01-31-2013 02:56 PM
analogtapes wrote:
and for the final word:
all music, when performed, has an element of visual appeal that is hand in hand with the clothes you wear, the gear you use, etc. theres no hard and fast guideline for anything, but there are some tried and true, historic standards.
playing a prs guitar is akin to putting on a button down affliction collared shirt with tattoo angel wings on back, BRAND NEW cowboy boots (that have never seen a cow, but probably plenty of boys), a cowboy hat (from the same store in the mall you got the boots), some vaguely baggy pair of lee dungarees, a wallet with a chain, and a leather wrist band and screaming into the mic "ARE YOU READY TO ROCK?!!?" into a room of washed up rodeo moms in a bar somewhere. yeah, there are people there, but only three of them paid to see you. your girlfriend, your mom, and some poor guy who thought it was a wet t-shirt contest but came on the wrong night. you then have to wait for the bartender to turn the jukebox off so you can play a cover of Sharp Dressed Man, terribly, and some originals that sound like Nickelback demos from the early days.
congrats, you bought a PRS.
FUCK i was signed in under my old account, but this.
01-31-2013 04:09 PM
analogtapes wrote:
and for the final word:
all music, when performed, has an element of visual appeal that is hand in hand with the clothes you wear, the gear you use, etc. theres no hard and fast guideline for anything, but there are some tried and true, historic standards.
playing a prs guitar is akin to putting on a button down affliction collared shirt with tattoo angel wings on back, BRAND NEW cowboy boots (that have never seen a cow, but probably plenty of boys), a cowboy hat (from the same store in the mall you got the boots), some vaguely baggy pair of lee dungarees, a wallet with a chain, and a leather wrist band and screaming into the mic "ARE YOU READY TO ROCK?!!?" into a room of washed up rodeo moms in a bar somewhere. yeah, there are people there, but only three of them paid to see you. your girlfriend, your mom, and some poor guy who thought it was a wet t-shirt contest but came on the wrong night. you then have to wait for the bartender to turn the jukebox off so you can play a cover of Sharp Dressed Man, terribly, and some originals that sound like Nickelback demos from the early days.
congrats, you bought a PRS.
I'd chip in and describe the typical Jazzmaster/Jaguar player, but...its pretty underground and you probably wouldn't know what I was talking about.
![]()
01-31-2013 04:12 PM
MacBradley wrote:
analogtapes wrote:
and for the final word:
all music, when performed, has an element of visual appeal that is hand in hand with the clothes you wear, the gear you use, etc. theres no hard and fast guideline for anything, but there are some tried and true, historic standards.
playing a prs guitar is akin to putting on a button down affliction collared shirt with tattoo angel wings on back, BRAND NEW cowboy boots (that have never seen a cow, but probably plenty of boys), a cowboy hat (from the same store in the mall you got the boots), some vaguely baggy pair of lee dungarees, a wallet with a chain, and a leather wrist band and screaming into the mic "ARE YOU READY TO ROCK?!!?" into a room of washed up rodeo moms in a bar somewhere. yeah, there are people there, but only three of them paid to see you. your girlfriend, your mom, and some poor guy who thought it was a wet t-shirt contest but came on the wrong night. you then have to wait for the bartender to turn the jukebox off so you can play a cover of Sharp Dressed Man, terribly, and some originals that sound like Nickelback demos from the early days.
congrats, you bought a PRS.
I'd chip in and describe the typical Jazzmaster/Jaguar player, but...its pretty underground and you probably wouldn't know what I was talking about.
and still a billion times cooler.
01-31-2013 04:17 PM
echodeluxe wrote:
MacBradley wrote:
analogtapes wrote:
and for the final word:
all music, when performed, has an element of visual appeal that is hand in hand with the clothes you wear, the gear you use, etc. theres no hard and fast guideline for anything, but there are some tried and true, historic standards.
playing a prs guitar is akin to putting on a button down affliction collared shirt with tattoo angel wings on back, BRAND NEW cowboy boots (that have never seen a cow, but probably plenty of boys), a cowboy hat (from the same store in the mall you got the boots), some vaguely baggy pair of lee dungarees, a wallet with a chain, and a leather wrist band and screaming into the mic "ARE YOU READY TO ROCK?!!?" into a room of washed up rodeo moms in a bar somewhere. yeah, there are people there, but only three of them paid to see you. your girlfriend, your mom, and some poor guy who thought it was a wet t-shirt contest but came on the wrong night. you then have to wait for the bartender to turn the jukebox off so you can play a cover of Sharp Dressed Man, terribly, and some originals that sound like Nickelback demos from the early days.
congrats, you bought a PRS.
I'd chip in and describe the typical Jazzmaster/Jaguar player, but...its pretty underground and you probably wouldn't know what I was talking about.
and still a billion times cooler.
And yet, not. Thanks for playing though.
01-31-2013 04:18 PM
Dr.Picklebottom wrote:noone cares what you think either, IRG. :cattongue:
This is definitely true. Except for Echo, he cares, or he wouldn't post here ![]()
01-31-2013 04:22 PM
01-31-2013 04:25 PM
the last thing on irg's mind is being cool.
that's why he bought a prs.
01-31-2013 05:11 PM
01-31-2013 05:20 PM
*skips entire thread* I've never liked the way any PRS felt or sounded. /shrug
01-31-2013 06:13 PM
echodeluxe wrote:
I care about IRG's opinion. He's a good guy.
You get Kudos!
01-31-2013 06:15 PM
goodhonk wrote:the last thing on irg's mind is being cool.
that's why he bought a prs.
Bingo. I might get a second one too. So I'll be even more uncooler.
01-31-2013 07:50 PM - edited 01-31-2013 07:51 PM
analogtapes wrote:
and for the final word:
all music, when performed, has an element of visual appeal that is hand in hand with the clothes you wear, the gear you use, etc. theres no hard and fast guideline for anything, but there are some tried and true, historic standards.
playing a prs guitar is akin to putting on a button down affliction collared shirt with tattoo angel wings on back, BRAND NEW cowboy boots (that have never seen a cow, but probably plenty of boys), a cowboy hat (from the same store in the mall you got the boots), some vaguely baggy pair of lee dungarees, a wallet with a chain, and a leather wrist band and screaming into the mic "ARE YOU READY TO ROCK?!!?" into a room of washed up rodeo moms in a bar somewhere. yeah, there are people there, but only three of them paid to see you. your girlfriend, your mom, and some poor guy who thought it was a wet t-shirt contest but came on the wrong night. you then have to wait for the bartender to turn the jukebox off so you can play a cover of Sharp Dressed Man, terribly, and some originals that sound like Nickelback demos from the early days.
congrats, you bought a PRS.
Holy smokes. It's a guitar, you poser. ![]()
01-31-2013 07:54 PM
01-31-2013 08:07 PM
bjcarl wrote:
I didn't buy mine to be cool. I bought mine because all indications were that it was worth the $349 I paid for it. If that makes me the proud owner of a furniture/lawyer guitar, so be it. I couldn't be happier
Ditto. And Kudos to you!
01-31-2013 08:25 PM - edited 01-31-2013 08:25 PM
lol prs
02-01-2013 07:23 AM
02-01-2013 10:49 AM
02-01-2013 10:58 AM
echodeluxe wrote:
Shut the fuck up, Ben.
i dont know, ive really ben lubin his posts.
02-01-2013 11:00 AM
02-01-2013 11:30 AM
Dr.Picklebottom wrote:
echodeluxe wrote:
Shut the fuck up, Ben.i dont know, ive really ben lubin his posts.
nice
About HCHarmonyCentral.com is the leading Internet resource for musicians, supplying valuable information from news and product reviews, to classified ads and chat rooms.
Advertise on HC