December 2010 \ Gigging & Recording \ Hey, You Can't Do That \ I Laughed, I Cried: Gear Stories To Write Home About

I Laughed, I Cried: Gear Stories To Write Home About

Steve Ouimette

Over the course of our lives as guitarists we tend to collect a good number of gear-related stories. Some inspiring, some devastating, some just plain stupid.


Premier Guitar December 2010

Over the course of our lives as guitarists we tend to collect a good number of gear-related stories. Some inspiring, some devastating, some just plain stupid. I’ll share a few of mine this month, and I hope you will do the same. I know you’ve got a good one! Don’t worry, we’re not laughing at you, we’re laughing with you…

Elliot Easton and the MuTron Octave Divider
When I first started out my professional career, after having a false start in the record biz, my gig was in computer-based sound. It was the early-mid ‘90s and the vintage stompbox market hadn’t gotten rolling quite yet. To cure the blues of sitting in a tech-support cubical all day long I had found a sure-fire way of killing time and adding to my gear collection. Every Wednesday I would call my phone pal, Stan Chang, at E-Wurlizer Music in Boston. Back then, Stan was getting pedals in all the time and I had just come from a 3-year recording studio stint where we had every pedal imaginable. We’d get on the phone and have a great time talking about music and gear-related topics, which would inevitably lead to what he had taken in that week and what might be a cool buy for me. Here’s a short list of a few of those items and their prices:

- Mutron Flanger (with manual pedal control) - $35
- EH Bassballs - $25
- Maestro Fuzztone - $20
- Gizmotron for bass - $15
- Gizmotron for guitar - $20
- Italian Wah (can’t remember what year, but '60s) - $35
- Mutron Octave Divider - $35

I bought all of these pedals over the course of a summer. Funny thing about the Mutron pedals is they had numbers on them (2 on the Octave Divider, 1 on the Flanger), and a little name scratched out on the underside of the pedal. They both read “The Cars.” Yep, Elliot Easton had owned these pedals and Stan had told me he bought them from Elliot. Being a huge Cars fan, that was just the icing on the cake for two already incredibly cool pedals. Sadly, the only one I still own out of the list is the Octave Divider and it has remained my number one favorite pedal of all time. The lineage is uber-cool, but the tone is by far the meanest and most badass of all octave pedals ever built, bar none.

The other pedals (and Gizmotrons) all went way up in value, and some I made a great profit on, while others (like the flanger) I sure wish I’d have kept! Either way it would be nice to turn the clock back and have the kind of pick of the litter I had back then. Can’t even begin to think about the pedals I turned down cause I didn’t need a fuzz, phaser, delay, etc. Thanks Stan, I appreciate it!

My First Plexi
Back in 1990 we still read the classifieds, and, while I was a Marshall lover, I still didn’t know that much about Plexis vs. metal panels, except that Plexis were older and cost more money. After doing a lot of recording with a 1980 2203 model (100-watt master volume) I knew I wanted another Marshall. After reading in the paper that a guy was selling a “Plexi 50 watt” I called him. He seemed adamant about the $350 price tag, but because it had been modded I didn’t think it was worth that much. “$300 is the best I can do,” I recall saying. I ended up driving out to his place in San Jose and checking it out. It looked kind of beat and the back panel had a part cut out of it. The iron was still intact but a crude master volume had been installed by some hack. He had taken the original logo off because it didn’t look cool, but said he’d throw it in if I cared. I did, and paid him $300 and went on my way.

Not knowing any affordable local techs at that time I just used it as-is but grew tired of its sound because it was kind of mushy and didn’t have the fire of the 2203. So, I went down to Black Market Music (stay tuned) and sold it for a 100 percent profit. Suckers! $600 for a 1967 50-watt beater. I put the money into a JCM 900—heck, the 900 only cost me another $300 more than what I sold the Plexi for. I heard that Slash bought it from Black Market just a few days after I sold it to them. He’s clearly a sucker too, because they no doubt marked it up even higher than the $6000—maybe even $1000! Some people never learn.

Black Market Music
The store that stands out in my mind more than any other was a place in San Francisco (and Los Angeles, from what I understand) called Black Market Music. In the late ‘80s/early ‘90s it was Mecca for me. When Marshalls were considered boat anchors and everyone was loading their refrigerator racks up with low-quality digital effects, it was hard to give away those amps. Stepping into the store, I kid you not, you could see rows of Marshall heads stacked four or five high all the way across the floor. This was a big place too, I’d say the aisles were an easy 40 feet long if not longer. There were hundreds of Marshall Superleads, Superbasses, P.A. s, you name it. Prices were fixed: $300 for a metal panel, $600 for a Plexi. We’d go into the store and look down the rows and check out the serial numbers. If they were an E or earlier we knew the amps were point-to-point wired and we could work on them (I’ll explain in a minute). Plexi’s were too expensive at double the price (I know, I know!) so we just paid attention to the metal panels. The only tricky deal was if they were an “E” serial number they might end up being a PCB version because half way through 1973 Marshall switched over to PCBs, except for the P.A. heads.

The reason we were buying them is to have extras to mod. Back then I’d read about the “mod kings” in magazines and wanted to learn how they LA guys got that great tone—Soldano, Jose, Lee Jackson, Harry Kolbe, Rivera. I’d seen one amp with Soldano’s mods so we tried to copy that with cheap parts from Radio Shack and failed miserably. It didn’t matter though, we bought the amps and had fun with them, although I don’t own a single one of them today. Again, facepalm!

Anyone have a time machine? $600 doesn’t sound too bad for a Plexi at this point.

I could go on and on. Selling a ’73 Marshall Superlead for another JCM 900. Selling a 1980 Gibson SG for a pointy Infinity guitar. Selling off all my old, first issue MXR pedals for a multi-fx unit. I’m starting to cry now. Look, we all have had cool things happen to us and some of us hold onto everything we’ve bought, but part of the journey is learning the lessons along the way while having a good time. At least I never traded a ’59 Les Paul for a Gorilla Amp (with TubeStack) and an Ibanez Destroyer. That’s a story for another time. What’s your story? Good or bad I’d love to hear about it!

     

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Comments

(23 comments) display by
UsernameComment
gtarmd
on 11/23/2012
In 1985, I bought what I thought was a mid 70's 50 watt Marshall head from a bandmate. I used it for several years after the band split. One day I decided to re-tube the amp. I removed the back cover and saw a thin band of red inside and was stunned (after a bit of research) to find that I had a handwired large box 1972, original Europeon rd Marshall. I paid $250. Still have it to this day and it is my pride and joy.
khan
on 02/13/2011
Yeah, playing bass in bands in the late 70's early 80's I started out with an early 70's Mustang bass, then bought a Rick4001 for $350, couple of years later traded the rick (+$25) for a mid-60's Precision, traded (+$25) a year or two later for a mid-70's Thunderbird, then traded for an 70's Tele-bass. Fortunately, kept that to this day, and the little Deluxe Reverb "practice amp" I bought ($125) as I wasn't playing out anymore. Kept that in a closet (literally) up until a year ago. Needless to say, I was quite (pleasantly) shocked when I researched the values on those guys. I also still have my '72 SG I bought new -but had Dimarzio humbuckers installed to replace the "nasily" P90s. Wish I'd kept them all but, had a damn good time going trough all of them in the meantime.
Luamano
on 02/12/2011
I wrote a whole story about how I scored two 1964 "Vibroverbs" from an old lady on Oahu for $150.00 and for an additional $50.00 she thew in a "Duo-Sonic" guitar. This is the short version because I didn't want to write the whole story again.
Ken
on 12/19/2010
Seems when I sell it's not worth anything than a few years later...crap!!!! Sold a real good Ibanez AR300 for $400.00,sold not one but two Rickenbacker 4001 basses, one a fireglow 76 for I think $500.000 and a black 80 for $550.00. My Steinberger L2 for $600.00. Also seen some great deals that I could kick myself for not buying. A 73 Gibson SG for $300.00, A late 70's white Gibson double neck in prestine condition for $1000.00 and a late 50's or early 60's Gibson Les Paul special[double cut] and Fender Bassman amp all going for maybe $1500.00. May more stories but can't look back just grin and bare it lol!
Daryn Edgemon
on 12/18/2010
About three years ago I was out playing with a country group. One night after a show the fiddle player, the steel player and myself were sitting around a camp fire knocking back a 6 pack before turning out the lights. The fiddle player pipes up that he's looking for a new or different amp to use at shows. So, our steel player says I'll sell you my old one for $250 bucks. It's in his closet back home. So I'm thinking,"what kinda amp is $250 bucks gonna buy?!?!? How about a 1960 Fender Deluxe Tweed with an appx value over $4000.00!!! Needless to say when Bruce sells something now...I make first bid!
Jimmy R.
on 12/18/2010
I had a 1958 Les Paul, Gold Top that I traded for a Hondo 2 because I wanted a black guitar. Now that gold is making a comeback I wonder if I made a mistake?
SixShooterBu ddha
on 12/17/2010
Stop your cry'n you friggin' mooks, it's called pay'n yer dues so you can play the blues !!!
Dave
on 12/16/2010
I had a les paul jr/sg that I sold to a pawnshop for $175 back in the late 70's, a Gibson E2 explorer that I traded for a Charvel that I no longer have, and a 70's 50 watt Marshall 2x12 combo that I sold for $200... aggghhhh!!! I beat myself to this day over all 3..
Rudy
on 12/15/2010
I remember in 1985 buying a 1966 Blonde maple Cap Telecaster,a 1964 Olympic White Fender Jazzmaster and a 1966 Fender Bandmaster with a 4/12 bottom..I paid 325.00 for the Telecaster which was mint and 250.00 for the Jazzmaster which had light wear and 175.00 for the amp and bottom.I also bought the 1965 Ramble Cross Country Station Wagon with 59,000 original miles in light metallic blue finish they were carried to gigs to for 325.00.Three on the column and a 199 cu inch inline six with a 1 barrel briggs and stratton carb.It was mint all it needed was an exhaust which I had done at Meineke..The guitars were sold after a girlfriend complained I had too many and the car was also sold for 600.00..Ater that I swore I would never let anyone make me sell anything I wanted to keep..I got rid of the girlfriend who was beautiful,but started a business that still thrives today...Everything
Rudy@Guitar Relics of N.Y. Inc. happens for a reason I suppose
Chris Famrer
on 12/15/2010
Bought a Fender Telecaster Custom (black, maple neck)in 1972 with the money the insurance company paid out on three copy guitars which got stolen from my house.I paid £200 for it because it had a bridge humbucking pick up. I hated that guitar because it didn't sound at all like EC's "Fool"SG and traded it in for a Mk 3 SG which sort of did.
About a year later, Keith Richards started playing black Fender Telecaster Customs with maple necks and the prices went from £200 to £1200 overnight...If I'd only known that I'd have a '61 SG/Les Paul by now!



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