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  • A Revolving Door of Guitars Guitars
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  • A Nostalgic Purchase: MIJ Squier Contemporary Stratocaster Gear Talk
  • Two New Songs for July 2023 DMCA-Free music
  • To Friends Who’ve Said Goodbye – New Upcoming Single DMCA-Free music
  • Creativity, Balance, and Burn Out DMCA-Free music
  • New DMCA-Free Rock Music Coming in May 2023 KCWM
  • A New Song for a New Album KCWM

1992 Fender Telecaster

Background Info
One of My Best Deals
The Big John Wizadry
I Can Admit That I Was Wrong
Background Info

Over the years, I’ve owned a number of guitars that either didn’t cost me very much or that many would agree were “cheap”.

My first handful of electric guitars were a 3/4 size Memphis Strat-style, an MIJ Squier Contemporary Series Stratocaster, a Lyon (Washburn’s “cheap” brand) Strat copy, and a $99 Epiphone Les Paul Special II. Heck, my friends’ first electrics were a MIK Squier II Stratocaster and a Cort Effector version of an Explorer.

With that MIJ Squier Strat being the outlier, and as much as I think my friends and I all liked playing that MIK Squier II, I was unknowingly experienced with cheap guitars in the first few years I played guitar.

On top of those guitars, another friend of mine from back then owned a Squier Affinity Telecaster, the cheapest of the Squier line at the time, and I played it most of the times we hung out at her house.
 

I, unjustly, hated that guitar and everything about it…the headstock, the “not quite Les Paul” single cutaway, the silver neck pickup, the control plate…I hated that Tele and therefore I hated all Teles. They weren’t a Strat and therefore they were inferior.

For years, that Tele shaped my opinion of all things Tele until I had the opportunity to buy one SUPER cheap. My opinion would forever change and that guitar would become the guitar that has stuck around longest out of any guitar I’ve ever owned.

I never said my opinions were sound, good, or resembled anything close to either of those.

One of My Best Deals

Pawn Shopping

This story is one where you point to your kids and say “Kids, this is how NOT to do things. This is how to be dishonest and swindle a pawn shop”.

In my defense, don’t most pawn shops take advantage of and swindle people who are desperate and in need of money? I mean, I’m no “Robin Hood of the Pawn Shops” here, but I was just taking something back for the little man, Right?

I used to stop at random pawn shops to see what they had. My wife and I called it “pawn shopping”. There was a chain that used to have a very particular pricing system that effectively displayed how much money the shop had invested in an item right on the tag. 

If you didn’t know the system, you just thought it meant nothing, but someone had shared the code with me and I used it to score the occasional killer deal, like an Audio Technica AT4040 for $50 that I sold for $400.

Just a Look

My wife and I had been over in Dallas to check out a bougie grocery store that I’d seen when I worked out that way. The pawn shop in question was just off the highway and I spied the sign on my way there and pulled in on the way back.

“I’m just going in to look,” I told her, stressing the word look. I was not being dishonest…I had no intention of buying anything. We walked inside and on the wall hung a Tele that had seen better days. It was a three color sunburst with a black pickguard. Very average-at-best looking. 

Remember, I was not at all fond of Telecasters, had not given one a single thought, and this one was no different. However, it was the only decent guitar on the wall.

I picked it up and noticed the bridge was odd. I used my phone to Google what it was and learned it was a Fishman VT Powerbridge, which contained a piezo pickup generally used in acoustic instruments. While I had a high level understanding of what it did, it wasn’t of much interest to me.

The guitar had different pickups than most Teles did: a Rio Grande Muy Grande and Halfbreed. I had no idea what that brand meant, but it didn’t have the silver cover on the neck pickup, so that was a win.

I looked at the tag and the pricing scheme told me the pawnshop had $50 invested. They were asking $300, which wasn’t shabby for a Made in Mexico Fender, but I didn’t want to pay $300 for a guitar that I was trying more out of obligation than interest. 

The sales rep came over and I asked for a cable to try it out. While I waited, I strummed a few chords. The neck was quite comfortable and was one of the nicer necks I’d played at that point in time. Cracks quickly appeared in the walls that kept my heart separated from Teles everywhere.

When the rep arrived with the cable, I plugged the guitar up, turned up the amp a little, and strummed a chord expecting the worst.

Bzzzt-grrrch 

It was worse than the worst I’d expected. The guitar didn’t even work. It made this fizzy electronic sound. I’d only owned one, but I recognized that terrible sound as the sound that active pickups make when the battery they need to power them is dead. I turned the guitar over for the first time and saw a battery compartment.

“Of course the Fishman is active,” I thought to myself. I’d known this after reading briefly about what the bridge was but didn’t even think about it. I took the battery out and put it to my tongue. It was dead as a door nail.

Yeah, let’s not even start to discuss just how nasty that was of me to do that. It’s been over 15 years later and I’m still put off by that.

A Lie By Omission

I pulled my wallet out and saw $85 in cash from a pedal I’d sold a few days before. Breaking down their code, I realized the store had $50 bucks invested. I hoped they’d take a 70% profit on what appeared to be a dead guitar.

I called the sales rep over, explained that the guitar wasn’t working right, plugged it in, and showed them the “bzzzt-grrrch” noise. He made a face. That particular sound isn’t all that pleasant.

The rep went over and asked the manager to come over. I showed them the same noise, and he immediately agreed to $85 out the door. For the price of $78.53 plus 8.25% tax, I walked out of the pawnshop with a beat up Tele.

Should I have told them about the battery thing? The correct answer, at least in a world of binary morality, is yes. It would have been transparently honest. In D&D terms, it would have been the “Lawful” thing to do. 

That being said, I didn’t lie. I DID say it wasn’t working right, I just omitted how easy of a fix it would be. As the seller, one may justify the behavior by saying it was their responsibility to know about the product their selling, and given how little money they had in the guitar, I have a feeling they had no issue offering as little as they could for it.

It Worked Out

We got home, a fresh 9v battery went in, and it worked right away. In spite of the numerous chips, scratches, dents, and damage already done to it, the guitar played and sounded great. Normally, Telecasters are on the brighter side, but the Rio Grande pickups really tamed that. 

I’d eventually pick up an SX Tele copy that had a tortoiseshell pickguard and I’d swap it out with the black one before selling the SX. That pickguard stayed on the guitar for quite some time and it now belongs to a friend of mine who bought another tele from me a couple of years ago.

Unfortunately, as things sometimes go, money became tight and I ended up selling for the guitar for $450…a tidy profit. A month later, I got a major bonus that would have kept it home. I really missed that guitar. But, life is full of quirky twists and turns.

As luck would have it, the same guitar come up on Craigslist within a month or two of that bonus coming in. I emailed the seller, and it was the same guy I’d sold it to. I immediately offered to buy it back for what he’d paid me for it, he accepted, and the guitar found its way back home…a home it’s had for the past 15+ years.

The Big John Wizadry

John Oliviera of Big John’s Guitars is a wizard, and has worked on pretty much every guitar I own or have owned for almost 15 years. While he’s out in Denton, TX, the drive is absolutely worth it. Over the years, he and I have had numerous conversations where time passes so swiftly that our time’s up before either of us realize it.

I think the very first work I ever had him do was swap the Rio Grande pickups out of this with the pickups in a ’96 American Telecaster I’d picked up after buying this. I thought if a MIM Fender Tele was good, a USA Tele would be even better. While it sounded better, at least to my ears, it did not play better.

I eventually sold that USA Tele to Guitar Center for my asking price…a rare feat. I saw they eventually sold it for $300 or so more than they gave me and it was gone pretty quick.

Shortly after quickly falling out of love with the USA stock pickups, I reached out to John and began inquired about a pretty significant bit of work. We went back and forth and discussed changing pretty much everything:

    • adding a burled maple vaneer and arefinish in purple
    • installing new pickups and wiring them however he wanted
    • a refret with stainless steel frets
    • staining the neck a vintage amber
    • applying a spaghetti-style waterslide decal
    • changing the dot inlays to abelone
    • adding new tuners

Pickups/Electronics

John suggested a set of GFS Power Rock pickups. They are stacked humbuckers that look like regular telecaster pickups (I’d softened on hating the silver neck pickup) but with increased, noiseless output. He wired them in the following setup on a 5-way switch:

    • 5 – Neck in series
    • 4 – Neck in parallel
    • 3 – One coil from each pickup in parallel
    • 2 – Bridge in parallel
    • 1 – Bridge in series

Positions 2 and 4 offered this really mellowed out sound that really pulls back on whatever drive pedal I’m using. I used it for playing cleaner parts with just a hint of drive. If you mix in a little bit of the Piezo bridge, it adds a layer of sound that the magnetic pickups alone don’t give.

We replaced the volume knob that controlled the magnetic pickups with a concentric knob, which are two knobs in one, so I could have both a tone and volume control. The Piezo bridge knob retained its single knob, and we kept the mini-switch that controlled which pickups were active.

In 2021, and after 13 years, the neck pick up began to lose some of its oompf while the bridge pickup kept trucking along. I bought a Seymour Duncan Antiquity II Mini Humbucker, new pickguard, and John replaced it and wired things back up with the following options:

    • 5 – Antiquity II in series
    • 4 – Antiquity II and GFS (full)
    • 3 – GFS parallel and Antiquity II
    • 2 – GFS in parallel
    • 1 – GFS in series
  •  
  • While I don’t get that 2nd mellow option in the 4th position, I get this really interesting sound in the 3rd position. I haven’t quite fully explored it and how I can use it in recordings, but I really need to dig into it, especially if I dial in the piezo pickup.

The Neck and Tuners

If the neck was comfortable before, John took that comfort to a luxury level. He has a service where he contours the fretboard and I had him make that adjustment to my Tele. In the nearly 13 years since he worked that magic on the neck, it’s been back once for a very minor tweak.

I bought some Wilkinson vintage-style tuners off of the GFS site and installed them myself. I’ve always been fond of the way those looked and thought it classed the neck up a bit. The hardest part about the install was pre-drilling the new holes and not drilling through the headstock.

In April of 2022, I swapped out the Wilkinson tuners for a set of Fender Locking Tuners, which are hard to beat. Those locking tuners and make restringing a breeze.

With the serial number wiped away due to the neck refinish, I had a local shop at a nearby mall etched it on a new neck plate. It looks terrible. I want to have it redone so the engraving is more cut into the plate. I just need to find a place willing to do that.

Are the Neck and Body Actually USA Made?

I will probably be corrected and I welcome the correction, but after Googling around, in the early ’90s (I think until ’93) the Fender plant in Mexico didn’t have the machining hardware available to make their own necks and bodies yet. 

Some make the claim that American made necks and bodies were shipped down and the guitars were then assembled with the normal hardware and electronics found in the Mexican-made Fender line at the time. That’s something that’s been debated, disputed, proven, and disproven on forums for years.

An interesting fact is that it’s quite likely that the wood is made of poplar with an alder vaneer. It doesn’t change my opinion of the guitar at all. It was interesting to read.

Whether it is or is not the case, the wood in this guitar has held up quite well in the 30+ years since it’s construction. The electronics, with the exception of that Fishman Piezo bridge, have been completely replaced, the wiring upgraded, and some definite wizardry done to the pickup options I have access to.

I Can Admit That I Was Wrong

This Tele has been played on pretty much every song I’ve been a part of since 2017 and is the lead guitar on just about every KCWM track that I can think of. Given the wear and tear, it’s also the guitar I travel with. 

I look back on my initial opinion of the Telecaster and realize just how wrong I was. I once thought that Stratocasters were the superior guitar. Over the years, I’ve owned too many Strats from every country they’re manufactured in, but I never found that felt as comfortable to play as any Tele I’ve owned.

It took one Tele, and a few years, for it to become my preferred body type. One, and it was even close to top of the line. Sure, the wizardry helps, but it was a great guitar when I picked it up off the hanger at that pawn shop so many years ago and continues to be one of my favorite guitars I’ve ever owned.

It just took taking it back for the little man to happen.

In a world of noise, be sound

– KC

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It has come time to part ways with one of the cool It has come time to part ways with one of the coolest Muff-based fuzzes I’ve ever played: the Blackout Effectors Musket, which is the right side of this pedal, the Twosome. 

You might question what a Muff fuzz is, and if you’re a non-guitarist/musician, I point you to Smashing Pumpkins’ album Siamese Dream, notably “Today” and “Cherub Rock”. 

Fuzzes have been used for a long time and the Electro Harmoniz Big Muff is one of the most well known. 

However, this allows me to bring other fuzz sounds into my bag of tricks and that makes me excited.
Gear that came and went in 2023: Pedal Edition (ma Gear that came and went in 2023: Pedal Edition (maybe pt. 1)

There might have been more. I’ll have to check an Imgur folder

• Jet Pedals Lion 
• Lovepedal Echo Plexi (traded toward Friedman PT-20 v2 head/cab
• Emerson Paramount (traded toward Friedman PT-20 v2 head/cab
• Line 6 HX Stomp + extension pedal (traded for Crate Palomino v16 and cash)
• TC Electronic Sub n Up (came in 2022)
• Boss DS-1
• Old Blood Noise Endeavors Float
• Kelley Katana Mini Boost
• Ibanez TS-9 Tubescreamer (traded for Katana Mini Boost)
• Barber Gain Changer (traded for Bearfoot FX Honeybee X)
• Jackson Audio Broken Arrow v1 (traded for Fulltone Fulldrive 2)
• Line 6 Helix LT

Gone but not pictured:
• JHS Buffered Splitter (traded for Tubescreamer)
• Fulltone Fulldrive 2 (traded for Emerson Les Paul Harness)

Bought and returned:

• Used Jackson Audio Asabi (defective)
• New Jackson Audio Asabi (gain was not useful)
•Jackson Audio Golden Boy mini

The Lion, Float, Paramount, and DS-1 were taken in as trade for the light blue tele in my recent guitar post 

I’ll probably think of a couple more I missed because I don’t still have the pictures of them, or never took pictures because I never posted them for sale. 

#guitar #guitarpedals #pedals
@bugdayband It’s glorious @bugdayband It’s glorious
@teresa.aldaco, ignore this post. I was going th @teresa.aldaco, ignore this post. 

I was going through my photos today and saw a number of guitars and pedals that I’ve sold/traded or bought in 2023. 

These are 10 of the guitars that came into and left my possession in 2023.

• 2016 Fender Chris Shiflett Telecaster Deluxe
• 2019 Gibson Les Paul Tribute DC
• 2021 Squier 40th Anniversary Jazzmaster, Vintage Edition
• Partscaster Tele
• 2021 Sterling Avis AX3FM
• 2022 Gibson Les Paul Traditional Pro V Satin
• 2007 Epiphone “1966”  G-400 SG
• LTD M-1000 with HetSet EMG (can’t remember the year)
• 1970s Session Les Paul Custom Copy
• 1997 Squier Affinity Strat (this year was one of the first years of the Affinity models)

I also sold or traded:

2022 Squier Classic Vibe ‘60s Strat
2018 Fender P-Bass Deluxe FSR
2012 Gibson Les Paul Traditional 

There might be one or two more I’m forgetting about. I also have a few that are waiting to be listed for sale too. 

It’s been a bit crazy, and 2024 is off to a start of its own. 

#guitar
Out getting into some Christmas Mischief and neede Out getting into some Christmas Mischief and needed some background music. It’s a good choice of good music. 

Finding new music from half the country (or world) away, or even right next door, is one of the best things about the internet and social media. Without it, I’d have never found bands like @bugdayband, No More Kings, @zwetschconnor, @clinically.sane.band, the musicians I’ve met and talked to, or people wouldn’t have found my music. 

Seek out new music. Don’t stay stuck in your music habits for too long like I too often do. I do love me some ‘90s rock, but I needed to move beyond what gets played on Lithium. 

Finding that new song that gives you chills with a lyric, when the distortion kicks in, a transition between section, or opening chord is never a disappointing feeling. 

It’s not 2024 yet, but we don’t have to wait to make a resolution to find and embrace new music by artists we might never have found if it weren’t for our friends, or an algorithm, saying “hey, check this out”.
Well, no surprise that I’m my #1 listened to ban Well, no surprise that I’m my #1 listened to band. Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift are due to my kid, but @bugdayband ranking up there with Pearl Jam is good stuff. You should check them out. 

#spotifywrapped #kcwmmusic #rock
Grayson, aka Buddy aka Buh aka Bubs, is our sole r Grayson, aka Buddy aka Buh aka Bubs, is our sole remaining cat after all three of our senior cats succumbed to complications of their age. 

He’s a good companion and has become extra clingy since Mike’s passing in September. He sleeps with us at night and responds to “Want to get some food and go to sleep?”

He really is the best buh. 

#grayson #graycatsofinstagram #cats #catsofinstagram #graycats
Five or six years ago, I bought a Gibson Les Paul Five or six years ago, I bought a Gibson Les Paul Classic in green oceanburst. After a setup from @bigjohnsguitars it played how I’ve always wanted a Les Paul to play. 

After the honeymoon phase was over, and after recording some tracks, I wasn’t happy with the sound. It was very dark and muddy. John helped me install some new pickups, but the problem persisted. 

I eventually met and talked to the guy who runs @wtonesupply and we talked pickups. I dropped my Les Paul off and he got to work winding me some of his pickups. 

We made the trip out to Allen (which is why we ate at Portillos) to pick it up last night and I finally got a good chance to put some time into playing it. 

Problem solved. 

Our original plan deviated a bit once he had the guitar  but the choices he made has proven to be the remedy it needed. Plus, the covers he used look slick! 

With a trade finding a new home for the guitar that displaced this one as my go-to Les Paul, it’s nice to have this back in its rightful place. I can’t wait to record a song or two with it real soon. 

Finding good folks that do even better work has been something I’m very thankful for. Those individuals and the many conversations I’ve had and work they’ve done for me is something I hope every musician can experience.
It’s a @bugdayband kind of day. You should make It’s a @bugdayband kind of day. You should make it a Bug Day kind of day too. Because #guitar #altrock is good for the soul.
Remixing the first 7 songs from Volumes One and Tw Remixing the first 7 songs from Volumes One and Two is coming along. 

Some songs sound better after the first attempt, some require a tweak or two, and others require whole new parts be recorded. 

I still need to re-record “Octivation”, “Lost It All In Factory”, and “Let’s Get Behind Them” for different reasons. 

I’ve learned a lot between the beginning of this whole process and now, and you can hear the difference in the originals vs. the remix. 

Want access to listen to the remixes? DM me and let’s talk about it. I’d love to talk about the process and hear your feedback.
During the 9/13 @pearljam show, we were treated to During the 9/13 @pearljam show, we were treated to Eddie Vedder dressed up as a mirrorball and a story behind the jacket and helmet for “Wishlist”. I recorded very little during the show, but him spinning around was too good to pass up. I tried to catch it on the big screen but only caught a moment of it.
I worked out two separate trades on Sunday that in I worked out two separate trades on Sunday that involved a #strat as part of the deal. Funny thing is that the #stratocaster is not my favorite type of guitar to play, but both were interesting. This doubled the number of strats I have.

1) The red #Fender is made up of parts from Fender guitars, but I do not believe that any parts are from the same guitar. 

• The body is refinished matte red with some roadworn-ish type relicing, which is just gold underneath...maybe the original color?

• Fender Vintage Noiseless pickups with a Clapton mid-boost mod. It sounds really good. 

• Neck is from a 2013 MIM Floyd Rose Fender. It's a really nice, comfortable neck. 

• Thick solid steel block. It has excellent sustain

If I keep this one, it will get some Fender Locking Tuners

2) The black one is a #Squier Affinity Strat, but it's not a normal Affinity. It's a 1997 model, the first year they offered the Affinity line and it's a full-sized, hardwood (likely Alder) body with a 22-fret rosewood neck. It's a pretty nice neck, especially for a Squier. 

It's hefty for a strat too...it's not light like so many of the Squier Affinity line. Having that full-sized body adds some weight. 

The pickups leave a bit to be desired, which is par for the course with the Affinity line, but this guitar would make a great modding platform for someone interested in doing so. 

Heck, if that red one hadn't come through and I didn't already have two other nice strats (both Squiers, interestingly), I'd likely look to make some modifications.

----

In the end, I will take time to consider whether I like the red partscaster or my Squier Classic Vibe '60s strat more. Whichever one wins gets the Vintage Noiseless. Clapton mod, and stainless steel block (as long as it fits the Squier). 

I have some decisions to make.
New upgrade for KCWM music purposes. Next recordin New upgrade for KCWM music purposes. Next recordings will feature this 2004 Dr. Z Maz 18 Jr. 

#NAD #newampday #drz #maz18 #guitar #guitaramps
Back in '95, my grandmother bought my first real e Back in '95, my grandmother bought my first real electric guitar from a pawn shop in the small town I grew up in. I think we paid $85 for it with a hard case. 

I played that guitar a lot, its pictured with me in the Jazz Band photo from my junior year (covered in a ton of stickers...so classy), and I recorded songs with it. 

When the electronics started to die, I wasn't as knowledgeable in what could be repaired and I junked it. I sold the parts and moved on. It wasn't until years later that I realized what I'd given up and I've often priced them, but never pulled the trigger. 

Yesterday (7/19/23), this popped up on Facebook Marketplace from a local shop. At first, I thought it was interesting and didn't intend on buying it, but after giving it some thought, I went and did just that. 

This was a bit of a nostalgic purchase. If I named my guitars, this one would be called Dot or Syb (short for Sybil), after my grandmother.

This Squier Contemporary Strat (27-6800) was made from '84 - '87 in Japan. From the info I've gathered online, it's a 24.75" scale instead of the normal 25.5" Fender Scale. The pickups each have an on/off switch so you can turn all three on at the same time, and the humbucker has an on/off/coil-tap switch. The tuners are Fender-branded Gotoh. 

It has some definite wear and tear, but I don't care. 

You'll definitely be hearing this on some upcoming songs, as I intend for it to split time with the tele I use for lead parts, as I did with the modified Squier '51 it's replacing did. 

Anyone in the DFW area looking for a cool modified Squier '51? 

#guitar #fender #squier #stratocaster #strat #fenderjapan #mij #ssh #rock #kcwmmusic #dmcafreemusic #dmcafreerock #nostalgia
I need to clean up my desk a bit more but I just r I need to clean up my desk a bit more but I just replaced my two 1440p monitors with this 34” ultra wide. I’m able to see every track on the mixer of Studio One 5 and so much of Superior Drummer 3. It’s so awesome.
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