Forty four years on the road, and all of that using a Fender bass that weighed 9.5# (4.3 Kilos).
All of that playing an acoustic guitar that weighed maybe 5 # (2.7 Kilos)... I never checked.
I didn't pay any attention to the weight. I was young and tough.
When I turned sixty in 2008, I bought myself the first electric guitar I had owned in decades.
It was my reward for making sixty, which I never believed I would reach. Shot by a jealous husband,
shot while attempting to escape, smushed by a truck... these were my likely fates I thought.
With death on the highway being the most likely. It's dangerous out there.
So the weight of my instruments (and my amp) was a small thing by comparison to the
weight of my doom... *grins
Being a bassist who doubled on guitar, I regarded it as part of the job... to carry heavy things.
And I did. But when I went to GC taking an amp in for service (bad idea) I glanced at the racks
of guitars of course. And I did a perfect double-take when I saw this instrument at a range of
ten meters...

Y'all have likely seen photos of this instrument... I can't stop talking about it. This is Luna...
I bonded with this guitar as soon as I touched it. The wand chooses the wizard, eh?
She called me to her from a distance, wordlessly. I saw her as I was walking in with the amp in my hands.
I saw her again on the way out, thinking, "That's one of those faded Specials... I've seen them in the M/F
catalog..." I took her down from the rack. She weighs 6 3/4# (just over 3 kilos). Zap... I was smitten.
Sixty years old and head over heels for a Gibson SG... I knew it was ridiculous but I didn't care.
As soon as my hands held her, she was mine. The rest was paper work. Mastercard, get me outa here...
Sure and part of the appeal is the weight. Here I am 17 years later, and she's still the Queen of my
music room. I have other guitars I play, Of course I do. I play acoustic, electric and bass. I read all the
hogwash that members write about neck shapes with puzzled amusement. I'm like, "really?..."
I never think about neck shapes. All my instruments have different neck shapes, and I never think
much about it. I just play them. My dream bass is my Warmoth fretless J-bass... I've been playing that
since about 2009. I named her Luretta after a song by Townes Van Zandt. She weighs ten pounds (4.5 Kilos).
I shoulder the weight because I want that fretless sound she makes. I use a wide strap.

To me, that's what it's all about.
It's the tone, not the weight, not the neck shape. It's all about
the song, and what tone it needs in order to be effective.
That's why we get G.A.S. and buy extra guitars. That's why guitar strap makers can charge so much
for an excellent strap. That thing we all are pursuing, that's tone. This forum is called the Tone Room.
To me, it's the combination of all these things we bring into play that creates tone, including the strap.
...and the amp as we all know, and other tone shaping equipment we might utilize.
Tone comes from a player's fingers and the strings, of course. But there's more isn't there.
If the guitar doesn't balance well, tone suffers... at least for me. My three kilo SG is so comfortable
to play, she frees my hands so they can move best. And she just oozes tone. *smiles
Her tone inspires me, her weight frees me to move well, her shape aids me in subtle ways.
But so do her handmaidens below...

Each of these beauties weighs about 8 pounds (3.6 kilos). Each of them has a different
neck shape. Each of them has a unique tone as well... a MIM Tele with humbuckers
and a MIC ES-339 with P-90s. I love them both for reasons I listed above,
Tone, feel, balance... how they respond in my hands, how they respond through my
amps, Whatever neck shapes they have, my hands can master them... they feel
great. Pretty easy on the eye too, but that's for the audience.

Well and so, I love my two SGs, Catalina the Silverburst weighs about 7# (3.2 kilos)
Luna the faded special weighs just under that. I would call these lightweight guitars even though my
acoustics are a couple pounds lighter than these. I like them for how light they are and how powerful their
tone is (each in her own way... mini humbuckers vs '57 classic & classic plus).
Is this all just mixed up to you guys, or does it ring true? It's my world... acoustic and electric and bass
(Oh My!). I love my light weight SGs, but when I need that P-90 tone there's no substitute. Equally so when
I need that "Wide Range Humbucker" sound from my Tele. If there's one neck shape that's been with me
my whole career, it's the Fender J-bass neck which I know so well. So I don't care if they are heavy, even
at my age! For most of my career, the Fender J-bass tone was my signature, and since 2009 it's been the
fretless J-Bass tone... I don't mind the weight, because I need that tone.