To What Are Yee Listenin' Right Now?

This is crazy. I have just seen this video and Chino is so skinny. By 2001 when I saw Deftones, he looked like he put on 40 lbs. The song sounded 40 lbs heavier too, which is a good thing if you ask me.


 
I love watching guys RIP IT UP --- doing ALL SORTS OF THINGS my GUITAR TEACHER told me NOT to do -- you cant do --you SHOULDNT do-----

yet when Stevie does it all it sounds soo friggin good!



Do you mean like this? Adrian


I am likely to have been at this show at this awesome little place called Club 66 in Edgewood Md.
Tommy comes all the way from Hungary to Texas and for those who post how he just plays like only SRV tunes and does a full tribute thing, he also adds other cover tunes in his shows. The guys are super nice and friendly to their audiences too.
 
Hamiltone Guitars

On the left: The 20th Anniversary Hamiltone made by Jim Hamilton
Hamiltone (also known as "Main" or the "Couldn't Stand the Weather" guitar) was a custom Stratocaster-style guitar made for Vaughan by James Hamilton in Buffalo, NY. It was presented to Vaughan by James as a gift from ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons on April 29, 1984.[11]

This guitar features a 2-piece maple body and a 3-piece "neck-through body" design. It also originally had EMG preamped pickups, but Vaughan didn't like the pickups in it. He was about to make next the music video for "Couldn't Stand the Weather", and didn't want to get Number One wet during filming, as that would have ruined the 1959 pickups, so he used the Hamiltone for filming. The EMG pickups and Gibson style amber top hat knobs were changed in June 1984.

The Hamiltone's fingerboard is ebony with a mother-of-pearl inlay that read "Stevie Ray Vaughan". The guitar was originally set to be made for Stevie in 1979, but the plan was dropped when Vaughan started using his middle name "Ray"; he was only known as "Stevie Vaughan" at the time.
 
Adrian, I am doing this just for you as I know how big a Peavey fan you are.
Ever since I first saw SRV in DC and Baltimore in the '82-'85 range, Tommy Shannon was rocking through the Peavey cabs. I also always loved watching Stevie make the guitar sound like 2 or 3 people were playing guitar all by himself.

I have no troubles hearing his bass do you?

 
Adrian, I am doing this just for you as I know how big a Peavey fan you are.
Ever since I first saw SRV in DC and Baltimore in the '82-'85 range, Tommy Shannon was rocking through the Peavey cabs. I also always loved watching Stevie make the guitar sound like 2 or 3 people were playing guitar all by himself.

I have no troubles hearing his bass do you?





;>)/
 
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