I'm afraid to take my nicer guitars to some of the jams

I spend the whole night worrying... At some point the guitar will be out of my sight. ...drunks asking to play your guitar or just getting on stage and then falling over, drunks picking up my guitar off the stand when I'm sitting out for a break. etc. etc.
It's great to have what looks like a beater guitar that plays and sounds great for times like that. Then there is the ego boost when other players tell you they can't believe how good you make that old beater sound. Little do they know.
I've learned this the hard way of course. When I think back, it seems like a wonder that I survived, some of
the places I've been. If you're Canadian, you might like to read Garnet Rogers' book "Night Drive."
He and Stan Rogers spent years on the road together, playing on the folk circuit when they could, but also
taking other dicier gigs in some seamy dives. Garnet's a rare story teller, and I imagine you'd enjoy it.
Garnet's one of those guys who can play fiddle or guitar and
make a strong man weep. And then he finishes
his song and makes a strong man laugh his arse off with his wit and story teller's art.
Garnet Rogers: "Night Drive"- the story of Stan Rogers and the rock and roll struggles of a folk trio.
Come to think of it, any of us might enjoy Garnet's book, whether Canadian or not, and whether or not
you've ever heard of the "folk circuit." I regard him as a friend, but he's a hell of a musician, and drives
a Volvo with 750,000 miles on it. He doesn't fly, since his brother Stan died on an Air Canada flight that caught
fire in mid-air on the way back from the Kerrville festival in Texas. The heroic pilot managed to land the plane
and save many of the passengers, but some (including Stan) died from the smoke. Garnet wasn't on that flight
...just by luck or something. He doesn't fly any more. I've talked with him about it, and he knows in his head
that driving is infinitely more dangerous... but he's made up his mind and that's it.
But anyway, having a guitar that didn't cost thousands, and having it be able to
sound and play as well
as one that did... that's a real pleasure for me. Sometimes I'll put the floozy right next to the Queen, and
play them side by side just to get an idea of what it's all about.
My Luna never minds being set next to her handmaidens... she's regally unconcerned
that anyone might think her handmaidens were lovely in their own right. She can kick their arses any night, she's a Chess Queen, the
MVP... no doubts. But there are places I would NOT take her.

This is my #1... She's actually an 'inexpensive' Gibson, but has all the elegance and grace expected from that
legendary brand, with none of the unnecessary decorations. People in the audience regard her with awe, which
is mostly inspired by other (famous) players who paid three to eight thousand USD for their Gibsons. Or who got
one
supposedly worth that much FREE, because they were so fruckin' famous. I'll never be famous, or rich,
so I've learned to measure wealth by other means than money. This is one of those ways. *grins
Having what looks like a "cheap guitar' that actually sounds and plays great...
...to me there's a cool factor to that. That's one of the motivating drives behind my
enjoyment of modding Epiphones. The extremely plebeian Epiphone Les Paul Special ll that I
posted above was my first essay into the craft. I nailed it, with a few 'learning experiences"
that I was able to disguise effectively. *smiles
But the Special ll has excellent tone, and her neck and frets are good, and she plays and feels
as well as a 9 pound guitar can. Great sustain... the Gibson 490 p'ups sound better in the Epi than
they ever did in the SG above. And they sounded good in Luna. Just not good enough for my Queen.
And she's the first guitar I think about after I've been on the road for some time without her.
Even if I pick up that Epiphone trollop, the blonde/black trashy/elegant guitar with the antique P-90 p'ups...
The one with the bell-like tone in the neck p'up, and the gritty rock an roll tone in the bridge...
*laughs... Are we having fun yet?