What he means is that even with the best gear in the world, if you can't play it well, the gear isn't going to save you. Also, different pickups work good for each genre. I really don't understand your grip with what he's saying.
I get the interpretation, but it seems to be a lot of people that really thinks that the feeling in your hands is more important to the tone than your gear, obviously if you are a sloppy player, you wont be able to sound good even if you have the best boutique amps, guitars, and pedals in the world. But if you are in fact a good player, you will get better tone with a gear according to what you want to play. And there's gear that's more suitable to different genres or tones you're searching, you can obviously sound and play good in a post rock band if you are a good player with a peavey 5150 and an ESP horizon with high output pups, but maybe a telecaster with passive low output pickups and an VOX ac30 will suit the sound better, that's my point. I'm not trying to be aggresive or anything, that's just what i think.
Saving Abel's Scott Bartlett shows off the gear that he uses on tour!
Who should we film with next?
Seems like a nice guy, definitely entertaining.
Definitely
Those are some serious PRS guitars.
Yup
Great guitarist.
Horns up for the 230lb rockers! tight
How about the 250lb rockers?
Is he the lead or rhythm or do they share that role?
He's rhythm.
@@digitaltourbus But he plays the solos? Null writes
@@flashingo I'm just going off what is listed on the band's Wikipedia page.
Any chances for big Morbid Angel gear masters? Ask Dan Vadim Von if Trey wasn't interested :)
We can try, but it's ultimately up to them, not us. :(
"The sound is in your hands, not in your pickups" Definetly biggest lie ever, i wanna see you try to play indie rock with emg 81's
What he means is that even with the best gear in the world, if you can't play it well, the gear isn't going to save you. Also, different pickups work good for each genre. I really don't understand your grip with what he's saying.
I get the interpretation, but it seems to be a lot of people that really thinks that the feeling in your hands is more important to the tone than your gear, obviously if you are a sloppy player, you wont be able to sound good even if you have the best boutique amps, guitars, and pedals in the world. But if you are in fact a good player, you will get better tone with a gear according to what you want to play.
And there's gear that's more suitable to different genres or tones you're searching, you can obviously sound and play good in a post rock band if you are a good player with a peavey 5150 and an ESP horizon with high output pups, but maybe a telecaster with passive low output pickups and an VOX ac30 will suit the sound better, that's my point.
I'm not trying to be aggresive or anything, that's just what i think.