Sorry I forgot to add that it was when I was a beginner. I later changed my mind and learned them because I honestly love some of the songs. Especially seven nations army because it's a very popular football chant
The only time I have an issue with beginners is when they play too loud or think they're amazing. Other than that, everyone starts somewhere so I don't really mind
Definitely missing the theory snob, who won't even talk to you about guitar unless you can identify a weird chord that sounds like an algebraic expression
The theory snob"WHAT? you don't know what are the chords for a C# Lydian with a raised 4th is??? Are you an amateur??" and his mirror reflection the Anti-theory snob "theory just limits your creativity man! Just..feeeeeeeeeelllll"
Though, I mean, if you're gonna play guitar, why not just learn chord naming conventions? It really isn't very hard at all if you know the conventions and they aren't that complicated. But hey each to their own.
I saw a sadly accurate example of the Nationality Snob in a review of a bass once. It was along the lines of, "This bass was incredible, it felt great to play, the finish was flawless, the sound was amazing. I would have given it 5 stars but then I discovered it was made in Indonesia, so I've knocked it down to 4."
The thing is that it doesn’t matter where the guitar is made in. Guitar making is actually not advanced and it’s relatively easy to make a great guitar. It’s not like building satellites or industrial turbines.
When I bought my Telecaster, I had an American and a Mexican that my choice was between. I had the guitar store employee help me out in a blind test to see which I liked more. I closed my eyes and tried both guitars, and the Mexican one had a better feel and sound, so I bought it instead. I would have spent a grand for the American one that I didn't like as much, opposed to $700 for what is still my favourite guitar.
You need to understand that the only good tones come from a thousand year old tree in an endangered species that only exists in a small area in the deepest African jungles. Anything else is useless.
Sadly, its true! You have NO idea, how many people came into my shop and played Smoke On The Water wrong! (I even had to teach my BOSS, who is the head educator how to play it, as he too, played the riff incorrectly! (70s rock is my specialty!))
The "loaded parents bought my guitar" snob, you know , the kid with the Gibson SG Special who makes fun of the kid who mowed lawns all summer for a used Fender strat at the pawn shop.
Ah yes. The satisfaction with those spoiled types is that ultimately that guitar will sit in the corner gathering dust for 6 - 12months once little jimmy realises expensive guitars dont make you *insert rock god here* and eventually finds its way at a massive loss to someone like me via ebay. Whislt the used fender will be loved and cherished because the kid thats brought it earned it and is less likely to give up at the first sign of adversity.
I replaced a lead guitarist in a local band who was a touch snobby. None of the members knew his parts and didn't have enough time to teach me their album. I had to learn their album from start to finish then at the first gig i played with them the ex guitarist showed up, found himself a spot directly infront of me and carefully analysed my playing all night. Whist i was having my post show beer he approached me and started correcting any riff I played even slightly incorrectly and interrogated me based on my choice of guitar. When we were in the process of writing a follow up album he kept texting the band to offer to write songs, as if I didn't know how to write a fucking metalcore song.
@Bryan Charles oh yeah. For the record I consider what I said to be a compliment... I have mad respect for both of those dudes. They've def accomplished more than anyone I know. 😎
@Bryan Charles that's a lotta close 2nds lol, but after all it's pretty reasonable for Waits... He's probably one of the more underrated artists in the history of recorded music
Tyler. You are a brilliant musician, and make absolutely hilarious videos. Everything you have mentioned here is so true. Been to some stores, and the have seen this very thing. I’m 67 and have been playing for about 48 years. Totally enjoy your work. It makes me laugh. Thanks.
I can't imagine your struggle. They seriously make barely anything left-handed. At least as far as color and body shape is concerned. Plus shops rarely have more than two or three of them. So you either have to buy online or settle for something that has strings and pickups.
Are you sure, I'm not about myself. :D I was adamant about getting an Ibanez and only Ibanez as my first guitar. Narrowed my choices quite a bit. :D And would be another snob sign choosing an old Japan made one over new Indonesian one...? Kinda the only demand not met would be a different bridge (meant to buy fixed, ended up with a Floyd Rose). Though I know I will consider other brands when I'm hunting for the second one. I feel like my life won't be complete without having a Flying V. :D
@@MuppetVT In compare to right-handed, they really don't. I wanted an Ibanez and it was like 10 guitars to choose from (if we're talking new). Though Solar has even less - they have around 100 options for "normal" people and exactly 3 for lefties - all boring matte black, Superstrat, Flying V and 7-string. Very hard to choose from such a vast collection... :D And I did end up buying online as our local shop (small) had only one lefty (electric, didn't ask about acoustic) and I didn't like that - didn't like the colour, the finish nor the shape :D).
There is also the opposite: the guy that will call every guitars that does not have 24 strings, fanned frets and the lastest active pickups on the market a "grampa instrument".
"It doesn´t have a sustainiac neck pickup with an active EMG split coil neck humbucker, 8 strings evertune bridge with piezo pickup, touch MIDI tone filter controller with stereo output and locking tuners? Man, my grandfather´s grandfather used to play that Jackson King V."
@@nehemiahzo_ not necessarily, even on a normal guitar the notes are thrown off,if you want a guitar with which you can play notes spot on buy a squiggly fretted one (true temperament guitar),the idea of a fanned fretted guitar is to have equal tension on each string,in order to do that they make the distance between the nut and bridge longer for the thicker strings,so let's say there's a fan fretted guitar,the high E will have the regular scale length,the B will have a longer scale length to even out the tension,the G will have a longer scale length,and so on and so on. Sure maybe on the bends you're gonna get something weird but I doubt it,the only place you're gonna have issues with are the frets above 18, especially on a 24 fretted one,I cannot comprehend how people got used to those frets.
The music genre snob is the one that gets me most. Also the technical snob that craps on songs if they don't have a million notes played weirdly in them and won't entertain the idea that just because a song has a simple structure in it, doesn't automatically make it a bad song.
I've experienced #5. Years ago I was picking up my '93 Fender MIM Strat from a music shop after having some work done. The Luthier brought my guitar out from the back room and went over his work while a sales guy (who looked like Ned Flanders) stood nearby. After the Luthier left, the sales guy was told to ring me up and while I was paying for the work the sales guy was looking at my guitar and commented that it was a nice Strat. Then, as I was closing the guitar case, he abruptly stated, "Wait!" and he pointed to the "Made In Mexico" decal on the headstock and said that he hadn't noticed that the guitar was a Mexican model and commented that the guitar was not as nice as he first thought.
I was a protection snob for a while, but then I got a more steady job and enjoyed playing more and started (slowly) to put them on racks and hooks on the walls. Some I still keep in the case because I don’t want to have to dust them off because of how little I play them, but otherwise I sell what I don’t like, play what I do, and keep what’s rare.
I own an airplane which I’ll occasionally take to shows. The worst thing I hear is “Oh, buddy, is this your plane? Oh it is? Good, I just straightened out this bit on the back, it was out of line.” Then, after the show, I have to spend a good 30 minutes trying to re-trim my airplane.
@@baldbearded9601 Or they are just giving their opinion. People are allowed to have opinions, no matter how unsubstantiated they are. I personally don't like PRS, mainly for the sound. I don't think they sound as good as other guitars on the market. I also don't like the price of a lot of PRS guitars. And, the only PRS' I've been able to play had glossy necks which were sticky and just felt wrong. I don't base my opinion off of those experiences, though, because if I did, my opinion would be based off of two experiences at my local guitar center, which would be very unfair to the brand
@@isaacthecorncob Why do you actually defend this guy? You actually gave your opinion. He just insulted people while making a dumb joke. And at least you have a reason to dislike it. It can't please everyone! But you didn't talk shit about it. If you know guitars, you will have noticed the quality of build of PRS guitars. They are the most consistent in terms of quality. Way ahead of the big brands unless you go "custom shops" kinda stuff. If you tell someone PRS is trash, you instantly showcase your absolute ignorance in terms of guitar quality. I stand by that. And I commented because OP seemed surprised that Tyler prioritises PRS.. well he's an endorsed artist.. duh! Cheers
@@isaacthecorncob why does everyone keep playing the "opinion" card as if people are supposed to be quiet while they give they "opinion?" Commenting on an opinion isn't suppressing the right to an opinion, it is itself an opinion. That's the thing about opinions, they're subjective, therefore opinions can be discussed with other opinions if they don't agree with said opinion, and if I say "opinion" 2 more times, I'd have said "opinion" 12 times in this whole opinionated response.
This describes most guitarists. In fact there's a little snob in all of us. Wether the beast is unleashed is on the individual /m/ "I need a new pick, this is broken." Best laugh today, thanks brotha
The effects snob: those that only play with a million and one effect pedals because they don’t want you to know they can’t play at all. Don’t get me wrong, effects are nice and all, but if all you’re doing is playing one string or playing like 3 power chords and using a pedal to make you sound like you know what you’re doing, then you need to practice more.
As a shoegazer i agree and disagree at the same time. Because on one hand yeah people who use a bunch of pedals just to mask that they cant do shit suck especially if they claim they're good. However if a person uses guitar pedals because they like the sound and know what chord voicings to use and when and being able to identify exactly how to get the tone that they are looking for i would say that they are a good guitar player. Additionally i also see the side which just says "why dont you just play a synth" i have been asked this and in response i said quote "guitar has strings feel good" Either way i can agree with you chaps. Sorry if this is long winded i just wamted to share my view.
Emilio ocotl well yea. Like Metallica obviously uses a wah pedal mixed with distortions and they sound awesome live. They also play clean and sound just as great. And you got bands like Pink Floyd that uses effects but still sound VERY good. Then you got the bands that just hammer and use effects and play power chords with DEEP distortion because they suck and can’t play any better. Perfect examples I can think of are bands like linkin park and papa roach and deftones. I always HATED those bands.
Snobs are terrible the only time I had someone insulting my Cobain jaguar it’s my main guitar. But he doesn’t play guitar or know anything about it. I wasn’t having it so it did pissed me off. But I like how that jaguar plays and sounds it’s awesome for me. He said that it’s not a real guitar I told him to fuck off.
Bryan Charles Honestly dude you shouldn’t have such negativity towards any electric guitar unless it’s an absolute lemon. But other than that you’re missing out man
"Harley Benton is trash/Squier is trash/Epiphone is average at best." I had one like that at my school dorm, he had an old american made les paul. I still outplayed him in the soloing contest, with my affordable Harley Benton 335 copy. Tools aren't as important as the artisan.
Take your usual Gibson-Les Paul Snob. Is around 50 years old, owns a 6.000 bucks reissue, owns an old Marshal Tube Amp, can‘t play anything besides „Sweet Child o‘ mine“. And that is the exact same guy who talks shit about everything new Gibson is producing, forcing them to produce the same crap over and over again while not buying anything, forcing the company to go bankrupt.
Currently have Elixirs on one guitar. Ernie balls on the other because I have sweaty hands and wanted to see the difference. Been about 3-4 weeks. Ernie balls are black. Elixirs look fine. Some people can't stand the feel or tone but idk man I think I'm just gonna keep using Elixirs.
I've met the tuning snob before. Spent more time tuning than recording and trying to get ideas down. I'm like "this guy must have amazing hearing cause it sounds fine to me". Ha, ive come to realize that I don't think there is such thing as a perfect tune on a guitar.
The "brand snob" comes to mind. The guy who says "gibson (or insert other brand) is the only guitar worth having" and wont even fathom trying other brands
A close relative to the Nationality Snob, the Brand Snob will vilify any off brand company that copies their beloved brand's guitar even in the face of overwhelming evidence that the off brand guitar offers the same, if not better playing experience at a fraction of the cost.
Just do NOT mention any of the brands flaws to the Brand Snob as they will rant for three and a half hours about how the flaws aren't actually flaws from the brand, but rather caused by the owner for "not treating the instrument properly"
1. Jackson USA Custom Shop/ESP Custom Shop 2. Jackson USA Artist/ESP Signature 3. Jackson USA Select/ESP "Series" line/Charvel USA Best products, best customer service, and appreciating rapidly. Gibson was the worst customer service experience that I've ever dealt with. I don't care if Jimmy Page played a Les Paul.
I don’t like the way he portrayed the nationality snob. There are more people who refuse to play any American guitar than people who only play American guitars.
Hey there "rock star" I play and watch shows and I cross my arms when i watch I'm appreciating what I'm seeing possibly pick up a trick or two , hope I didn't upset you "rock star" maybe take it as a compliment
Pretty sure most of us feel some of these ways. Having nice gear is cool. It takes a lot of time but I don't think I had more fun than when I was nailing Green Day by ear in middle school on my Epiphone SG and Beringher amp.
My first teacher was definitely "the protective snob". I remember he had tonnes of cases around the walls of his garage/studio. One day I broke my first electric (les paul epiphone plustop) and he had told me he was wanting to sell one of his old ones, and all of a sudden brings out what was about to be my second guitar- PRS SE. Cool dude, thanks Steve.
I did a one off show for this amazing teen singer doing a showcase or something and she wanted to do Paramore, Still Into You. A guy came up to me after the set and was saying it sounded good, but he couldn't help but notice I was hitting a wrong chord in the chorus or something. I was like oh? what chord. He said well I saw you were on the 2nd fret , but that chord is E. Something to that effect. I said wellllll...the song is in drop D so I was playing E. Like dude, did it sound wrong or just look wrong? Use your ears. Notice that low D in the bridge how do you think you hit that low note?
Eliju lmao I was playing Johnny b Goode at my grandparents party once cuz they asked if i could play for a while and entertain ppl with a band of old musicians they knew. I don’t play the Johnny b Goode intro or solo note fir note I play the way that I think sounds good but after we were done playing some guy was like u played the intro wrong and I was like oh what part and what r the correct notes and he was just like idk I don’t play guitar...like ok damn (and the way I play it is close enough I can play it over the actual song and get a pretty good match)
I love the Martin players who scoff at my Carlo Robelli, until they see it has locking Grover tuners, a bone nut, bone bridge tailpiece, and fretboard so oiled that it looks like kitchen table.
Cutaway guitars are amazing, like bruh I wanna be able to play 3-string barres on fret 16, thanks. As a fingerstyle player, being limited to barre only ip to fret-14 would suck.
Yes and no, there is a difference between being a snob and having a preference. It's when you belittle things you don't like because they aren't what you like that it becomes snobby. Example, I really don't like flying V's. I think they look stupid, and I also don't like bolt on necks, and i prefer rosewood fret boards. These just aren't my cup of tea. But if someone were to hand me a flying v with a bolt on neck and a standard maple fretboard my first instinct wouldn't be to beat it across every available surface and burn the remains, I'd still plug it in and try it.
I can totally understand the "nationality guy". I'm french dreaming of an american made les paul but i know some peoples who will play only on french made guitars just to support local luthiers, i think thats a pretty cool thing to do if you ask me ! but yeah if some peoples do this just out of snobism i can totally understand how this type of person ende up in the video
There was a point in time where I’d gotten a huge promotion at work, and was making about 4 times more money that I had been previously and I started buying a guitar or amp about every month for a year or so. The guys I was in a band with labeled me a guitar snob because I was going out and buying so much gear and felt as though I was rubbing their faces in shit by doing something that made me happy.
As a guitar tech: The low action snob, comes back after a setup because action is not low enough, then comes back because he experiences fretbuzz, then comes back because he want lower action, etc, etc..
I feel you, Leo......recently had some 'friends' and even family complain I play guitar too much, only to later that day go on about having me play Freebird or Stairway. Not the whole song, mind you, just the riffs.
I used to be a vintage gear snob that would scoff at people for using a POD, yet I was super crap at guitar. Luckily I got over that phase, and now I'm just a normal guy that's super crap at guitar
Ahh yes, the "Everyone is pretentious except me" snob. These guys are real easy to identify, just ask them what pretentious means and they will verbally crap themselves.
Basically any guitarist who can shred. People also accuse John Petrucci and I am like have you not heard A Change of Seasons, The Spirit Carries On or Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence because how can you listen to those and say he has no feel? I think this all started with Yngvie and then started spreading to other guitarists since then(Not saying Yngvie has no feel, but I feel he is the first high profile guitarist to be seen as having no feel)
Here’s another: the Electrician. The Electrician believes that the only real guitars worth playing are electric guitars. Acoustic guitars, to the Electrician, are a crime against humanity and ought to be outlawed.
When I was in college I had someone count my frets telling me there was not as many as his, so mine must a 3/4, then time passed and I got a bc rich warlock and he said it was fake because he did not recognise the serial number.
“The Cheapskate” Constantly goes to guitar stores and plays guitars he clearly can’t afford and calls them “too cheap” or “not as good as the one he has” and makes excuses when the employees ask if he wants to buy the guitar. Leaves without buying anything, Having only wasting the employees time.
See! I always get self conscious about this, so I have a philosophy, never touch what you can’t afford, play something within your realistic price range. And if you don’t intend to buy anything, I at least buy some strings, a key ring, a strap, picks or a pedal, cause that’s the nice thing to do. Them’s my rules whenever I go in a Guitar Center or any music store.
@@CCAndPinkie how do know the difference between a high end feeling, sounding guitar and squire bullet? So in the event you happen across a partscaster or a second hand off brand guitar that is comparable to highend or better, you understand the value and not to flip it on a whim?
@@Emma-kz3zr as someone who plays a squire bullet but has nicer guitars it is the intonation. Learn a classical piece or anything that has microtonal aspects and you will see what I mean. Of course tone because tone wood but that is subjective.
Nah, you deliberately play a guitar that you can't afford, Just cos you're killing time... Then you end up buying it!!! Those devilish employees know what they're doing.
Funny is when one of those guys meets a sales guy who is also one.. It becomes a comedy show. There are no limits and so funny to watch. Remember once at my local shop. They were talking gear. It was model numbers here and years things were made there and where they were made and who invented and so on.. I just stood and listened and had a great time. Loved it. Nerds incorporated. It really made my day.😊
Ah yes. The "Nationality Snob." The most frequent of snobs I'd get when I worked at Guitar Center. Refuses to buy a well crafted and great sounding Epiphone Les Paul over a mediocre, overpriced Gibson Les Paul because *'Merica*
Partly, i can understand this snob. USA-Gibson is more price-stable and can be even worth more after some yrs...an Epiphone will rarely do this. And than, its some kind of worshiping history: The original is an original. The meaning of this may be different for all of us...but i can understand someone seeking for that. About the prices: You do not only buy an instrument. You buy also the guarantee, that the workers who build this, have rights and a (more or less) fair pay.
I’d love to own a Gibson, but I also really wish I still had my white epiphone les Paul studio, that was my first guitar. Maybe it’s because I didn’t know jack about guitars, but that thing felt and sounded amazing. You don’t need expensive gear, just something decent and a positive outlook.
These types are sad- Epi's in the last few years, and Schecter's for a long time now, have been better than a low end Gibson of the same make/model. "Won't play/buy a Mexican Gibson/Fender" fall into this category, too. Heck, the guys in CA and Mexico switch back and forth and work the same lines sometimes, so what's on the headstock was probably touched by both groups anyway. I loved my Epis and Schecter, and it was only a few years after where I was in a place where I could afford Gibsons and an Ibanez- but id argue that the differences are minute. Im guilty, too, for getting the 'named' model. I DID give my Schecter and Epi's to people that I KNEW would use them, enjoy them, and appreciate them as a considerable upgrade over what they had at the time, though, so I feel like my music karma is balanced.
Guitar companies perpetuate this. Whenever they're selling to a price-point, they offshore the build and downgrade the hardware. Are we really supposed to believe that Indonesians and Koreans don't know how to carve wood properly!
@@paulapplewhite6135 Exactly. I wouldn't buy an overseas PRS, not because I doubt they're well made, but I know they skimp on certain things and I'd rather just pay more and have any corners cut. My mexi strat plays great, but the electronics were terrible. Upgraded to SSL-1s and now it sings.
9: The one who mocks players for not knowing anything about music theory ( Im number 10: the one who is genuinly interested in music theory and no matter if you are interested or not, i will explain everything about music theory i know)
the "better than clapton" snob, they dont know how to even play but tell everyone there better than clapton and when they get asked to play they say "your not cultured enough for my skills" (this one is 100% real, my old neighbour owned 16 guitars and couldnt even hold them properly and didnt even know a thing about them, but claimed hed been playing 40+ years despite the fact he was 34. the guy had a ego the size of the moon)
I kind of do the opposite of your neighbor. Technically, I've been playing for 20ish years if you count how long I've owned guitars ... but if you count the times I've stopped playing and started up again, maybe we're looking at 3 or 4 years. Any my (in)ability to play kind or really shows it.
Maybe appropriate statement here. I'm late 70's I made an emergency Sears catalog order with 2 day store delivery. Just moved across 2 states, My possessions couldn't be found. I shared the moving company truck with another family moving to the same state. I ordered a no name Sears Les Paul copy for $79.00 for a gig in 3 days. It was a beautiful red sunburst, bolt on neck, and single coils hidden in humbucker cases. Set it up, replaced strings, played it at gig. Once I tweaked the eq on the borrowed amp it was a HOOT to play. Some tuning problems. I liked it so much I upgraded the tuners and pickups and played it for years on specific songs at gigs. It was stolen as we loaded in a gig. Funny thing, it was worth the least of anything in the van. That guitar showed me the name on the headstock didn't mean much then, and less now. I have big name gear but also some less desirable names too.
The Type Snob: Certain types of guitars are only allowed to play certain types of music. You cant play metal on a tele, idc if it has humbuckers. You cant play blues with an explorer. You cant play country with a flying v.
Pick thickness, string core, cable length, cable tyoe, string Guage, single coil, humbucker, pickup pole height, active pickups, intonation, how much pressure is applied whne fretting, what part of your finger frets the strings, how you hold the neck, how you angle the pick, the Amp head you use, the speaker(s) used, speaker combination, cabinet angle, raised off the ground or not, what tubes do you use if any, scale length of the guitar, tremolo system or not, bone nut or metal, how high is your action, and so many other questions are too be asked to really Guage the sound one makes with a guitar. A guitar is merely a tool. If it's not an acoustic then you're not playing guitar. You're manipulating the frequencies emitting from the speaker. The notes just happen to be on the guitar. Which is why you don't focus on them as much as the sound. I mean, you don't focus on the inflection of certain letters or words as you're speaking do you? Because playing guitar is akin to speaking because music is literally a whole nother language. But people forget that and see it as a serious business like endeavor instead of the art and emotional conveyer and inner world translator that it is. Which is both parts disappointing and pathetic. It's understandable to want to know everything someone else does in creating music and how they go about it and what gear. So, why aren't you asking about their car? Or how they drive? Or the clothes that they wear? Or the coffee they drink? Or their morning routine? Yknow, the things that attribute them to who and how they are in thus giving a clear picture of the choices they make and reasons they decided to do as such. But, no. People like pixels and not the whole picture. So they forgo understanding art as it is and figure they need every single thing first. I'm sorry. You can study Mozart all you want. But how are you going to be known for your own things if you're constantly trying to replicate someone else's?
Gibson snob: Believes that the Les Paul is the one and only true guitar to own, the SG lineup is for kids that think they are cool and every other shape or form the guitar's body or neckstock may have is deplorable. The Gibson snob is a combination of every snob you just listed in the video, the absolute worst of all guitar snobs. Equivalent to a brand royal Harley-Davidson boomer, that talks shit about everything new and anything different, essentially making possible new buyer distance themselves from the brand just because of the image it's gotten from it's old loyalists, that aren't bringing anymore money to the company, ultimately dooming them completely and forcing them to file for bankruptcy.... Oops. Price/resale value snob: The numbers on the pricetag matter more than the guitar itself. Most often doesn't even know how to play the guitar and has it displayed as more of a decorative piece than anything else, continuously bragging about how much the guitar cost and how much they can get for it, should they sell it again later. In a price snobs eyes, the higher the price tag, the more rare the guitar has to be. Hivemind snob: Their opinion keeps changing by every comment they read and depending on who's being called "stupid" first in the comments, the snob will ally and side themselves with the opinion of the person doing the name calling. But should a more well known celebrity, internet personality or magazine make a contradicting comment about whatever guitar related discussion going on, the snob will immediately change their opinions about the matter and claim "Yes, this is what my opinion has always been about this thing". Fan snob: The only gear to have and own, is the one the target or idolization may have, lmao
Nu-Metal snob: Would only play Ibanez or Jackson with the neck pick-up ripped out. Tuned down to C because "muh, heavy". Don't understand how valve amps operate or the value of reverb. Anything that looks old is "cheesy" and of are the firm belief that rap and rock go together. Also believe "the more pedals used, the better the sound". They play staring at their own shoes and haven't washed their credlocks for 6 months. The PRS snob: Firmly of the belief that the company have successfully merged the best attributes of Fender and Gibson. Hates the tops of Les Pauls and can see no similarity between the two at all. Laud the sound as "clear and crisp" despite it having almost no character of its own. Players likely work in insurance and have limited personality. Have caught up to Gibson snobs but lack the money to actually surpass them.
The Gibson Snob will also freak out if you replace a knob, a pickup, or even think about installing straplocks on a Les Paul. Heaven forbid your volume pot craps out and you have to replace it.
The funniest thing is giving those Gibson snobs a „Maybach Lester“ to test. You‘ll see immediately in their eyes that the Maybach outplays the Gibson reissues in almost every way. But they won‘t admit it...they almost get a stroke and then fall into that good old „Well, it‘s nothing more than a well made copy, I‘m not that impressed.“ Always gives me a good laugh. It‘s just lovely to see their Brand-Castle crumbling in their heads. But they would never in a million years admit that. What a bunch of obnoxious Fan-Boys.
I got a squire telecaster and restored it and put a seymour duncan hotrails pickup in the bridge. This is one of my favorite guitars, sounding good is sounding good. And it is very transverse. If you can sound good with something, that's what you want.
The melancholic snob. He keeps saying "Oh! Yes! Back when I was a guitar noob I used a [insert gear] like that" And you're there thinking "Dude, I've seen you play, you kindda still are a guitar beginner..." hahaha
The setup snob: Only plays guitars they set up themselves or had set up by their luthier/tech of choice. "Nobody else knows how to do it right" The pickup snob: Only ever plays humbuckers/single coils/actives and belittles anyone who plays anything else "Those sound like crap" The wood snob: Never plays any guitars with any wood they consider to be inferior, despite how they objectively sound "Ugh, alder?!" The technique snob: Considers any alternative techniques for playing to be illegitimate/unearned even when warranted "Dude tapping doesn't count"
Had a nationality snob employee at GC keep telling me "The guitar sucks, it's from China....But it's from CHINA..You gotta buy American" Bruh, I just want to buy a pickguard.
Back when I was in a band in the 80's and early 90's, A LOT of us got shit on for playing BC Rich "All flash, no substance" . Pardon me for liking to play something that looks a little different. I'm not particularly enamoured of the Strat style (tho those 80's Charvel guitars with the crackle finishes looked awesome) but I've never blasted anyone for playing them...you play what you like. What diference does it make?
my dad thinks its all tone. with me I gotta like what the guitar looks like, the tone can come later with pick-ups, set up and amp. I have to like how it looks first and foremost, then how it feels. the tone to me, I can do anything later on with amps, pedals, pick ups. its gotta look cool and feel good. amp settings and ect. can make anything sound good. I wouldn't play a banjo that sounded like Bostons lead tone straight outta the box lol, its not me.
@@JB-ju4ev That was the whole thing for me. I loved how B C Rich felt in my hands. They are comfortable, the necks didn't feel like I was holding a bowling pin, and they looked great. I was lucky enough to get two US made ones second hand, so they sounded great. Swapped the Dimarzios out for Seymours, and I was set to go. I once got a Kramer Nightswan coz I loved the graphic on it, figured I'd get used to the thicker neck. Nope, never could. I sold it.
Music Is Win Reactions 1. It's Pathetic 0:57 2. What A Know It All, Pitiful! 1:26 3. Eh, Get Away From Me 1:51 4. Just Deplorable 2:17 5. Atrocious 2:36 6. Barbaric 3:22 7. Rotten 3:47 8. Sad 4:06
I had a “friend” in high school who constantly gave me a hard time in front of people because i only knew how to play 2 songs from start to finish. He knew how to play more songs than me but only knew opening riffs and all of them sounded sloppy. I’ll take knowing how to play 2-3 songs well v.s only knowing the beginning of many songs and playing them poorly.
I call those people living room virtuosos. People who can riff and shred but can’t solidly play start to finish let alone write a song. They care more about fuelling their egos than musicianship and serving the song. Annoying eh?
@@JB-ju4ev Lawyers and dentists who own "Bursts" (aka original 58-60 Les Pauls with sunburst finishes) sometimes hang out together with their guitars, take some pictures to be posted on the Les Paul Forum and then wax poetic about the benefits of original plastic parts on the overall guitar tone and about how many times they've carefully analysed Joe Bonamassa's live rig. These "burst hangs" then hopefully lead to forum threads with lots of beardy-strokey replies from the internet experts.
Imagine knowing this guy in real life, as I do. I know someone who bought 3 overpriced epiphones, a huge tube amp that is too loud for his apt. Over 20 pedals, among so much more. Times I've seen him play, 0 (ZERO) no joke.
I have an extensive collection of ukuleles. Almost nobody that comes to my house sees me play them... because I'm not about to invite you over so I can sing songs by myself on the corner. I do that when I'm alone.
I fit in to this one but I do practice once an while just really late an very seldom. Why my setup is still in its planning an organized stages missing key parts to actually record. Coming together but slowly not wanting to stumble on some good material an have no way to record an document the process. IE for legal reasons from concept to finish work i will have 100% proof of concept. While it may be crazy so is being sued an losing it all. An it does suck id rather be active but my final pieces are costing me retail which on my budget is extremely difficult.
keep your Line6 Spyder away from me bro
Hey you should read Rain(webcomic) by Jocelyn Samara
I call them cork sniffers.
can i get a discount on your course?
"I only use the most expensive amps. All tube amps are garbage"
You should’ve done the Gibson snob, you know, the guy who only buys Gibson’s made in Kalamazoo and doesn’t touch Nashville made ones?
People who belittle beginners for playing basic riffs
Same. I never played basic riffs and "overplayed" songs due to the fear of being made fun of.
Astolfo please dont be they’ll just see u as a beginner
@@anuvette I on the other hand have made it my mission to learn all the overplayed songs and riffs. I relish on the agony of players who they annoy.
Sorry I forgot to add that it was when I was a beginner. I later changed my mind and learned them because I honestly love some of the songs. Especially seven nations army because it's a very popular football chant
The only time I have an issue with beginners is when they play too loud or think they're amazing. Other than that, everyone starts somewhere so I don't really mind
Definitely missing the theory snob, who won't even talk to you about guitar unless you can identify a weird chord that sounds like an algebraic expression
The theory snob"WHAT? you don't know what are the chords for a C# Lydian with a raised 4th is??? Are you an amateur??" and his mirror reflection the Anti-theory snob "theory just limits your creativity man! Just..feeeeeeeeeelllll"
Though, I mean, if you're gonna play guitar, why not just learn chord naming conventions? It really isn't very hard at all if you know the conventions and they aren't that complicated. But hey each to their own.
Aka Jazz elitists 🙄
@@fahadalghamdi9316 Spot on, I'd say anti theory is by far more prevalent. "Theory will limit my natural creativity..." ...
Don't even get him started on tabs
I saw a sadly accurate example of the Nationality Snob in a review of a bass once. It was along the lines of, "This bass was incredible, it felt great to play, the finish was flawless, the sound was amazing. I would have given it 5 stars but then I discovered it was made in Indonesia, so I've knocked it down to 4."
The thing is that it doesn’t matter where the guitar is made in. Guitar making is actually not advanced and it’s relatively easy to make a great guitar. It’s not like building satellites or industrial turbines.
When I bought my Telecaster, I had an American and a Mexican that my choice was between. I had the guitar store employee help me out in a blind test to see which I liked more. I closed my eyes and tried both guitars, and the Mexican one had a better feel and sound, so I bought it instead. I would have spent a grand for the American one that I didn't like as much, opposed to $700 for what is still my favourite guitar.
Good salesman.
@@snoopyguy21 He was probably upset that he didn't make more off commission, but he was extremely helpful to me.
@@hamshankscps1049 he made the more reliable sale instead of trying to go for the higher commission.
@@snoopyguy21 Yup! Good service like that means you'll go back to that particular salesman time after time......
Dude this is uncanny, same exact thing happened to me but with a strat. I’ve never played a guitar that sounds better than my mim strat.
What if I'm all of them? o_O
You are a next level Ola, you even started your own guitar factory. That's hard to beat.
Ola is a burp snob. He started his own guitar company just so he could add stomach gas to his brand.
Atleast you know how to turn a garbage into gold. Unlike Tyler 😂😂😂
No worries, help is on the way.
your comment sections are sometimes filled with guitar snobs
The obvious one that I haven't seen mentioned...."the 'tonewood' snob."
My favourite is that "Rosewood fingerboard has a deep tone"
@@torzsokszilveszter2444 love the feel of rosewood but if anyone thinks it makes much of a tone difference if any shouldnt be allowed to drive.
@@torzsokszilveszter2444 I like maple fingerboards more just because the look better imo. I wouldn't be able to tell the difference😂
You need to understand that the only good tones come from a thousand year old tree in an endangered species that only exists in a small area in the deepest African jungles. Anything else is useless.
@@toshineon And if you can't hear the difference, man, there's something wrong with you! 😀
The “no your playing it wrong snob” then they proceed to play it wrong.
oh yes! my guitar teacher!
That’s my friend up and down! XD
Sadly, its true! You have NO idea, how many people came into my shop and played Smoke On The Water wrong! (I even had to teach my BOSS, who is the head educator how to play it, as he too, played the riff incorrectly! (70s rock is my specialty!))
“nO OBamA You’RE dOinG iT wROnG”
*you're
The "loaded parents bought my guitar" snob, you know , the kid with the Gibson SG Special who makes fun of the kid who mowed lawns all summer for a used Fender strat at the pawn shop.
Ah yes. The satisfaction with those spoiled types is that ultimately that guitar will sit in the corner gathering dust for 6 - 12months once little jimmy realises expensive guitars dont make you *insert rock god here* and eventually finds its way at a massive loss to someone like me via ebay. Whislt the used fender will be loved and cherished because the kid thats brought it earned it and is less likely to give up at the first sign of adversity.
@@Joelay101 The Fender guy will definitely more likely become a rock god itself. Or a guitar god, at least...
Used Fender Strat is not that bad, actually. Much better than brand new chinese Fender Strat knockoff for $120
Ik how the lawn kid feels but I started building and trading
SG Special 🤢
I replaced a lead guitarist in a local band who was a touch snobby.
None of the members knew his parts and didn't have enough time to teach me their album.
I had to learn their album from start to finish then at the first gig i played with them the ex guitarist showed up, found himself a spot directly infront of me and carefully analysed my playing all night.
Whist i was having my post show beer he approached me and started correcting any riff I played even slightly incorrectly and interrogated me based on my choice of guitar.
When we were in the process of writing a follow up album he kept texting the band to offer to write songs, as if I didn't know how to write a fucking metalcore song.
Metal core sucks.
You sound as much like a guitar snob as any lmao
@@chetsenior7253 I mean personally I'm not opposed to it, nor am I a fan, but I prefer Melo-deth or thrash/black metal.
The Tuning Snob: The guy who considers open tunings, drop tunings, and even the use of a capo as cheating.
Or that those tunings are useless. "Just use standard"
"Only depressed suburban kids who shop at hot topic and listen to Slipknot play drop d tuning." -- Snob from the year 2000
Omg yes!
Or the ones who use all "special tunings" and therefore if you don't, you are "old".
Me: *dances in open D*
The look that says "I don't knew who I idolize more between M Shadows and Tom Waits, so I just aspire to become both of them at once"
Haha 69 likes
@Bryan Charles oh yeah. For the record I consider what I said to be a compliment... I have mad respect for both of those dudes. They've def accomplished more than anyone I know. 😎
@Bryan Charles that's a lotta close 2nds lol, but after all it's pretty reasonable for Waits... He's probably one of the more underrated artists in the history of recorded music
I'm a huge A7X fan and I will always say Matt has one of the most dynamic voices I've ever heard
I have never heard a more accurate description of an outfit/vibe! Well done.
Tyler. You are a brilliant musician, and make absolutely hilarious videos. Everything you have mentioned here is so true. Been to some stores, and the have seen this very thing. I’m 67 and have been playing for about 48 years. Totally enjoy your work. It makes me laugh. Thanks.
Only Blayze can pull off the snob style perfectly.
Lemon Grass SAME HERE
marty music, Paul davids, Sean Daniel, music is win, guitar pilgrim, and samurai guitarist, to name a few
agreed
I think playing guitar left handed actually makes you immune to being a guitar snob, like I’ll literally use anything aslong as I can play it
I am a fellow lefty and I don't shun anyone who uses a unknowned guitar brand
@@ctom0641 same
I can't imagine your struggle. They seriously make barely anything left-handed. At least as far as color and body shape is concerned. Plus shops rarely have more than two or three of them. So you either have to buy online or settle for something that has strings and pickups.
Are you sure, I'm not about myself. :D I was adamant about getting an Ibanez and only Ibanez as my first guitar. Narrowed my choices quite a bit. :D And would be another snob sign choosing an old Japan made one over new Indonesian one...? Kinda the only demand not met would be a different bridge (meant to buy fixed, ended up with a Floyd Rose).
Though I know I will consider other brands when I'm hunting for the second one. I feel like my life won't be complete without having a Flying V. :D
@@MuppetVT In compare to right-handed, they really don't. I wanted an Ibanez and it was like 10 guitars to choose from (if we're talking new). Though Solar has even less - they have around 100 options for "normal" people and exactly 3 for lefties - all boring matte black, Superstrat, Flying V and 7-string. Very hard to choose from such a vast collection... :D
And I did end up buying online as our local shop (small) had only one lefty (electric, didn't ask about acoustic) and I didn't like that - didn't like the colour, the finish nor the shape :D).
My first guitar was an offbrand strat. The next christmas after i learned basic riffs i got an epiphone sg. Best guitar i’ve ever owned
There is also the opposite: the guy that will call every guitars that does not have 24 strings, fanned frets and the lastest active pickups on the market a "grampa instrument".
"It doesn´t have a sustainiac neck pickup with an active EMG split coil neck humbucker, 8 strings evertune bridge with piezo pickup, touch MIDI tone filter controller with stereo output and locking tuners? Man, my grandfather´s grandfather used to play that Jackson King V."
Man I hate those guys. Fanned frets and active pickups suck anyway
@@nehemiahzo_ fanned frets are sick actually since it makes doing some chords a little bit more natural but yeah active pickups aren't my thing
Communalcamp968 Benny checa I’ve never really tried fanned frets, but I’ve heard that they throw off the notes. Is that true?
@@nehemiahzo_ not necessarily, even on a normal guitar the notes are thrown off,if you want a guitar with which you can play notes spot on buy a squiggly fretted one (true temperament guitar),the idea of a fanned fretted guitar is to have equal tension on each string,in order to do that they make the distance between the nut and bridge longer for the thicker strings,so let's say there's a fan fretted guitar,the high E will have the regular scale length,the B will have a longer scale length to even out the tension,the G will have a longer scale length,and so on and so on.
Sure maybe on the bends you're gonna get something weird but I doubt it,the only place you're gonna have issues with are the frets above 18, especially on a 24 fretted one,I cannot comprehend how people got used to those frets.
I think this was just an excuse for him to flex his guitar collection
Would you blame him? It's a nice collection, lol.
@@TheWrathsblade I wouldn't
You must be new here
Like every video? Hehe. Tbh I kinda like it for his other videos because they're like time stamps.
@@freq9939 Do you know his address? If you do contact me on the Dark net.
The music genre snob is the one that gets me most. Also the technical snob that craps on songs if they don't have a million notes played weirdly in them and won't entertain the idea that just because a song has a simple structure in it, doesn't automatically make it a bad song.
can this snob pick up an acoustic guitar and entertain a group who just wants to sing-along??
Fuckin hate these guys. They're why I never open the comments section on music instagram.
I can’t help but notice Tyler looks an awful lot like all these snobs he’s showing us, do you have something to tell us.
U r the first lol
pepsi and vaccines contain soylent green
what are you insinuating sir
@@MusicisWin lots of brothers!
Getting rumdy amdobe vibes here
I've experienced #5. Years ago I was picking up my '93 Fender MIM Strat from a music shop after having some work done. The Luthier brought my guitar out from the back room and went over his work while a sales guy (who looked like Ned Flanders) stood nearby. After the Luthier left, the sales guy was told to ring me up and while I was paying for the work the sales guy was looking at my guitar and commented that it was a nice Strat. Then, as I was closing the guitar case, he abruptly stated, "Wait!" and he pointed to the "Made In Mexico" decal on the headstock and said that he hadn't noticed that the guitar was a Mexican model and commented that the guitar was not as nice as he first thought.
The only one you didn't mention is the Acoustic Snob. "What, your guitar runs on electricity? What's next, electric cars?"
Electric organ? Electric piano? 😱
and using computers +interfaces instead of tape machines?
Electric-acoustic guitars?
Lol! You just described a big chunk of the classical guitar community.
Sad elon musk noises
The laugh at the end is the exact reason why I love this channel because Tyler is himself and loves what he’s doing.
I was a protection snob for a while, but then I got a more steady job and enjoyed playing more and started (slowly) to put them on racks and hooks on the walls. Some I still keep in the case because I don’t want to have to dust them off because of how little I play them, but otherwise I sell what I don’t like, play what I do, and keep what’s rare.
honestly, if it holds tuning well...i'll play it.
And if not I'll bend it in. Still playing it, 'cause, well, it's a guitar after all.
I live by my own personal motto:
“If I can afford it, I’ll play it.”
@@ayjay579 me too
@@ayjay579 Same
that's half the reason I mostly use Floyd Rose and not everyone cuz I use the trem
alot and I can't afford evertune
When your guitar is in tune and the “Expert” tells you it isn’t and then proceeds to un-tune it.
that's my dad, and he's a drummer lol, its like no... that's what this chord sounds like
I KNOW BRO
I own an airplane which I’ll occasionally take to shows. The worst thing I hear is “Oh, buddy, is this your plane? Oh it is? Good, I just straightened out this bit on the back, it was out of line.” Then, after the show, I have to spend a good 30 minutes trying to re-trim my airplane.
Some eight year old kid told me my guitar is out of tune, i felt terrible after that
@@guitar_and_weed lol
"Guitarists with a huge collection are snobs", he said, standing in front of the wall of guitars
May I introduce: The Tyler
PRS > literaly everything other than PRS
He is officially endorsed by PRS. And if you talk shit about PRS you either never played one or know nothing about guitars.
@@baldbearded9601 Or they are just giving their opinion. People are allowed to have opinions, no matter how unsubstantiated they are. I personally don't like PRS, mainly for the sound. I don't think they sound as good as other guitars on the market. I also don't like the price of a lot of PRS guitars. And, the only PRS' I've been able to play had glossy necks which were sticky and just felt wrong. I don't base my opinion off of those experiences, though, because if I did, my opinion would be based off of two experiences at my local guitar center, which would be very unfair to the brand
@@isaacthecorncob Why do you actually defend this guy? You actually gave your opinion. He just insulted people while making a dumb joke.
And at least you have a reason to dislike it. It can't please everyone! But you didn't talk shit about it. If you know guitars, you will have noticed the quality of build of PRS guitars. They are the most consistent in terms of quality. Way ahead of the big brands unless you go "custom shops" kinda stuff.
If you tell someone PRS is trash, you instantly showcase your absolute ignorance in terms of guitar quality. I stand by that.
And I commented because OP seemed surprised that Tyler prioritises PRS.. well he's an endorsed artist.. duh!
Cheers
@@isaacthecorncob why does everyone keep playing the "opinion" card as if people are supposed to be quiet while they give they "opinion?" Commenting on an opinion isn't suppressing the right to an opinion, it is itself an opinion. That's the thing about opinions, they're subjective, therefore opinions can be discussed with other opinions if they don't agree with said opinion, and if I say "opinion" 2 more times, I'd have said "opinion" 12 times in this whole opinionated response.
Bald & Bearded hmmm... sounds like we got a Tyler in the chat
If you look closely you can see there is actually one type here: PRS snob. Ah, wait.
Right! lol
I identify as a PRS snob.
This describes most guitarists. In fact there's a little snob in all of us. Wether the beast is unleashed is on the individual /m/
"I need a new pick, this is broken." Best laugh today, thanks brotha
And there's the wannabe snob: the guy that wants to be a snob but can't afford the gear to be one.
LOL,....But a true snob wouldn't allow that to stop them,..they simply get on the net and crank up their snobbery anyway.
GOJU RYU!
@@nuclearsenshi 👊
me, neither can afford the skill, nor has good technique, it's the theory snob
Yeah I am
The price snob: the guy that won’t buy any guitar under 3,000 but he doesn’t know the difference between a $3,000 or a $450 guitar
One of the best comments.
I’m not a price snob mate
Honestly after about 750 its probably a case of deminishing returns
@@ApertureWarrior
That is Exactly right....After 750.00 - 800.00 you start paying for something that is hard to identify tangibly.
@@stricknine8623 After that, you're paying FOR the name! * Cough cough FENDER! * * Cough cough GIBSON!! *
The effects snob: those that only play with a million and one effect pedals because they don’t want you to know they can’t play at all. Don’t get me wrong, effects are nice and all, but if all you’re doing is playing one string or playing like 3 power chords and using a pedal to make you sound like you know what you’re doing, then you need to practice more.
Yes. I never play with more than two effects at a time, and the most common pair I use is distortion and flanger
As a shoegazer i agree and disagree at the same time. Because on one hand yeah people who use a bunch of pedals just to mask that they cant do shit suck especially if they claim they're good. However if a person uses guitar pedals because they like the sound and know what chord voicings to use and when and being able to identify exactly how to get the tone that they are looking for i would say that they are a good guitar player. Additionally i also see the side which just says "why dont you just play a synth" i have been asked this and in response i said quote "guitar has strings feel good" Either way i can agree with you chaps. Sorry if this is long winded i just wamted to share my view.
Emilio ocotl well yea. Like Metallica obviously uses a wah pedal mixed with distortions and they sound awesome live. They also play clean and sound just as great. And you got bands like Pink Floyd that uses effects but still sound VERY good. Then you got the bands that just hammer and use effects and play power chords with DEEP distortion because they suck and can’t play any better. Perfect examples I can think of are bands like linkin park and papa roach and deftones. I always HATED those bands.
No pedal will make you sound like you know what you're doing when you only know 3 power chords. You don't even know wtf you're talking about 🤣
@@J.C... did I just touch a nerve with you?
I once talked to guy while I was holding my 1962 vintage jaguar, and he said “I hate your guitar, it’s a fender.”
He said that. About a 62 Jag. That's sad that somebody would belittle it just because its Fender
Snobs are terrible the only time I had someone insulting my Cobain jaguar it’s my main guitar. But he doesn’t play guitar or know anything about it. I wasn’t having it so it did pissed me off. But I like how that jaguar plays and sounds it’s awesome for me. He said that it’s not a real guitar I told him to fuck off.
It's a Jag!!! How could you do that?
Bryan Charles Well dude not every single piece guitar are all that strong. Imagine you need a neck replacement.
Bryan Charles Honestly dude you shouldn’t have such negativity towards any electric guitar unless it’s an absolute lemon. But other than that you’re missing out man
"Harley Benton is trash/Squier is trash/Epiphone is average at best."
I had one like that at my school dorm, he had an old american made les paul.
I still outplayed him in the soloing contest, with my affordable Harley Benton 335 copy.
Tools aren't as important as the artisan.
Take your usual Gibson-Les Paul Snob. Is around 50 years old, owns a 6.000 bucks reissue, owns an old Marshal Tube Amp, can‘t play anything besides „Sweet Child o‘ mine“. And that is the exact same guy who talks shit about everything new Gibson is producing, forcing them to produce the same crap over and over again while not buying anything, forcing the company to go bankrupt.
@@flowryan5829 *intro to Sweet Child o Mine, because that same guy can't bend enough because he's afraid to damage the frets
My harley benton strat was great but my harley benton flying v was a lemon, theyre kinda like cars, you never know.
Gimme the most expensive guitar ever made, and I'll show you, how bad it is in my hands
Been really eyeballing Harley benton's telecaster lineup.
Literally never met any of these people. I still play a squire strat and everyone's still chill w me.
What about string snobs, where it has to be a certain material string or its trash?
1) unocated strings only
2) string gauge snobs
@@thenoobyXD the uncoated snobs bother me the most cause I cant play uncoated for more than a month (sweaty hands)
I’m kinda like that. I only use Ernie ball 9-42 paradigms, and can feel the difference between paradigms and other string types
Rotosound is the only bass string you should ever use! Lol
Currently have Elixirs on one guitar. Ernie balls on the other because I have sweaty hands and wanted to see the difference. Been about 3-4 weeks. Ernie balls are black. Elixirs look fine. Some people can't stand the feel or tone but idk man I think I'm just gonna keep using Elixirs.
Another snob: acoustic guitar players who think metal is talent less when all they can play is wonder wall
I've met the tuning snob before. Spent more time tuning than recording and trying to get ideas down. I'm like "this guy must have amazing hearing cause it sounds fine to me". Ha, ive come to realize that I don't think there is such thing as a perfect tune on a guitar.
I have met them at school. Even though I kicked their ass, they thought that they won because could play stairway to heaven (and horridly)
@@aristotlefromebay No Stairway!
Pick up their acoustic.
Play them the intro sequence to "Black Horsemen" by King Diamond.
Hand their acoustic back to them with a drool bib.
Or blackbird
Me looking at someone’s beat up cheap guitar: „dude your guitar is awesome can I play it?“
They are usually belonging to the most incredibly talented player you’ll witness in person, driven by genuine passion
The "brand snob" comes to mind. The guy who says "gibson (or insert other brand) is the only guitar worth having" and wont even fathom trying other brands
A close relative to the Nationality Snob, the Brand Snob will vilify any off brand company that copies their beloved brand's guitar even in the face of overwhelming evidence that the off brand guitar offers the same, if not better playing experience at a fraction of the cost.
See: the PRS silver sky for an example of those coming out of the wood works
Just do NOT mention any of the brands flaws to the Brand Snob as they will rant for three and a half hours about how the flaws aren't actually flaws from the brand, but rather caused by the owner for "not treating the instrument properly"
1. Jackson USA Custom Shop/ESP Custom Shop
2. Jackson USA Artist/ESP Signature
3. Jackson USA Select/ESP "Series" line/Charvel USA
Best products, best customer service, and appreciating rapidly.
Gibson was the worst customer service experience that I've ever dealt with.
I don't care if Jimmy Page played a Les Paul.
I don’t like the way he portrayed the nationality snob. There are more people who refuse to play any American guitar than people who only play American guitars.
I can spot them in the audience whenever I play a show: arms crossed or some other defensive posture while everyone else is jamming.
I always have my arms crossed when I stand to see bands or other type of musicians :c
Reminds me of a G3 show. 😂
Another one is guitar players who always remind everyone that they play out
Nice. Of course, that could just be the guy who's girlfriend has a little crush on the singer.
Hey there "rock star" I play and watch shows and I cross my arms when i watch I'm appreciating what I'm seeing possibly pick up a trick or two , hope I didn't upset you "rock star" maybe take it as a compliment
Pretty sure most of us feel some of these ways. Having nice gear is cool. It takes a lot of time but I don't think I had more fun than when I was nailing Green Day by ear in middle school on my Epiphone SG and Beringher amp.
My first teacher was definitely "the protective snob". I remember he had tonnes of cases around the walls of his garage/studio. One day I broke my first electric (les paul epiphone plustop) and he had told me he was wanting to sell one of his old ones, and all of a sudden brings out what was about to be my second guitar- PRS SE. Cool dude, thanks Steve.
Type 9: if you don’t play a song note fir note they get genuinely pissed at you.
I did a one off show for this amazing teen singer doing a showcase or something and she wanted to do Paramore, Still Into You. A guy came up to me after the set and was saying it sounded good, but he couldn't help but notice I was hitting a wrong chord in the chorus or something. I was like oh? what chord. He said well I saw you were on the 2nd fret , but that chord is E. Something to that effect. I said wellllll...the song is in drop D so I was playing E. Like dude, did it sound wrong or just look wrong? Use your ears. Notice that low D in the bridge how do you think you hit that low note?
Eliju lmao I was playing Johnny b Goode at my grandparents party once cuz they asked if i could play for a while and entertain ppl with a band of old musicians they knew. I don’t play the Johnny b Goode intro or solo note fir note I play the way that I think sounds good but after we were done playing some guy was like u played the intro wrong and I was like oh what part and what r the correct notes and he was just like idk I don’t play guitar...like ok damn (and the way I play it is close enough I can play it over the actual song and get a pretty good match)
This kind makes me the most angry. Like if I wanted to hear it sound exactly the same as the original, I would just listen to the original.
Eliju whats drop d?
Nicolas Samanez it’s where u take the letter d from a scrabble set and you drop it
0:36 “He can’t even play the freakin’ thing to know the difference” I love it. 😂
The similarity between all of the snobs in the list is that they have all the money in the world
i like how when he plays bad he doesn't mute any strings
The true mark of poor execution. It hurts how terrible it is lol
Every time I watch one of your videos, I get this incontrollable urge to drop everything and play.
"Acoustics shouldn't have a cutaway" snob
I love the Martin players who scoff at my Carlo Robelli, until they see it has locking Grover tuners, a bone nut, bone bridge tailpiece, and fretboard so oiled that it looks like kitchen table.
Cutaway guitars are amazing, like bruh I wanna be able to play 3-string barres on fret 16, thanks. As a fingerstyle player, being limited to barre only ip to fret-14 would suck.
New title: Tyler flexing us his guitar collection and indirectly calling us poor
lmao
Your content is consistently brilliant and entertaining. Cheers
I was laughing, until I identified myself as the "Stuck in time snob".
Oh Shit.
Same :(
As a small guitar shop owner this checks out completely.
I use coiled cables for one reason and one reason only. HENDRIX AT MONTEREY!!!
They just looked so cool. You want gear that gets you stoked to play.
I think that everyone has a tad bit of guitar snob in them one way or another
Sad but true
It’s Solid State Amos and Active pickups for me...
Is there a rehab for Guitar snobs?
I’m number 8
Being an internal snob is fine but being a snob to others is a no no
Yes and no, there is a difference between being a snob and having a preference. It's when you belittle things you don't like because they aren't what you like that it becomes snobby.
Example, I really don't like flying V's. I think they look stupid, and I also don't like bolt on necks, and i prefer rosewood fret boards. These just aren't my cup of tea. But if someone were to hand me a flying v with a bolt on neck and a standard maple fretboard my first instinct wouldn't be to beat it across every available surface and burn the remains, I'd still plug it in and try it.
I can totally understand the "nationality guy". I'm french dreaming of an american made les paul but i know some peoples who will play only on french made guitars just to support local luthiers, i think thats a pretty cool thing to do if you ask me ! but yeah if some peoples do this just out of snobism i can totally understand how this type of person ende up in the video
Yeah, there are a lot of jerks who don't believe that a guitar from any country other than [Insert country name] could ever be good
A French man speaking fluently English? Come on, man. Don't try to fool us!
Dan Kay a lot of europeans speak multiple languages fluently
@@khimcleod3459
I am European, live right next to France and know VERY WELL how many percent of French people speak English.
All the best...
@@dankay7982 Fluently ?? thank you so much haha
There was a point in time where I’d gotten a huge promotion at work, and was making about 4 times more money that I had been previously and I started buying a guitar or amp about every month for a year or so. The guys I was in a band with labeled me a guitar snob because I was going out and buying so much gear and felt as though I was rubbing their faces in shit by doing something that made me happy.
Yeah it pays just to keep it to yourself and not even mention it because people automatically get jealous
They were jelly because they are losers.
As a guitar tech: The low action snob, comes back after a setup because action is not low enough, then comes back because he experiences fretbuzz, then comes back because he want lower action, etc, etc..
if he cant do a basic setup himself then what the fuck lmao
Tell him he needs his frets leveled and it'll be a few thousand dollars, then he will leave you alone
I got my tele from one of those guys. First thing I did when I got it was raise the strings of the frets.
I’m the 9 type : I CANT SHUT THE F UP ABOUT GUITARS
Sorry friends, family, classmates, neighbors ;)
Same dude....same
@@brendanmanning9683
Yes..Also too
I dont remember ı wrote this comment?
I feel you, Leo......recently had some 'friends' and even family complain I play guitar too much, only to later that day go on about having me play Freebird or Stairway. Not the whole song, mind you, just the riffs.
Will you be my friend? I wouldnt shut up too, but I have no one to talk to about it
I used to be a vintage gear snob that would scoff at people for using a POD, yet I was super crap at guitar. Luckily I got over that phase, and now I'm just a normal guy that's super crap at guitar
" all Steve Vai does is play a million notes per second. he has no feel"
I go out of my way to argue with people who say that. I feel like I can make that argument about many guitarist, but not Vai.
Ahh yes, the "Everyone is pretentious except me" snob. These guys are real easy to identify, just ask them what pretentious means and they will verbally crap themselves.
Jared Dines has no feel.
Roasted.
Aaron Archual it’s a meme Tyler made ages ago
Basically any guitarist who can shred. People also accuse John Petrucci and I am like have you not heard A Change of Seasons, The Spirit Carries On or Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence because how can you listen to those and say he has no feel? I think this all started with Yngvie and then started spreading to other guitarists since then(Not saying Yngvie has no feel, but I feel he is the first high profile guitarist to be seen as having no feel)
Here’s another: the Electrician. The Electrician believes that the only real guitars worth playing are electric guitars. Acoustic guitars, to the Electrician, are a crime against humanity and ought to be outlawed.
I work on power grids, and spent a decade owning only a hollowbody electric and an acoustic, no amp. This comment took me for a ride.
I hear more people who are snobs against electric honestly.
I've actually gotten it the other way around that distortion is a quick one way trip to hell 😂😅🤷♀️
Good plot twist I didn't expect you to be a super guitar snob with that wall of 600 different guitars behind you. Love the vid by the way.
When I was in college I had someone count my frets telling me there was not as many as his, so mine must a 3/4, then time passed and I got a bc rich warlock and he said it was fake because he did not recognise the serial number.
Should've said, "Do you recognize this?" and bashed him with it
@@troysmithfr lol
“The Cheapskate”
Constantly goes to guitar stores and plays guitars he clearly can’t afford and calls them “too cheap” or “not as good as the one he has” and makes excuses when the employees ask if he wants to buy the guitar. Leaves without buying anything, Having only wasting the employees time.
See! I always get self conscious about this, so I have a philosophy, never touch what you can’t afford, play something within your realistic price range.
And if you don’t intend to buy anything, I at least buy some strings, a key ring, a strap, picks or a pedal, cause that’s the nice thing to do.
Them’s my rules whenever I go in a Guitar Center or any music store.
@@CCAndPinkie how do know the difference between a high end feeling, sounding guitar and squire bullet?
So in the event you happen across a partscaster or a second hand off brand guitar that is comparable to highend or better, you understand the value and not to flip it on a whim?
@@Emma-kz3zr as someone who plays a squire bullet but has nicer guitars it is the intonation.
Learn a classical piece or anything that has microtonal aspects and you will see what I mean. Of course tone because tone wood but that is subjective.
Nah, you deliberately play a guitar that you can't afford, Just cos you're killing time... Then you end up buying it!!! Those devilish employees know what they're doing.
David Willis
Well... yeah, of course.
I didn’t always have these rules, I was a young guitarist once.
Funny is when one of those guys meets a sales guy who is also one.. It becomes a comedy show. There are no limits and so funny to watch.
Remember once at my local shop. They were talking gear. It was model numbers here and years things were made there and where they were made and who invented and so on.. I just stood and listened and had a great time. Loved it. Nerds incorporated. It really made my day.😊
"don't touch my guitar, don't even breathe on it!"
*puts a hot Cup of coffee on the guitar*
You want to play it? Okay, go wash your hands.
@@denniswalsh8476 this might actually be good advice in the light of the pandemic tho!
@@brandontay2053 The pandemic is recent, this actually was kind of a joke with good friend, a "hands on Dad" with two kids still in diapers.
A dear old friend, a session guy, has a Harmony 'strat-knock off' that is his number one. Play what you like.
I'm half an amp snob- can't stand solid state, but I really like virtual amps and stuff like that.
The "If it doesn't have 3 barrel saddles it's not a Tele" snob
the "Authenticity Snob", I believe we should call it
I feel personally attacked.
Ah yes. The "Nationality Snob." The most frequent of snobs I'd get when I worked at Guitar Center.
Refuses to buy a well crafted and great sounding Epiphone Les Paul over a mediocre, overpriced Gibson Les Paul because *'Merica*
Partly, i can understand this snob. USA-Gibson is more price-stable and can be even worth more after some yrs...an Epiphone will rarely do this.
And than, its some kind of worshiping history: The original is an original. The meaning of this may be different for all of us...but i can understand someone seeking for that.
About the prices: You do not only buy an instrument. You buy also the guarantee, that the workers who build this, have rights and a (more or less) fair pay.
I’d love to own a Gibson, but I also really wish I still had my white epiphone les Paul studio, that was my first guitar. Maybe it’s because I didn’t know jack about guitars, but that thing felt and sounded amazing. You don’t need expensive gear, just something decent and a positive outlook.
*'MURICA!* *
These types are sad- Epi's in the last few years, and Schecter's for a long time now, have been better than a low end Gibson of the same make/model. "Won't play/buy a Mexican Gibson/Fender" fall into this category, too. Heck, the guys in CA and Mexico switch back and forth and work the same lines sometimes, so what's on the headstock was probably touched by both groups anyway.
I loved my Epis and Schecter, and it was only a few years after where I was in a place where I could afford Gibsons and an Ibanez- but id argue that the differences are minute. Im guilty, too, for getting the 'named' model. I DID give my Schecter and Epi's to people that I KNEW would use them, enjoy them, and appreciate them as a considerable upgrade over what they had at the time, though, so I feel like my music karma is balanced.
2:56 ok but this riff is awesome
"The Nationality Snob" implies something a whole lot worse than someone who's picky about where their gear was made
Right?
Because humidity, right?
Guitar companies perpetuate this. Whenever they're selling to a price-point, they offshore the build and downgrade the hardware. Are we really supposed to believe that Indonesians and Koreans don't know how to carve wood properly!
@@paulapplewhite6135 Exactly. I wouldn't buy an overseas PRS, not because I doubt they're well made, but I know they skimp on certain things and I'd rather just pay more and have any corners cut. My mexi strat plays great, but the electronics were terrible. Upgraded to SSL-1s and now it sings.
9: The one who mocks players for not knowing anything about music theory
( Im number 10: the one who is genuinly interested in music theory and no matter if you are interested or not, i will explain everything about music theory i know)
Ever meet the one who knocks players for knowing theory?
"Bah, I didn't use that stuff and I'm good!"
Bruh me too
ok obi wan
Honestly I'd rather run into the guy who explains theory rather than mocks you for not knowing cause then I actually learn something from it!
I really enjoyed this video, and the twist at the end was hilarious! keep it up, my guyyyyy
the one acts like he plays so much but holds it hor 10 minutes and shows off on twinkle twinkle little star
And then says: "That was the theme to Mozart variations on 'Ah! Vous dirai-je, Maman'."
Yes. I'm a classical snob and proud of it !!!
I’ve been playing for 2 weeks and twinkle twinkle, hot cross buns, and rain rain go away is all I can play...
@@dustinpeele2748 Hang in there man. We all started somewhere...
the "better than clapton" snob, they dont know how to even play but tell everyone there better than clapton and when they get asked to play they say "your not cultured enough for my skills"
(this one is 100% real, my old neighbour owned 16 guitars and couldnt even hold them properly and didnt even know a thing about them, but claimed hed been playing 40+ years despite the fact he was 34. the guy had a ego the size of the moon)
The dark side of the Moon?🤣🤣🤣
That sounds awful
I kind of do the opposite of your neighbor. Technically, I've been playing for 20ish years if you count how long I've owned guitars ... but if you count the times I've stopped playing and started up again, maybe we're looking at 3 or 4 years. Any my (in)ability to play kind or really shows it.
And apparently a pea sized brain !
"Yeah i been playing like 100 years"
Maybe appropriate statement here. I'm late 70's I made an emergency Sears catalog order with 2 day store delivery. Just moved across 2 states, My possessions couldn't be found. I shared the moving company truck with another family moving to the same state. I ordered a no name Sears Les Paul copy for $79.00 for a gig in 3 days. It was a beautiful red sunburst, bolt on neck, and single coils hidden in humbucker cases. Set it up, replaced strings, played it at gig. Once I tweaked the eq on the borrowed amp it was a HOOT to play. Some tuning problems. I liked it so much I upgraded the tuners and pickups and played it for years on specific songs at gigs. It was stolen as we loaded in a gig. Funny thing, it was worth the least of anything in the van. That guitar showed me the name on the headstock didn't mean much then, and less now. I have big name gear but also some less desirable names too.
You forgot "The Jazz Player".
These are in the videos about players, this is about gear snobs. :)
Pin this comment, this is #9!
jazz is good
"I only play 13's, 12's are for pussies" -Jazz Snob
Tyler: The PRS Snob
1:18 I’d imagine the impedance is from the coil of (inductive) copper wire. Inductors cause impedance
The Type Snob: Certain types of guitars are only allowed to play certain types of music. You cant play metal on a tele, idc if it has humbuckers. You cant play blues with an explorer. You cant play country with a flying v.
But can you play brutal deathcore infused black metal on vintage Fender?
Swap the pickups and you can play whatever you want on whatever you want ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Pick thickness, string core, cable length, cable tyoe, string Guage, single coil, humbucker, pickup pole height, active pickups, intonation, how much pressure is applied whne fretting, what part of your finger frets the strings, how you hold the neck, how you angle the pick, the Amp head you use, the speaker(s) used, speaker combination, cabinet angle, raised off the ground or not, what tubes do you use if any, scale length of the guitar, tremolo system or not, bone nut or metal, how high is your action, and so many other questions are too be asked to really Guage the sound one makes with a guitar.
A guitar is merely a tool.
If it's not an acoustic then you're not playing guitar.
You're manipulating the frequencies emitting from the speaker.
The notes just happen to be on the guitar.
Which is why you don't focus on them as much as the sound.
I mean, you don't focus on the inflection of certain letters or words as you're speaking do you?
Because playing guitar is akin to speaking because music is literally a whole nother language.
But people forget that and see it as a serious business like endeavor instead of the art and emotional conveyer and inner world translator that it is.
Which is both parts disappointing and pathetic.
It's understandable to want to know everything someone else does in creating music and how they go about it and what gear.
So, why aren't you asking about their car?
Or how they drive?
Or the clothes that they wear?
Or the coffee they drink?
Or their morning routine?
Yknow, the things that attribute them to who and how they are in thus giving a clear picture of the choices they make and reasons they decided to do as such.
But, no.
People like pixels and not the whole picture.
So they forgo understanding art as it is and figure they need every single thing first.
I'm sorry. You can study Mozart all you want.
But how are you going to be known for your own things if you're constantly trying to replicate someone else's?
@@TheLemonKiller "if it's not an acoustic, then you're not playing guitar" is the single most pretentious thing I've ever heard.
@@stoneofpower6192 And the person taking things seriously and not for the metaphor that it overly blatantly obviously is.
That's fairly pathetic.
Gibson snob: Believes that the Les Paul is the one and only true guitar to own, the SG lineup is for kids that think they are cool and every other shape or form the guitar's body or neckstock may have is deplorable. The Gibson snob is a combination of every snob you just listed in the video, the absolute worst of all guitar snobs.
Equivalent to a brand royal Harley-Davidson boomer, that talks shit about everything new and anything different, essentially making possible new buyer distance themselves from the brand just because of the image it's gotten from it's old loyalists, that aren't bringing anymore money to the company, ultimately dooming them completely and forcing them to file for bankruptcy.... Oops.
Price/resale value snob: The numbers on the pricetag matter more than the guitar itself. Most often doesn't even know how to play the guitar and has it displayed as more of a decorative piece than anything else, continuously bragging about how much the guitar cost and how much they can get for it, should they sell it again later.
In a price snobs eyes, the higher the price tag, the more rare the guitar has to be.
Hivemind snob: Their opinion keeps changing by every comment they read and depending on who's being called "stupid" first in the comments, the snob will ally and side themselves with the opinion of the person doing the name calling. But should a more well known celebrity, internet personality or magazine make a contradicting comment about whatever guitar related discussion going on, the snob will immediately change their opinions about the matter and claim "Yes, this is what my opinion has always been about this thing".
Fan snob: The only gear to have and own, is the one the target or idolization may have, lmao
Nu-Metal snob: Would only play Ibanez or Jackson with the neck pick-up ripped out. Tuned down to C because "muh, heavy". Don't understand how valve amps operate or the value of reverb. Anything that looks old is "cheesy" and of are the firm belief that rap and rock go together. Also believe "the more pedals used, the better the sound". They play staring at their own shoes and haven't washed their credlocks for 6 months.
The PRS snob: Firmly of the belief that the company have successfully merged the best attributes of Fender and Gibson. Hates the tops of Les Pauls and can see no similarity between the two at all. Laud the sound as "clear and crisp" despite it having almost no character of its own. Players likely work in insurance and have limited personality. Have caught up to Gibson snobs but lack the money to actually surpass them.
The Gibson Snob will also freak out if you replace a knob, a pickup, or even think about installing straplocks on a Les Paul. Heaven forbid your volume pot craps out and you have to replace it.
Don't forget the Gibson hater snob who whines about the price and quality control
The funniest thing is giving those Gibson snobs a „Maybach Lester“ to test. You‘ll see immediately in their eyes that the Maybach outplays the Gibson reissues in almost every way. But they won‘t admit it...they almost get a stroke and then fall into that good old „Well, it‘s nothing more than a well made copy, I‘m not that impressed.“ Always gives me a good laugh. It‘s just lovely to see their Brand-Castle crumbling in their heads. But they would never in a million years admit that. What a bunch of obnoxious Fan-Boys.
Legend has it that having an Epiphone in the house keeps the Gibson snobs away.
I got a squire telecaster and restored it and put a seymour duncan hotrails pickup in the bridge. This is one of my favorite guitars, sounding good is sounding good. And it is very transverse. If you can sound good with something, that's what you want.
i just keep hearing sweet child on a loop never stopping, never stopping.
And in D Major and not Db Major
That tone at 3:00 is unmatched bruh
The melancholic snob. He keeps saying "Oh! Yes! Back when I was a guitar noob I used a [insert gear] like that" And you're there thinking "Dude, I've seen you play, you kindda still are a guitar beginner..." hahaha
The setup snob: Only plays guitars they set up themselves or had set up by their luthier/tech of choice. "Nobody else knows how to do it right"
The pickup snob: Only ever plays humbuckers/single coils/actives and belittles anyone who plays anything else "Those sound like crap"
The wood snob: Never plays any guitars with any wood they consider to be inferior, despite how they objectively sound "Ugh, alder?!"
The technique snob: Considers any alternative techniques for playing to be illegitimate/unearned even when warranted "Dude tapping doesn't count"
So the technique just disses Eddie Van Halen
Hey! I setup all my guitars myself.....because I can.
@@popsfereal I mean I do too, because it saves money, but I don't refuse to play other people's guitars because they're not setup the same way as mine
@@Undercoverfire
indeed.
The bass guitar snob: Playing bass with a pick is illegal!
Had a nationality snob employee at GC keep telling me "The guitar sucks, it's from China....But it's from CHINA..You gotta buy American" Bruh, I just want to buy a pickguard.
So, there aren't even guitars in Europe? Nooooooooo! 😄
0:18 you forgot “wanker”
Back when I was in a band in the 80's and early 90's, A LOT of us got shit on for playing BC Rich "All flash, no substance" . Pardon me for liking to play something that looks a little different. I'm not particularly enamoured of the Strat style (tho those 80's Charvel guitars with the crackle finishes looked awesome) but I've never blasted anyone for playing them...you play what you like. What diference does it make?
my dad thinks its all tone. with me I gotta like what the guitar looks like, the tone can come later with pick-ups, set up and amp. I have to like how it looks first and foremost, then how it feels. the tone to me, I can do anything later on with amps, pedals, pick ups. its gotta look cool and feel good. amp settings and ect. can make anything sound good. I wouldn't play a banjo that sounded like Bostons lead tone straight outta the box lol, its not me.
@@JB-ju4ev That was the whole thing for me. I loved how B C Rich felt in my hands. They are comfortable, the necks didn't feel like I was holding a bowling pin, and they looked great. I was lucky enough to get two US made ones second hand, so they sounded great. Swapped the Dimarzios out for Seymours, and I was set to go. I once got a Kramer Nightswan coz I loved the graphic on it, figured I'd get used to the thicker neck. Nope, never could. I sold it.
@@JB-ju4ev the irony of people is how a guitar looks REALLY matters, this is why nobody wants to touch a Parker guitar inspite of their amazing tone.
My first guitar was a cheap $170 BC Rich Warlock. That axe shreds like no other for the price, and looks bad ass.
damn last time I was this early he still played stairway
no stairway? denied
Music Is Win Reactions
1. It's Pathetic 0:57
2. What A Know It All, Pitiful! 1:26
3. Eh, Get Away From Me 1:51
4. Just Deplorable 2:17
5. Atrocious 2:36
6. Barbaric 3:22
7. Rotten 3:47
8. Sad 4:06
My friend is totally the first one 😂! He laughs at me for having humbuckers but can’t play anything but a minor pentatonic scale
Humbuckers rule!
Spooky Skeleton - that they do!
The "tone snob" aka the audio engineer
I'll take that label. I don't care what it takes. DOES IT SOUND GOOD?!
@@Aaron-zh4kj Tone? Meshuggah.
I had a “friend” in high school who constantly gave me a hard time in front of people because i only knew how to play 2 songs from start to finish. He knew how to play more songs than me but only knew opening riffs and all of them sounded sloppy. I’ll take knowing how to play 2-3 songs well v.s only knowing the beginning of many songs and playing them poorly.
I call those people living room virtuosos. People who can riff and shred but can’t solidly play start to finish let alone write a song. They care more about fuelling their egos than musicianship and serving the song. Annoying eh?
The highest council of the most supreme guitar snobs are the ones organizing “Burst hangs” on the Les Paul Forum.
wtf is burst hangs? lol only thing I can think of is guitars with burst finishes? lol burst hangs, gotta explain ty it just sounds funny
@@JB-ju4ev Lawyers and dentists who own "Bursts" (aka original 58-60 Les Pauls with sunburst finishes) sometimes hang out together with their guitars, take some pictures to be posted on the Les Paul Forum and then wax poetic about the benefits of original plastic parts on the overall guitar tone and about how many times they've carefully analysed Joe Bonamassa's live rig. These "burst hangs" then hopefully lead to forum threads with lots of beardy-strokey replies from the internet experts.
Don’t talk to me or my Yamaha Pacifica ever again!
You should try Silvertone guitars if you like Yamaha Pacificas XD
Yamaha Pacifica's are the greatest bang for your buck in the non-custom built world. Especially those made in the early 90's.
The glitch edit and the smile at the end made it all worth it.
Imagine knowing this guy in real life, as I do. I know someone who bought 3 overpriced epiphones, a huge tube amp that is too loud for his apt. Over 20 pedals, among so much more. Times I've seen him play, 0 (ZERO) no joke.
I have an extensive collection of ukuleles. Almost nobody that comes to my house sees me play them... because I'm not about to invite you over so I can sing songs by myself on the corner. I do that when I'm alone.
Even if he just is a collector...thats fine. Why not?
I fit in to this one but I do practice once an while just really late an very seldom. Why my setup is still in its planning an organized stages missing key parts to actually record. Coming together but slowly not wanting to stumble on some good material an have no way to record an document the process. IE for legal reasons from concept to finish work i will have 100% proof of concept. While it may be crazy so is being sued an losing it all. An it does suck id rather be active but my final pieces are costing me retail which on my budget is extremely difficult.
Worse,imagine knowing someone that complains about what gear someone else buys because they’ve never seen them use it