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Topic: What do you own? |
HowardR
From: N.Y.C.-Fire Island-Asheville
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Posted 8 Feb 2003 6:21 pm
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what on earth does anyone need with 11 pairs of shorts?.... |
because there's one other thing that I don't own.....a washing machine! |
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Matt Brydges
From: Renfrew, Ontario, Canada
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Posted 9 Feb 2003 12:09 am
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'70 Fulawka S-10 (built for my father back then)
'67 Emmons D-10
Matt |
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Tony Orth
From: Evansville, Indiana, USA
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Posted 9 Feb 2003 1:28 pm
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Emmons SD-10 Legrande II
ZumSteel S-10 Stage One
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Chuck McGill
From: An hour from Memphis and 2 from Nashville, R.I.P.
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Posted 9 Feb 2003 4:11 pm
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You don't think anyone from the IRS reads
this forum do you? |
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Ian McLatchie
From: Sechelt, British Columbia
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Posted 9 Feb 2003 7:22 pm
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Ah, boys and their toys. Here are some of mine:
c. 1915 Knutsen hollow-neck Hawaiian
1930s (?) Hager square-neck Hawaiian
1936 Rickenbacher bakelite
1937 Rickenbacher Silver Hawaiian
1938 Gibson EH-150 7-string
late 1940s Gibson Console Grande, 7- and 8-string
1953 Fender Dual Professional
1954 Fender Deluxe 8
1956 Fender Stringmaster triple
1993 Yanuziello resophonic
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Alvin Blaine
From: Picture Rocks, Arizona, USA
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Posted 9 Feb 2003 10:14 pm
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I have to much stuff to list it all.
43 different instuments including 8 in the steel family.A couple of old stringmasters an old Rick a few Fender 400 and one Fender 1000, and a mid '30s dobro.
24 old tube amps, 14 are old Blackface and tweed Fenders, and 4 pre-war Ricky amps.
And if anyone from the IRS is reading this, I'm homeless and I don't own anything! |
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chas smith R.I.P.
From: Encino, CA, USA
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Posted 9 Feb 2003 11:08 pm
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Chas, will you puhleeze put up pictures of your whole museum somewhere? A guided tour web site would be nice, or just upload a few more pix to where the current ones reside (and may explain a few of those space alien things you built)? |
Jack, there was talk of a web site for the "alien" things, but I probably won't show/advertise the other stuff except for the occasional photo on the forum. There are bad people out there and living in a city increases the percentage of them nearby.
The personal instruments were, briefly, designed and fabricated to make complicated sounds and have a "look" (it gives me an opportunity to showcase my skills) and from a compositional point of view, I would rather write simple music for complicated sounds than complicated music for simple sounds. I've been listening to some of them for over 10 years and I never get tired of hearing the sounds they make.
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Chas, you have a museum of history. I sat down with that Bigsby that Norm had when it was his main drive in '61. I didn't realize he no longer owned it. You must not keep your car in the garage with all of that. |
Gary, Rudy Farmer, who was knowm to "convert" triple necks into single necks, got the guitar, and there were fears that that was it's fate. However Herby Wallace had it and sold it to Bobbe who sold it to me. Norm's name had been removed, but Larry Petree confirmed the serial number.
I keep the cars on the front lawn, they make great lawn ornaments and for the Holidays, I put Christmas lights on them, it looks really festive and it tests the neighborhood's sense of humor.
After reading Ian's list, I remembered that I have a 1930 Greenfield Hawaiian "hambone" in a case, it's too delicate to leave out. |
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Davie Holland
From: Scotland, UK
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Posted 10 Feb 2003 4:09 pm
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MSA Classic XL s10 4x3 equipped with George-L`s E99 Pickup, Profex One (the original one) and get this, The FIRST NASHVILLE 1000 in SCOTLAND. |
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