The guitar becomes a special part of a guitartist , and as we have name it deserves one too.when i hold my black coloured hobmer guitar , i feel like holding a black star in my hand therefore i give my guitar "black star" as its name.post the picture of yourself with it, if you feel like.thanx for reading.
I was pondering over this a little since yesterday. A friend of mine named his new bass 'Mjollnir', and I was surprised I didn't think of it first. Since I'm still working on a paint job for my guitar (Photoshop stage as of now) among other things, the name will have to fit the design I decide for it.
never named a guitar till now. i think i haven't found a guitar that i developed an extraordinary attachment to. i tentatively named my fretless strat project "mirage fretless" but canned that when i realized that the epoxy fingerboard would not reach that mirror-finish level i wanted.
name it...give him milk...make him sleep comfortably..talk to him when he's sad..play with him...wtf! girls can name it..
^https://pix.motivatedphotos.com/2009/3/25/633735472547783860-LMAO.jpg MetalMonk, this was clearly the wrong thread to post your opinion in...it's like going to a metal concert and saying "I hate Lamb Of God" out loud (I'm guilty of that )
^AHA. GOOD IDEA. I'll call my 7 string 'Shodan'. (as in Heian Shodan. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shodan) It's my first step into electric guitar. And it's black, like the shodan belt
i named my guitars "guitar" except for my bass, which i named "bass". my names pwn all your names put together. nonnie nonnie nyah nyah
LOL! Insane! Off topic (this is a bull thread either way). Say I'm playing an arpeggio with one hand, one one or two strings (touchstyle; you need to conserve horizontal space, so vertical playing is more or less a necessity to utilize the instrument better; think of it like this, the more you want to exploit polyphony on a guitar, the better vertical movement and shifting skills you need to have), if I strategically use a delay pedal, can it be so that after I play a note and play another on the same string, the first note still sounds instead of getting muted - or rather, blocked - by the new note? Like a piano note - you hit a key, it keeps sounding till it's own envelope ends regardless of what other keys you hit in the meantime.