Some axes have mojo, most don't. Some people define mojo as beat to hell and back. Some define it as a worn in necks that fit your hand like a glove.
I have 3 guitars. Out of these three one have what I consider mojo.
It's not the smooth worn in neck.
It's not the battle-scarred body.
It's not the 20 year old EMG.
It's the fuckin TONE! A note played on this axe resonates through the entire guitar. It is as if the body and neck were one, even though it's a bolt on. It just has heaps and heaps of TONE sprouting out of her. No other guitar I've ever played have touched her in the tone department.
What creates this tone phenomenon? Is it good wood? Poplar, maple and rosewood in this case. Nice hardware? A blocked worn JT-6 and a Floyd nut in this case. Is it the age? 17 years in this case.
I luvz eZ-bob [img]/images/graemlins/cool.gif[/img]
I have 3 guitars. Out of these three one have what I consider mojo.
It's not the smooth worn in neck.
It's not the battle-scarred body.
It's not the 20 year old EMG.
It's the fuckin TONE! A note played on this axe resonates through the entire guitar. It is as if the body and neck were one, even though it's a bolt on. It just has heaps and heaps of TONE sprouting out of her. No other guitar I've ever played have touched her in the tone department.
What creates this tone phenomenon? Is it good wood? Poplar, maple and rosewood in this case. Nice hardware? A blocked worn JT-6 and a Floyd nut in this case. Is it the age? 17 years in this case.
I luvz eZ-bob [img]/images/graemlins/cool.gif[/img]
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