Originally posted by Jacksons Shred
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Rudy
www.metalinc.net
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Man, I have endorsements from a couple of companies. It's not all that exciting. I am endorsed by a custom guitar builder and by an amp company. I still pay SOMETHING for the gear but it's CONSIDERABLY less than retail.
In turn for their generosity, we put their logo's on our ads in magazines, our website, myspace, etc. It's a business agreement.
I am still holding out for a Jackson endorsement and I will NEVER stop trying for one!!! Jackson is the only major guitar company I have no problem spending top dollar on. I love my USA's and will own them until I die!
Shit I even endorse THEM for free on my cars license plate!
Why? Because they make (IMHO) some of the finest guitars I have ever played!
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I can understand how a band would jump to ESP instead of sticking with Jackson. If I were in a band struggling to make ends meet and a company said:
A. You get FREE guitars
B. You get PAID to play these guitars
and another company said
A. You don't get free guitars
B. Well, we'll at least give you a discount for your guitars
C. Oh yeah, forget getting paid to play for us
I know who I would go with. As much as I like Jackson guitars they're still just pieces of wood and metal. ESP can take everything you like about the Jackson or whatever you're playing and duplicate it.
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Originally posted by cdwillis View PostI can understand how a band would jump to ESP instead of sticking with Jackson. If I were in a band struggling to make ends meet and a company said:
A. You get FREE guitars
B. You get PAID to play these guitars
and another company said
A. You don't get free guitars
B. Well, we'll at least give you a discount for your guitars
C. Oh yeah, forget getting paid to play for us
I know who I would go with. As much as I like Jackson guitars they're still just pieces of wood and metal. ESP can take everything you like about the Jackson or whatever you're playing and duplicate it.
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I think the point of being edorsed with Jackson is...well...its Jackson!!
At the end of the day (i was discussing this with my band last night actually lol) if I go endorsed by Jackson i really wouldnt want a free guitar.
Il tell you what i would want tho, the knowledge that Jackson, the best guitar company in the world (for me personally) have thought that i am good enough to represent them.
If they offered me something? i would say no thank you, but i would ask for a Tshirt-with the band name on the back and "jackson endorsee" on the bottem. At the end of the day i will play for jackson, if i ever got endorsed then i would continue to play Jackson, mabye with the extra exsposure we would get and then with the extra money we could make that way, i could then order my custom.
That for me is what Jackson is all about, people look at your guitar and they go..."holy shit hes playing a jackson"
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Originally posted by origamikid View PostI think the point of being edorsed with Jackson is...well...its Jackson!!
At the end of the day (i was discussing this with my band last night actually lol) if I go endorsed by Jackson i really wouldnt want a free guitar.
Il tell you what i would want tho, the knowledge that Jackson, the best guitar company in the world (for me personally) have thought that i am good enough to represent them.
If they offered me something? i would say no thank you, but i would ask for a Tshirt-with the band name on the back and "jackson endorsee" on the bottem. At the end of the day i will play for jackson, if i ever got endorsed then i would continue to play Jackson, mabye with the extra exsposure we would get and then with the extra money we could make that way, i could then order my custom.
That for me is what Jackson is all about, people look at your guitar and they go..."holy shit hes playing a jackson"
Didn't Alexi only play a couple Jacksons?
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three guitars would be more then enough.
I would have 2 that i would use for live and one as a back up.
I dont think i would want a sig, unless it was really demanded by fans if band ever got that big.
Problem with a sig is, my sig would literally be almost stock kv1 but id make the fins not as wide lol
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On the subject of signature models, aside from the "top dog" sigs like the JEM (which was merely a continuation of the mods Vai did to his Green Meanie Charvel), of all the "sig models" from other companies I've seen, I haven't seen many that have something special that separates them from the production model it's based on.
The Satch model is a Sabre with his name on it. The Vinnie Moore was a Radius. Gilbert uses a standard RG with a custom paintjob.
Even the Joe Perry "Boneyard" LP: what, a different top? Yawn.
On the other hand, things like the Kevin Bond Rhoads make me laugh, much the same way a Slash or Joe Perry Les Paul does. It's a Signature Signature model
Sig models are meaningless to me unless they have something that truly separates them from any other model in the line. The Phil Collen models (archtop and PC) are significantly different than a standard Jackson Dinky (especially the archtop) in body shape as well as cosmetic features like fretboard material (figured instead of regular), electronics (only one with the Floyd Rose Sustainor - the DK2S gets the Sustainiac), and headstock (never had a regular Jackson pointy on it - even the archtop had a rounded tip).
Then you look at the John Mayer Strat. What's it got that makes it different from any other off-the-shelf Strat? Pickups? Special wiring? A neck profile?
Yes he's sold a lot of records, but how does that justify a sig model?
It's a marketing ploy to keep him with Fender, and for Fender to put their logo on his photo.
I can understand that working bands have little money to splurge on gear. That's where the Professional Series comes in. You don't NEED a USA model to tour the club circuit. Yes you may prefer the USA over the import, but you also have to have the maturity to:
1: recognize that for what you're making in the club circuit, you can't afford 3 new USA Jacksons.
2: accept the fact that you can't just throw your guitar around. You have to take care of it because it's your money-maker.I want to depart this world the same way I arrived; screaming and covered in someone else's blood
The most human thing we can do is comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
My Blog: http://newcenstein.com
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Originally posted by Newc View PostI can understand that working bands have little money to splurge on gear. That's where the Professional Series comes in. You don't NEED a USA model to tour the club circuit. Yes you may prefer the USA over the import, but you also have to have the maturity to:
1: recognize that for what you're making in the club circuit, you can't afford 3 new USA Jacksons.
2: accept the fact that you can't just throw your guitar around. You have to take care of it because it's your money-maker.
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Originally posted by Newc View PostOn the subject of signature models, aside from the "top dog" sigs like the JEM (which was merely a continuation of the mods Vai did to his Green Meanie Charvel), of all the "sig models" from other companies I've seen, I haven't seen many that have something special that separates them from the production model it's based on.
The Satch model is a Sabre with his name on it. The Vinnie Moore was a Radius. Gilbert uses a standard RG with a custom paintjob.
Even the Joe Perry "Boneyard" LP: what, a different top? Yawn.
On the other hand, things like the Kevin Bond Rhoads make me laugh, much the same way a Slash or Joe Perry Les Paul does. It's a Signature Signature model
Sig models are meaningless to me unless they have something that truly separates them from any other model in the line. The Phil Collen models (archtop and PC) are significantly different than a standard Jackson Dinky (especially the archtop) in body shape as well as cosmetic features like fretboard material (figured instead of regular), electronics (only one with the Floyd Rose Sustainor - the DK2S gets the Sustainiac), and headstock (never had a regular Jackson pointy on it - even the archtop had a rounded tip).
Then you look at the John Mayer Strat. What's it got that makes it different from any other off-the-shelf Strat? Pickups? Special wiring? A neck profile?
Yes he's sold a lot of records, but how does that justify a sig model?
It's a marketing ploy to keep him with Fender, and for Fender to put their logo on his photo.
I can understand that working bands have little money to splurge on gear. That's where the Professional Series comes in. You don't NEED a USA model to tour the club circuit. Yes you may prefer the USA over the import, but you also have to have the maturity to:
1: recognize that for what you're making in the club circuit, you can't afford 3 new USA Jacksons.
2: accept the fact that you can't just throw your guitar around. You have to take care of it because it's your money-maker.
In my mind, Les Paul is a shape... not a guy.
The Rhoads is probably slightly different for me, since Rhoads the guy was one of my guitar heroes, but still, I would say that I associate him much more with the Concorde, white LP Custom and the Sandoval V than the current shape RR model.
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