I know what you mean when you refer to old guitars. It is the close to the spring feeling. The older the more genuine and closer to the original dream.
yes exactly, and I would add : it's about the "spirit"
I think that choosing to play on an old "unique" instrument is not the same "artistic spirit" (sorry for my poor english, but I hope you get what I mean) than playing on a recent "serial" instrument
during 80's and early 90s, most of musicians were playing on synths, modern guitars and amps, etc...
Mark and DS were in this stream : schecter, and later pensa with soldano, ovation for acoustic, Guy played on synths, etc...
Gilmour put EMG pickups on his red strat, using modern pedal boards, Clapton dropped Blackie for his sig model, and so on...
But then, in the mid 90, musicians were back too their roots with "vintage" instruments :
Grunge bands were using odl guitars and amps, Gilmour used the big muff again, and later the black strat, synths almost disapeared while the B3 came back, and of course Mark dropped the reissue Les Paul for real 58 and 59 ones, he used "real" acoustic guitars (Martin, gibson) rather than "plastic" ones (like the Ovation), and later the Danelectro, the Speisco, even the EKO for Sonny liston in studio
he brought back the 61 strat, and on STP tour, Mike Henderson played some old guitars too, with a notable vintage "dirty" sound, far away from the over produced OES/OTN distinctive sound.
Look at Guy's studio diaries, and you can see all of these gems : old harmonium, old hammond organ, glenn's double bass from 19th century...
I think it's not just about the guitar model, it's about the artistic sense of your record, of your sound. The 80s and early 90 have sounded quite "artificial" fro many listeners, and the back to vintage instruments was also to go back to music roots, to music soul.
At least, that's how I understand it.
I would find strange if Mark would have played those blues of his last album tunes on a pensa with a soldano. Of course, many listeners wouldn't have heard the difference, but as Mark wanted to sound "root", "chicago blues", he HAD TO play on a vintage model.
Of course, it's also a matter of production. I agree that the sound isn't all in the guitar, but it's an important key I think.
Now, do we know why Mark doesn't play with the first red strat any more?
Well it's a thing I don't really understand. he still play and bring on the road : 58 and 59 LP, 54 strat, Danelectro...all these guitars cost a fortune (especially the LP), but for his distinctive clean sound (THE sound that made him famous) he prefers to play on the sig model, while he got a stradivarius....I just don't get it
I dont think so somehow!! I guess you haven't played one then?
One of mine incidentally is 'on loan' to a guitarist friend and he has played and recorded with a lot of fenders/guitars like myself and we both absolutley adore the MK Strat - Oooooh the sound, the playability, the look, the feel.... etc!!!
Each to their own I guess - but if you get a chance to have a go on an 'MK' strat - go for it!
I'm sure it's a great guitar, it sounds nice, it's well manufactured,etc...
But I guess that if I had 2300