Monday, 25 May 2020

Twitch may be retiring... it's guitar...


Yes, that is my guitar! I've written many albums, singles, EP's with it... with the exception of this most recent album "Databomb", and my last EP "Instructions To Your Revolution". This last Friday I decided to plug it in and play around a bit... unfortunately, there was no volume. Every time I touched the volume knob, it crackled... and I eventually messed around with it enough, to get a tiny little bit of volume... (although it was cranked to 10). I unplugged it and took a look at the internals... everything is connected and seems to be fine... no fucked wires or loose wires or anything. The pick-up switch is also fucked, makes noise, and volume will cut out if you touch it fuckin weird.

This guitar I've had since the beginning of my music career, I purchased it when I was around 17 years old from a friend, I paid $75 for it. It was one of those cheap starter guitars, that is some weird brand name, that you wouldn't recognize... the company that made it, probably doesn't exist anymore. When I originally purchased it, I didn't have an amp for it, but I plugged it into my parents stereo and played through that. A couple years later, I would start a band called Adam Hates You... that was my first industrial band (although, we didn't really write any songs, and we didn't play any shows), but this guitar was there. Eventually, I would move to Calgary, and this thing followed me. That's when I started to write the first Twitch album. I sampled the guitar, and threw it into the tracker program (sequencing software) I was using to write music with. Course along with those samples, I had a friend that helped with other guitar parts and recorded those onto the album. Over the years, I used the same technique to write the guitars (sample it, then sequence those samples). Eventually, I would acquire a different kind of writing/recording/sequencing software, and I would finally be able to actually record parts without having to sample in little chunks, "ant" and everything moving forward, outside of the two most recent releases.

There have been countless times I've brought this thing back to life, so many times that it somehow got fucked, and I fixed it. The last time, I had a friend fix it. It worked for a long time, and then this last Friday... it looks like there is nothing I can do this time to bring it back to life, and quite frankly... I will likely not be taking it to some guitar tech to repair it... the repair will cost more than the guitar is worth. It is time to retire this guitar, I will miss this friend, (although, I'll probably keep it, and mount it on the wall or something like that), the last 25 years have been amazing, and I'm glad I got so much life and use out of this thing. Time to hang this piece of history up, and replace it with... well, not sure yet, but I'm sure whatever it is, it'll be great!!

See ya "renegade" guitar!

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