joegyork posted in the group Open Mic (Open Discussion)
Has anyone let gear go and come to regret it – like the people in this article from Production Expert?
My biggest regret was letting someone have my WASP synth & Spyder sequencer. They weren’t working but I wish I had got them repaired as they are being sold for prices between £600 and £1400 now!https://www.production-expert.com/production-expert-1/the-gear-we-let-go-too-easily
4 CommentsMy first “stage amp” (my Dad and I built a small Heathkit for my $29 Tiesco first guitar 🙂 was a 1965 Fender Twin Reverb and I still have it. BUT I blew the speakers (somehow) and instead of having the Jensens re-built (like my Dad advised), I bought el-cheapo nameless replacements (hey, they’re rated at 200W- what else matters?) and tossed the Jensens. We also did a lot of modifications to the Twin, but that stuff can all be un-done.
Just like the guy in the article, I had a Roland Juno 60 that I got new in 1984 (was actually my first polysynth that I ever owned!). Sometime in the late 1990s, while it was still in great working condition, I let it go for a steal! I was diving headlong into digital stuff , and figured it was headed toward the ash heap. Bad call there. Everything old is new again!
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The first drum kit I ever had, which I bought at around age 7, was a Camco. It was a white pearl kit. It sounded great, but I wanted something that looked cooler. So maybe when I was 12 or so, I was persuaded by a guy at the local music store that this cool-looking blue kit — a garbage low end kit made in Taiwan called Royce — for around $400 was superior.
So I saved the money I made from my newspaper route, allowance, and odd jobs, I started paying for the Royce kit on installments. When I came close to what I needed for the new kit, I sold my Camco kit for $120 to afford the new kit. It sounded like a cheap kit. I ended up realizing that I made a mistake but couldn’t afford a better kit until a few years later, at 15, when I started working at my first regular job.
In recent years, I’ve bought a couple of sample libraries (from Toontrack) that have Camco drums. It makes me sentimental just to see that they’re Camcos, and they sound great.