Interesting talk as always. It´s nice to know that Dallas is doing good and kicking asses. His and Karl´s playing have me hypnotized since my teenage years haha 🤘🤘
could these be loaded into a two notes captor x? i own a 4x12 cab from arachnid and if it simulates the same tone i would like to throw that in for silent recording. just learning how to record im still new to this
Installed my F**uckbicker rail humbucker on my Dimebag Scorched Earth Superstrat. F**ucking Gloriously Collosic! Thank you Mr. Corrigan. Cheers man!arty.
Blah blah blah just tell me what conditioner to use to get my hair like that! 😂 seriously though, Rob is the coolest and down to earth dude, this is such a great informative video. Thank you guys for this.
The skilled labor and cost of education to be a professional goes into it too. Just like any proper skilled labor profession. This is a really good information video. Running a business is definitely calculated risk. It’s beyond materials, time, and value of education/skill to be a professional.
I've often thought about building a parts-caster of sorts...but itll most likely cost twice as much and be half the quality...and definitely zero resale value.
Found this through my recommends (am a metal and guitar fan). Other builders have articulated similar costs and expenses behind guitar production, but this is probably the most candid one I've seen with real numbers. Thank you for this and will follow your channel too!
My take is that someone could pay out of pocket and go over the top with wood, frets, pickups, hardware, and strings, but it isn't cost effective. I think quality parts won't break a budget, and you still get an awesome guitar or two. Thank you for some awesome guitars.
I found this conversation to be very interesting and informative. I understand Rob's point that raw numbers are "boring" but it is very informative to hear from a luthiers perspective. Great interview as always Ryan. The only criticism I could have is the video abruptly ended, yeah I'm a nerd and wanted to see more.Thanks.
While there are many "solid" cheaper import guitars, with many things in life, you generally get what you pay for with higher end guitars. If you're not serious about guitars, don't pay serious money. They are tools as much as they can be luxury items. What price tag do you put on the inspiration a guitar can give you?
That’s a great question! With the level Rob is at I imagine that’s somewhat limited outside of the occasional collab like Ryan Waste. One of these days I’ll definitely have to find someone with more expertise on that specific subject. Thank you!
In short: ANY business has overhead costs. That's adult life. These are niche products. Love your channel, man, but this kind of content of someone talking/complaining about their bills and how everything is expensive is not it. I say this with the utmost respect. No hate or trolling.
Appreciate the love and input, but that’s not the point of this video whatsoever. As we stated in the video, this is just to inform people that have no idea, what kind of things go into the cost of making guitars. Some people, mainly younger consumers, don’t have that full of a grasp, or some people take for granted what larger companies put out, and don’t understand why so and so charges this much. Some of it seems obvious to buyers like you and I, but some people don’t have that insight.
I respectively disagree... as someone who has a few custom shop instruments and has run a couple businesses it was really interesting to hear the breakdown. Kudos to Rob for being so transparent. Many times owners don't want to do so for fear of exposing the inner workings of their business to criticism from people who don't get how business works. I feel a video such as this is a great way to impart to younger generations of guitarists an appreciation for craftsmanship and why people such as Rob can and should charge what they do in comparison to some cheap guitar off of Amazon.
He is right, fret jobs do tear your arms up. The neck would being stable and the fret job is the most important part of a guitar. If you dont have those the entire guitar is a paper weight in my opinion. Like ya, youve got a nice bridge and pickup, the paint looks good, ect, bu tif it doesnt play good none of those things matter.
Completely agree - I have nice guitars with unstable necks, and I simply don't reach for them during certain seasons. Sometimes you just want to sit down and play.
Yes, speakers absolutely make the biggest difference in your overall tone. I think given the context of the conversation, Dallas meant more the tone of the guitar. Like of any guitar component, woods, bridge, frets etc, pickups are the sound of the guitar. We probably should’ve clarified in the vid. Hope this helps!
@@MrRyanshreds i think I've noticed them using Marshall DSL heads but I could be wrong. If they are that's the most brutal grinding DSL tone I've ever heard! The bass tone is equally insane also
@@MrRyanshreds whatever he's using it sounds insane. I used to have no interest in the JVM series just too many knobs for me but if he's getting that kind of tone I might have to try one 😂
This interview was super helpful i been wanting to do a punk band without a bassist for a while! People are just so hard to find to jam with. And i discovered a cool new band in the process!
Great interview Ryan. I love how Karl opened that much and the talk was so friendly and interesting at the same time. I wish that you can get Rutan too and Kyle again as the other one was short. Keep it coming 🤘🤘
Great interview and long overdue for a rig rundown. I've been listening to metal since 1987 and no other band held first place for so long as 1349 . Unfortunately I'm not much a fan of their latest stuff. I have thrashed Hellfire and Demonoir over and over that many times back then it drove my friends crazy ha!!! I really hope they return back to their original sound. That's the unfortunate thing about bands touring with other's . They can be a bad influence on great bands . I have witnessed many great bands go boring and it started with Metallica who set this terrible trend but I get the feeling Behemoth is the band that has created a lot of damage these days .
The guitar/bass split thing is cool. My first guitar amp was a Peavey TNT bass combo with the 10 band eq. Sounded killer with distortion and an octave fx.
Black metal bands are just try hards who play the same triad notes with a variation of two celtic riffs. Rinse eash repeat oh and add a blast beat and some guy last minute saying ugh
@@MrRyanshreds Correct in 90% of cases. Dimmu is top shelf Black Metal, of course.....they havent been rehashing faustian power chords, they created a whole new sonic approach to BM, thats why you even referenced them because the dichtomy of BM is theres like 9 good bands lollololololol. Which is exactly my initial point, all Black metal is, is a bunch of try hard playing the same triads and a variation of two celtic riffs, and then theres like literally a fucking drop in the ocean where they become pioneers sonically. The rest is literally burzum cover bands its so sad to see, BM could achieve so much more the community is too busy with tradition and culture to even get its hands dirty in the ways of Watain or Dimmu. Sure Watain is the commandeer of triad riffs, if not the chief in command but these people have owned the soil for decades. They are bands about evolution and craftmanship, theres nothing honorable or worthwhile for me to copy in any way relative shape or form, I am a different kind of musician in that when im inspiried by music it filters out in many different kaleidiscopes of ideas. When I go see a 30 bill black and white Norwegian Assault Deluxe tour it is a fucking snore fest because it's too busy like I said with culture and tradition. Youre better off waiting to see any Mayhem tour passing through for one night than a month of concerts with most BM tour bills, it a jerk off fest over who has gucci or dollar tree shirts
@@EliLemke-ft3fs I mean I’m not gonna pretend like I’m the biggest rep of bm bands. But there’s a ton of creative acts out there besides “traditional “ black metal. Also not going to sit and list them in comments lol. DM on IG if you’d like any cool recommendations later. Have good one 🍻
@@MrRyanshreds I mean we're just two people conversating, its not the end of the world. Speaking of creative acts Imperial Triumphant and Plebian Grandstand lately are my current soaked Oreo in Milk.