Thanks Spencerfor having me over once again. Always a fun time talking about my super wacky collection of guitars!! This one originally was called "The Brick" because the orange color finish reminded me and all my band mates about bricks that people use for building houses 🙂
I have one of these guitars still stock original and can't get with the odd neck profile. Feels like a broomstick that sets off the body in a weird way.
This sounds exactly like the Dom-church in Cologne. That is a building a mile high, a mile wide and 5 miles long. And packed with curved arched roofs and stone colums that echo to 72 directions. What went wrong with the reverb spring units inside the amp? Or does this guitar do its own reverb?!
Thanks Spencerfor having me over once again. Always a fun time talking about my super wacky collection of guitars!! This one originally was called "The Brick" because the orange color finish reminded me and all my band mates about bricks that people use for building houses 🙂
I have one of these guitars still stock original and can't get with the odd neck profile. Feels like a broomstick that sets off the body in a weird way.
Rad that it’s all stock. Do you have a photo? Would love to see it. Are you able to get some sounds out of the guitar that you like?
@@ildefonsoinc there are a half dozen SG200's on Reverb right now that appear stock. Mine looks like the walnut model for sale.
Cant find any SG 250s that are anything else than sunburst or solid red. Care to elaborate where you got the info for the orange one?
I believe this one was red, painted orange by the original owner, sold to Hanz who painted it back to red.
This sounds exactly like the Dom-church in Cologne. That is a building a mile high, a mile wide and 5 miles long. And packed with curved arched roofs and stone colums that echo to 72 directions. What went wrong with the reverb spring units inside the amp? Or does this guitar do its own reverb?!