- Play a real ’59 Gibson Les Paul Standard.
- Join an online guitar forum.
- Get into an argument with someone on an online guitar forum.
- Get invited upstairs at Gruhn Guitars in Nashville, Tennessee to see the good stuff.
- Fire a drummer.
- Take a factory tour at C.F. Martin & Co in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.
- Have at least two quotes from This is Spinal Tap committed to memory.
- Attend Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Festival.
- Host a house concert.
- Play “Eight Miles High” on a Rickenbacker 12-string.
- Perform a song you wrote at an open mic.
- Order a custom guitar from an independent luthier.
- Pay for a neck reset.
- Buy a ukulele in Hawaii.
- Have a moment of twang on an original Blackguard Telecaster.
- Stick a mirror in your acoustic guitar’s sound hole to look at the bracing.
- Attend a NAMM show, the annual trade show for musical instrument manufacturers held in Anaheim, California.
- Own a guitar worth more than your daily driver.
- Find yourself in a strange neighborhood chasing a Craigslist lead.
- See B.B. King perform.
- Swear off a particular brand of strings.
- Go to the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco, one of the world’s greatest music festivals and it’s completely free.
- Film yourself playing and post it on YouTube.
- Introduce yourself to one of your guitar heroes after a concert.
- Order a flight case to keep your favorite instrument safe and sound.
- Teach a kid his/her first three chords.
- Install a humidity gauge somewhere in your house.
- Change a broken string onstage in the middle of your set.
- Walk around Greenwich Village in New York City contemplating Bob Dylan and step into Matt Umanov’s store.
- Travel to Paracho, Mexico to see the world’s only community centered around guitar building and order a nylon stringed model to take home.
- Play “Wipe Out” through a spring reverb.
- See a show at McCabe’s Guitars in Santa Monica, California.
- Play a show at McCabe’s Guitars in Santa Monica, California
- Attend a guitar-centric summer camp such as Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peace Ranch or the Puget Sound Guitar Workshop.
- Listen to Leo Kottke tell a joke between songs at one of his concerts.
- Take a class at the Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago.
- Take a long roadtrip listening to Ry Cooder’s Paris, Texas soundtrack.
- Hoard a stash of tone woods for a custom guitar that you haven’t fully decided upon yet.
- Hold a blacklight up to a vintage guitar to see if it’s had any finish work done.
- Install a boutique set of pickups by yourself – will do that too, soon enough!
- Buy a cheap acoustic guitar specifically for outdoor jams and barbeques.
- Strum a pre-war Martin herringbone.
- Play a Carter Family tune on an old 16″ Gibson L-5 like Maybelle’s.
- Buy a pick that costs more than $20.
- Lend a piece of expensive gear to a musician far more proficient than you.
- Play through a tape echo.
- Attend a multi-day bluegrass festival like MerleFest or Telluride; partake in too much music and other stuff.
- Carry more than $5000 in cash to a vintage guitar show, just in case something catches your eye.
- Play a little Robert Johnson on a 1920′s or ’30′s Gibson L-00 or L-1.
- Talk about vintage Martin guitars with expert Richard Johnston of Gryphon Stringed Instruments in Palo Alto, California.
- Play Django Reinhardt’s “Minor Swing” on a Selmer-style guitar.
- Peruse the halls of the Montreal Guitar Show, a giant showcase of the world’s best lutherie held every July during the Montreal Jazz Festival.
- Burn yourself on a hot vacuum tube.
- Busk.
- Find yourself backstage at a stadium rock concert.
- Play a Collings at Quincy’s Guitars in Austin, Texas.
- Learn how to Travis pick.
- Visit the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee.
- Refuse to buy an otherwise great guitar because you don’t like the way the neck feels.
- Have Westwood Music‘s Fred Walecki captivate you for at least an hour with storytelling and guitars.
- Drop your guitar and then realize it’s not the end of the world.
- Learn the middle and end of “Stairway to Heaven.”
- Grow your fingernails out.
- Capture a Les Paul Monday at the Iridium in New York City (bonus points if you actually saw Les Paul play when you could).
- Try to play a harp guitar.
- Adjust a truss rod without any outside help.
- Attend a show at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee.
- Play a vintage Weissenborn.
- Force your family to visit Buffalo Brothers and take a Taylor Guitars factory tour on your San Diego vacation.
- Own Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music, the influential boxed set of early blues and old-time music.
- Build your own cigar box guitar.
- Find your inner bluesman by taking a pilgrimage to the Crossroads Monument in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where Highways 61 and 49 meet.
- Attempt to play “Dueling Banjos” on a 5-string banjo.
- Learn an open tuning.
- Buy a 12-string guitar.
- Go to Elderly Instruments in East Lansing, Michigan and ask to see the Tone Balls.
- Collect a vintage set of strings for the cool packaging, even though you have no intention of ever using them.
- Buy a short-scale or parlor guitar specifically for travelling.
- Find yourself on the Staten Island Ferry holding an instrument you just purchased fromMandolin Brothers.
- Play James Taylor’s “Fire and Rain” on an Olson guitar.
- Scratch and sniff a piece of Brazilian rosewood.
- Go to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio.
- Conduct a photo shoot with your current guitar quiver.
- Own at least one guitar made in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
- Own at least one guitar made in Fullerton, California.
- Visit the Cavern Club in Liverpool.
- Learn a song written by a musician who is fifteen years younger than you.
- Learn a song written by a musician who died before you were born.
- Restring your guitar in “Nashville” tuning.
- Play “Little Wing” on a Strat loud enough to upset the neighbors.
- Go look at the Stradivarius guitar at the National Music Museum at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion.
- Catch a set by Telecaster whiz Redd Volkaert at Austin’s Continental Club.
- Regret that you sold a great guitar when you were younger and needed the cash.
- Learn the difference between a Duolian and a Triolian.
- Contemplate buying a guitar made the year you were born.
- Own an effects pedal not carried by Guitar Center.
- Miss a day of work because you were up too late playing.
- Write a song for your significant other.
- Subscribe to the Fretboard Journal.
- Order a custom guitar and amplifier to create your own unique sound.
10.17.2011
Guitarists Bucketlist
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