Well said.Mike Neer wrote: I can't harbor negative feelings towards people for something as innocent as collecting instruments. It comes off as envy, and I don't dig that. Truthfully, IMO steel guitars are nothing special until they are in the hands of people who can play them.
I have to admit that I too sometimes catch myself falling into that trap. I see musicians and collectors with dozens, sometimes hundreds of high dollar vintage Martins, Gibson Les Pauls, 335's, etc, Fender Blackguard Teles, 50's strats and so forth and I wonder on occasion what on god's green earth do they need more than a few to cover their bases. But I recognize the root of this impulse to judge for what it is: envy, the flipside of greed. It's not like I'm envious of guys who own that many guitars and would want them to myself, no, it's mostly that I envy the ability to simply pursue these beautiful material possessions without a thought wasted on ethics, guilt, shame, etc. Must be nice...but it's not for me and so I feel compelled to add my negativity, but I don't because in the endstatements like "He doesn't even know how to play, he surely has no right to own them" say more about the person making them than the person being criticized.
So instead I make it a point to pay more attention to guys who make magic happen with only a couple of guitars and let the collectors collect, more power to them, I'm glad I don't have to look after all those guitars. And the coolest players are the ones least promiscuous when it comes to guitars anyway.
I'll take Willie and Trigger, Junior Brown and old yeller plus a spare or Peter Green with one Les Paul and a Strat over any of those guys touring with an arsenal the size of a music store any day.