HardlyRamone wrote:Yeah, that picture is in Johnny's autobiography when he's talking about recording for the first album, that's how I knew he used a MK1 on it.. unless the book is wrong. I also recall him saying he had "new amps and guitars to work with", or something of the sort. I assume those would be the MK1 and the Fender used on "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend".
And yeah, I'm sure the right equipment would get you the right guitar tone, but actually sounding like the man himself can't really be bought. I'm still just practicing on my cheap guitar (I'm about two years in), trying to build up some essential technique and learn to play like Johnny at the same time. "Downstrokes and barre chords" sounds simple enough, but I've discovered even that won't make you sound like Johnny right away. If I get good enough, perhaps I'll try to save up and upgrade to a nice Hallmark, like the Johnny Ramone model. But at the moment I'm not quite sure if I need to buy a brilliant guitar when I'm not a brilliant player.
Please allow me to give you a little advice from a 40 yr old Ramones fan that's seen them live 6 times and has met each member in person. I mean this with 100% all due respect:
Don't try to be Johnny. Yes, he's an awesome inspiration and his sound and style was special and unique and set the stage for millions of punk rock guitarists to follow. I get it. He's my personal guitar idol. Downstrokes and barre chords at warp speed sound awesome, and true, they're not as easy as it seems. But try to develop your own sound. I hate to say it, but Johnny would probably scoff at you for trying to be too much like him. If you wanna base your sound on his style, knock yourself out. Millions have done the same thing. But don't spend your time trying to nail his tone or anything. You never will. heck, his own sound was never the same from album to album. It is fun to try, but be your own man. I guarantee you that Johnny did not put as much thought and effort into his sound as those do that are trying to copy it.
Having said that, his later tone would be much easier to copy if you just insist on doing it. Get you a Hallmark or Mosrite, put a Dimarzio Fat Strat single in the bridge, and plug into a real, early 80s vertical input JCM 800 or late 70s JMP 2203 and run that into a standard 1960 cab. Run the gain and master volume around 8. Wear earplugs. That's his 80s and beyond gear. The JCM 800 has a more consistent sound than his Super Lead days. The rest is up to your hands.