You can practically hear her thinking, “what-what-what???”

You can practically hear her thinking, “what-what-what???”

I have a little pocket knife that we bought on a visit to lake Winnipesaukee that has been my most useful tool for dealing with COVID-19 shipping and receiving. I wrote a post on it a while ago. You can probably dig through the site and find it.

I made a command decision the other day. I upgraded to an actual Swiss Army knife. I just used it to open a huge Yankee Candle drop shipment. It performed perfectly.

This was a good move on my part, even if I will forever have a soft spot for Mr Winnipesaukee Souvenir knife.
Finally!! After months of struggle we have finally found something that is able to clean my god damned glasses! Let’s celebrate!


Look at me with pedals on the floor like some kind of freakin’ amateur.
Two songs were added to the 50/90 pipeline this morning. That makes eight, all with rhythm guitars recorded. I’m going lo-fi this time, sort of like I did back in March. No doubling. This time I have two amps though so I can pan one left and one right and still keep the bass in the middle. Fascinating.
I have also finished tracking volume 1 of the Great 2015 Re-Recording Project. I put the lead guitars onto the last of the eight songs. It only took five years! I’ll try to mix it tonight, but a crappy night’s sleep last night might get in the way of that.
Most important, my new Crybaby wah pedal is working. It wasn’t for the last couple of days. I thought I broke the switch. It worked fine when it was on, but when it was “off” the wah was still engaged, there was just maybe 1% of the signal coming through. I took it off the board on Thursday so I could get some work done. Today I put a battery in it (because when I tried to power it with my daisy chain it sounded awful) and messed with it.
The problem was still there. I remembered that there’s a switch inside to change from true bypass to buffered bypass. I figured since the bypass is the problem, maybe I could change that? Nope, didn’t fix it. I kept the buffer on. I know buffers are like bad words to most guitar gear nerds, but I prefer the way the wah sounds when there’s a buffer in the signal. What can you do.
So it’s not the bypass, maybe it is the switch? I flipped it a few times with my hand, maybe it’s stuck on something? Worst case scenario is I send it back to get it fixed and probably also buy something a little meatier than a Dunlop. Something boutique and expensive. I don’t know… that switch… One more try… I stomped on the pedal… really hard. Problem solved. Oh jeeze, Edith.
I did two rhythm guitar parts for 50/90 today. One was the one I did a couple of days ago that was too fast for me. I slowed the tempo and re-recorded the part. The other song was the only song in the pipeline that I hadn’t gotten to yet. There are only six songs. That’s not enough on day seven.
I also did one of the two remaining re-recording project songs. I don’t think I purposely saved the two hard songs for last, but it looks like it ended up that way. The one that’s done isn’t very good. The other one was only just started but I scrapped the little bit I did and will go back to it after taking a break.
Hard songs are hard to play.
Our friendly neighborhood giant turkey is back today.

Assuming I’m doing things correctly, and the YouTube tutorial I’m watching isn’t steering me wrong, the neck on my ES-335 is right where it should be.

No one is more shocked than I.

