It was my D string. Broke at the bridge. How do you break a D string? What do you do?
I had been religiously changing my strings before every 'gig.' I really love the sound of new strings, but very few people notice. So, at $4/pack I started making them go longer.
And when the cursed event happens:
- Everything on your guitar is now out-of-tune. It
is, indeed, the laws of physics. - What's that? Did you say that you don't keep a spare
set of strings in your case? For shame! - Changing a string will take at least 5 minutes because
you have no roadies, and the case is 30 feet away. - Tuning quickly and making do could work... but all those
hours of practicing all those tasty licks are... not much use now.
Every scale. Every arpeggio. They need that string. - What's that? You don't know where the octaves on your
guitar are located? Too bad. It's going to be very
hard to make-do.
I chose to make do, because I knew I couldn't grab a string fast enough.
The best way is to change your strings is on the D'Addario website: here. They stay in tune, break in very quickly, and makes changing strings super fast. You end up with about 1 wrap (which breaks in quick), but you do a "lock-wrap" so that it stays really secure (which stays in tune). Using this method, I've been able to change strings right before a performance without having to re-tune more than once or twice.
So tell me: What are your broken string war stories? What did you do?
[1] - Image from http://www.verkstad.com/art/stringball/StringBall05.jpg, by John Kieltyka
[2] - @Mike: better? :-P
2 comments:
And the licks were tasy indeed! hate it when that happens!
Yeah, that's the absolute worst. I put together a band for homecomming my junior year of highschool, during the first song (say it ain't so by weezer), Broke the A string. the A string!
After that I bought string saver sattles, and I haven't broken a string since. (Minus the time I was wacking my guitar with a drum brush and snapped the E-string, but I don't fault the string savers).
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