I'll never forget one tech named James Link. I was initially
impressed
that James was operating out of a garage in his backyard with several
assistants helping out. Instead of the usual smelly basement. I
patiently
explained to him that, as a harp player, I was possibly looking for
something different than what he might do with a guitarist's amp.
I asked
for a few modifications that I had read about other harp players
doing.
After a heated argument, I figured I had prevailed. After all, I
was the
one paying for the work.
After a week or two went by with a couple of calls by Link
informing me
that he finding more and more things to replace on my old Super
Reverb, it
was finally time to pick up the amp. Link's garage was less than
10 minutes
from my place of work but his official hours of operation perfectly
coincided with my workday. I asked if he could hang around his
garage an
extra 5 or 10 minutes after closing while I hustled over with a
check. The
tab had climbed to around $300, by the way. Nope, James informed
me that he
was running a business and I needed to be there during business
hours. He
wasn't open on weekends. The next day I had to sneak over to his
"business"
with the company van on company time. Once the check was in his
hand, he
became quite gregarious. Told me what an "honor" it was to work on
a Fender
in such good condition. I asked if he had made the modifications I
requested while restoring the amp. Nope, he felt that I should
experience
the amp just as it came off the assembly line. Restored to factory
specifications. Then, if I was unhappy with the sound, he'd be
glad to try
it my way. I tell you, I had smoke coming out of my ears at that
point.
I know this is Easter, but there must be a special place in Hell
reserved
for guys like that.
Mick Zaklan
_______________________________________________
Harp-L is sponsored by SPAH, http://www.spah.org
Harp-L@xxxxxxxxxx
http://harp-l.org/mailman/listinfo/harp-l