· Joke 7: A man asks the devil: “how much does it cost to be the greatest guitar player in the world?”. The devil says: “Give me your soul.”. Joke 8: Two jazz guitarists meet in a bar, and one says, “Hey, I bought your last album, it was really great!” to which the other replies, “Oh so that was you!”.
 · Guitar Puns. I also thought I’d compile a short list of guitar puns you can use when talking to another guitarist. Drop these during a casual conversation and they’ll know exactly what you mean ;). Get yourself a G-string. Pick on someone your own size. Fingerpickin’ good (fingerlickin’ good also works) Case closed.
 · 10 – A man asks the devil: “how much does it cost to be the greatest guitar player in the world?”. The devil says: “Give me your Soul.”. The man asks: “What can i get for a dollar?”. Devil: “Greatest bass player in the world.”. 11 – Why are so many guitar player jokes one liners?
We suggest to use only working strings string quartet piadas for adults and blagues for friends. Some of the dirty witze and dark jokes are funny, but use them with caution in real life. Try to remember funny jokes you've never heard to tell your friends and will make you laugh.
Guitars never argue, you are always right. Guitars don’t snore. Guitars never wake you up in the middle of the night, for any reason. When your Guitar is being played too slow, you can speed up. Your Guitar will never earn more than you do for the same job just because it’s a Guitar.
You don’t have to continually assure your Guitar that its string length is just right
You can play your Guitar the first time you meet it, without having to take it to dinner, see a movie, or meet its mother
Inside the bar, the string asks for a beer. Sadly for the string, though, the bartender states "Sorry, we don't serve strings here." So, the string walks out of the bar, frazzles up his head, twists his stomach and walks back in. The bartender, noticing the string, says "Hey!- aren't you that string from earlier?" The string replies "Nope, I'm afraid not."
A string walks into a bar and the bartender points to a sign that says "no strings allowed".#N#So the string goes outside, ties himself up, messes up his hair and comes back into the bar. The bartender yells "aren't you that string I just kicked out?" The string replies "I'm a frayed knot!"
and the bartender says to him, "Hey no strings allowed. Get out!" So he goes out side, messes himself up, ties himself up, and goes back in. The bartender says, "Hey, aren't you that string from earlier?" "Nope. I'm a frayed knot."
The guitar player replied " I love Gsus2".
A young man wanted to learn an instrument, so he bought himself a bass guitar. Not knowing where to begin, he decides to take music lessons. After some searching he finds an old bassist who is offering beginner classes at a reasonable rate. He calls the man and they schedule a meeting for the next evening.
So he starts going for lessons and after a few months he is quite good so he calls on his friend Mr Pig who plays the piano because he would like to start a band. They write some songs and play at some venues but all the fans say that they need a vocalist to take their band to the next level.
A Scottish teenage girl learns guitar and writes a song. When she performs it at the talent show, to her father's disapproval, she wears a crop top. During a guitar solo, her father walks up on stage and starts singing the song as if he's part of the act, and then he wraps her exposed belly with a t ...
You can tune a guitar but you can't tuna fish.
Peter Frampton. The legendary Humble Pie guitarist Peter Frampton also used very light strings during one part of his career. According to an old interview from the mid-1970s, Frampton revealed that he uses ultra light strings. It's been known that during that decade he went as low as .008.
Well, what else would you expect from a virtuoso like Joe Satriani, whose music is filled with fast legato passages, than to use light gauge strings? Over his career, he often played .009 strings in the E standard tuning. However, as the years went by, he switched over to .010s and tuned one semitone down.
Tony Iommi. Knowing that he lost the tips of two fingers on his fretting hand, Tony Iommi was forced to make his own prosthetics and switch over to lighter strings. However, finding very light strings in the UK in the '60s wasn't exactly the easiest task.
Frank Zappa was also pretty obsessed about using lighter strings. While Ernie Ball has the signature Zappa strings that are .008-.038 and he reportedly never went above .009, certain sources even mention gauges going as low as .007. Well, knowing how weird and innovative he was, it wouldn't surprise us even one bit if he did, in fact, have .007s.
And it is only logical to see one of Satriani's students, the young and talented Steve Vai, using light gauge strings. Of course, Vai is no longer that young, but he still often uses .009s, although you'll also see him with .010s. Either way, it's expected of such a player who plays fast and bends strings all the time to use lighter stuff.
Chuck Berry. Way back in the days of early rock 'n' roll, Chuck Berry found out that he can use banjo strings on his electric guitar. It's not certain whether anyone made such light strings for guitar back then but the "Johnny B. Goode" legend used .008 gauge.
Aside from his legendary Red Special, Vox amps, and the well-known use of a sixpence instead of a pick, Queen guitarist uses a classic light string gauge of .009–.042.