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Imports/Guitar Teacher Tactics/ Clif
Gregg Ellis
I do not want to start WWIII but, It seems the imports are putting "American" names on their product to sell. Isn't there popular Asian names to put on handmade guitars? "Eastman Strings"? Ibanez sounds latin? I know we are a world of brands but a name use to mean something. If China makes a quality kick butt guitar and they name it Wang Jung would we buy it? On the other hand...why is Gibson sourcing out Epiphone to Korea? Wages? What a mess:)...
Teacher Tactics/Choking on Stage I studied with a popular teacher for three years. In the first year of our relationship if I didn't apply myself to his specific direction he would tell me I sucked...it is what it is? I think we all need a teacher to tell it like it is. Maybe we shouldn't be holding the thing if we aren't going to follow their direction. Would you spend $100 hr weeks at a time and not buy in to your teachers brutal truth? Getting booed on stage will send home or to the pawn shop! Clif - Which came first the Chicken or the Egg? I say - Music came first then the lydian flat 5 #11. Cal Collins, Wes Montgomery and Tal Farlow played the sounds....I'm with you brother! __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around |
Toby Rider
Gregg Ellis wrote:
I do not want to start WWIII but, It seems the imports are puttingI think it's all a matter of targeted marketing. :-) |
Jeff Shirkey
On the other hand...why is Gibson sourcing
Yes, of course. What else? It's all about maximizing profits for those big companies, especially with their low end product lines. So, what does Gibson do? They turn around and charge *outrageous* money for their "custom shop" or "historic" lines made in the US--none of which are worth the cash.out Epiphone to Korea? Wages? Jeff |
In a message dated 9/24/2005 11:58:18 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
jcshirke@... writes: On the other hand...why is Gibson sourcing Yes, of course. What else? It's all about maximizing profits forout Epiphone to Korea? Wages? those big companies, especially with their low end product lines. So, what does Gibson do? They turn around and charge *outrageous* money for their "custom shop" or "historic" lines made in the US--none of which are worth the cash. and greggsguitar: JeffI do not want to start WWIII but, It seems the imports are putting "American" names on their product to sell. Isn't there popular Asian names to put on handmade guitars? "Eastman Strings"? Ibanez sounds latin? I know we are a world of brands but a name use to mean something. If China makes a quality kick butt guitar and they name it Wang Jung would we buy it? On the other hand...why is Gibson sourcing out Epiphone to Korea? Wages? What a mess:)... Well, yeah, all that---and also because we don't want to pay "outrageous" money for ANYthing we buy in this country. Just about everything these days seems to come from Korea or China. If we insist on buying only stuff made in America (by workers who need "high" wages, benefits, 401Ks -- and who have to pay outrageously high taxes on those wages) then we have to pay the price to cover all that. The whole thing, IMHO, is customer-driven. I think one of the reasons so many operations have moved overseas is because we as customers refuse to pay that kind of money, and also because of onerous US regulations which increase the cost of producing something. Also, IMHO, there's nothing wrong with a business maximizing its profits. The shareholders or those who have invested their dough in a company are entitled to a return on their investment. Two companies that sell all US-made stuff at reasonable prices are Crate and Taylor. Now, Crate's reliability and sound are subjective, but I own a couple of Taylors and they're great with respect to both sound and craftsmanship. Rick Cape Cod |
Toby Rider
whaler@... wrote:
Well, yeah, all that---and also because we don't want to pay "outrageous" money for ANYthing we buy in this country. Just about everything these days seems to come from Korea or China. Yup.. I agree with your assessment on this 100%. Personally I don't have a problem with buying products from South Korea, Japan or Taiwan. They are all fledgling democracies with free market economies. Plus my mother is from Taiwan, and even though she's lived in the US since 1964 (long before I was born!), she still has family there. I also don't really care what names they come up with for their instruments, as long as it isn't something too weird. Alot of ideas in Chinese don't really translate very well into English, for instance a literal translation of "computer" is "electric brain". So maybe picking something that is market-friendly isn't such a bad idea :-) I will not however buy products from mainland China, due to the Communism and flagrant human rights violations. I don't want my money to be funding sweat-shops. Outsourcing isn't an issue that faces only us. One of my uncles owns a business in Taiwan that maufacturers restaurant quality freezers. He has had to move the entire manufacturing plant to South East Asia, because the cost of labor/living in Taiwan has gotten so high, that he can't afford to pay the prevailing wage for assembly line workers in Taiwan and make a decent profit, so the plant had to be moved to somewhere that the operating costs were lower. He has since enlarged his corporate office in Taiwan and hired more professional workers to improve the engineering & marketing of his products. The way it's supposed to work is that as labor jobs go away, they are replaced with higher wage technical jobs and people are always making an effort to improve their job skills. Doesn't always work that way, but nothing ever always works as it should. Companies moving their operations to cut costs, improve profit margins, be more competitve, happens domestically quite a bit as well. The company that I work for recently shut down 60% of it's facility in Orange County, CA. and is significantly expanding it's facility here in Cowtown. They laid off 400 people out there, but due to the differences in the cost of doing business, they're going to be hiring 600 people here. Sorry for the extended diatribe, but you just happened to bring up a subject that is what I do for my day job. -- -- Toby Rider -- Fort Worth, Texas |
joseph ramirez
Will be around 4th or 5th. The Chinese realize that If they want to sell more products here in the USA then they call them American names. The traditional days are over and the upcoming capitalist are taking this route to globalize the world.
American big business realize this as well and they do the same thing over in china. As far as outsourcing, it is cheaper to do this. This tactic is nothing new it, it is an old technique. You are not going to start WW III, we are all on the doorsteps of a global economy where were not competing against Americans for jobs, but every individual that is qualified for the same job no matter their worldly position. Joe Joseph Ramirez |
Donnie Loeffler
HI YJJG,
Hi folks, just a few comments on the overseas manufacturing issues. The global economy is very complex and is constantly expanding at very high rate. One of the reasons of our high gasoline costs is due to the increase of consumption of crude oil from the far east, mainly china. I've purchased many items from epiphone which are made in korea and maybe china. I've also purchased amps from fender which are made in china. The epiphones are very well made for the money , of course; they require a professional set up. The amps were very poorly made and required a professional tech to repair "shotty" craftsmanship. Why did I purchase such items? I don't think (new) gibson is worth the money for thier quality, anymore. However, I do contend that if the USA doesn't produce or manufactuer the majority of its products that eventually there will be a price to paid in terms of good jobs that provide a wage of which people can support a family. The most important reason for jobs moving overseas is the cost of health care , of which employers bare the brunt of the costs. Why do companies offer such "benefits"? During World War 2, the US govt. mandated a price "cap" for wages, so in order for companies to compete for viable workers they introduced benefits and pensions. Of course, health care and insurance has changed drastically since the 1940's and the economy is demostrating the effects of such costs by offering more "new" jobs which are part time with out benefits. However, the response from the last reply on this thread was inaccurate to state the US has higher taxes than other countries. If you compare the US's taxes to other countries you will find that the majority of countries have higher tax rates for business and individuals. A good example of this is the beringer corp. from germany now has the majority of its products made in china and overseas countries. So, it isn't just US companies involved in such efforts to retain as much profit as possible. The only way to combat such problems on a individual basis is for the workforce to become higher skill labor. Any job that cannot be automated is a starting point. The greatest advanatge to being a musician is: the job cannot be outsourced, it cannot be "automated", and it is a high skill job with the implication of "not everybody can play or teach music professionally". Also, a great selling point about professional music is, the majority of folks working in the business are their own "bosses". Sure , there are many corporations that work with and employ musicians, but usually a musician has their own input and control of their product (for better or worse). However, my opinion about manufactuering in the US should be "protected". I think folks should be able to work a 40 hour work week, make a fair wage, and have accesss to proficent health care. I don't think it's fair to have the majority of folks work mutliple part time jobs of which the person is being "double taxed" (local and state taxes at least) and not have access to "affordable" health care. Unfortuneately, it will take a "depression", not recession, for the US and other mkts. to understand this economic reality. "History does repeat itself, and those who don't understand are doomed to repeat it" -- Henry Kiaser , guitarist Sincerely, Donnie Loeffler -- guitarist for more info on american workforce concerns: www.jobswithjustice.com --- In jazz_guitar@..., Toby Rider <high-tech- hillbilly@b...> wrote: whaler@a... wrote:pay "outrageous"Well, yeah, all that---and also because we don't want to everything these daysmoney for ANYthing we buy in this country. Just about who needseems to come from Korea or China. outrageously high taxes on"high" wages, benefits, 401Ks -- and who have to pay reasons sothose wages) then we have to pay the price to cover all that. refuse to paymany operations have moved overseas is because we as customers which increasethat kind of money, and also because of onerous US regulations I don'tthe cost of producing something. have a problem with buying products from South Korea, Japan orTaiwan. They are all fledgling democracies with free market economies.Plus my mother is from Taiwan, and even though she's lived in the US since1964 (long before I was born!), she still has family there.their instruments, as long as it isn't something too weird. Alot ofideas in Chinese don't really translate very well into English, forinstance a literal translation of "computer" is "electric brain". So maybepicking something that is market-friendly isn't such a bad idea :-)the Communism and flagrant human rights violations. I don't want mymoney to be funding sweat-shops.uncles owns a business in Taiwan that maufacturers restaurant quality freezers.He has had to move the entire manufacturing plant to South East Asia,because the cost of labor/living in Taiwan has gotten so high, that hecan't afford to pay the prevailing wage for assembly line workers inTaiwan and make a decent profit, so the plant had to be moved tosomewhere that the operating costs were lower. He has since enlarged hiscorporate office in Taiwan and hired more professional workers to improvethe engineering & marketing of his products.they are replaced with higher wage technical jobs and people are alwaysmaking an effort to improve their job skills. Doesn't always work that way,but nothing ever always works as it should.profit margins, be more competitve, happens domestically quite a bit as well. Thehere in Cowtown.differences in the cost of doing business, they're going to be hiring 600 people here.bring up a subject that is what I do for my day job. |
jazzclif
The thoughts on manufacturing and supporting the Chinese are very
interesting, but it's probably hard to write 500 words or less and make much sense. I have two chinese guitars called Epiphone and Jay Turser, a couple of Korean ones, called Wasburn and De Armond and a Japanese one named 'Ibanez' and a plain ole Gibson. American manufacturing has a number of obstacles in the way of competing. It's true that US workers want living wages and benefits, but before 1980, CEO's made an average of 25 to 30 times the lowest company-paid wage. Now it's a thousand times and up. And their salaries are not tied to performance, but to the whim of their boards, which consist of other CEO's. Outsourcing doesn't just save on wc and health insurance, which is usually paid for by both the corporation and the employee, but the wage base is virtually non-existent in countries that don't have the overhead of policing their citizens or if they are a police state, paying or protecting them, nor do they have any overhead for control of the emissions that wreak havoc on the entire biome. Corporations don't pay taxes anymore, so the tax base on the wage earner has to be much higher to compensate the government for their shortfalls due corporate welfare. Therefore they need higher wages, but it is possible to shift blame to the worker if one ignores the effect of corporate welfare. Here's a fact you may not like, but you can't dispute it. If you received a tax cut after 2000, it was paid to you in Chinese money your government did not have and had to borrow from our ideological enemy at a high interest rate *at the cost of its sovency! * All the subsequent tax rebates came from the same place - your Chinese banker/global adversary who aspires to be your master. Under this admin, the government has borrowed trillions to pay tax cuts for people who were not only already extremely wealthy, but benefitted from shelters that only left them marginally exposed to taxation to begin with. Interesting story, in 1978 and 79, while working fulltime as a musician, and before he was president, I paid more taxes than Ronald Reagan. So did you if you paid any, he paid zip. that was BEFORE he got into office. Afterwards, there was the biggest shift of wealth to the already wealthy that our nation had ever experienced, so the Reagan crowd paid even less, assuming they were paying anything to begin with. He left the US with the highest defecit in the nation's history, and a savings and loan ripoff that wasn't even detected yet, but he achieved his goal: at that time, 10% of the people had 90% of the money. And Iran had our weapons technology. The government had to borrow trillions from the Chinese to pay the recent Bush tax cuts, and of course they'll be paying them for a very long time to come. If you got it a truck brought it and if it did, it needed fuel, it needed to be made, and all the other obvious contributions from getting raw materials out of the earth and whipping them into products. The Chinese communists are intimately involved in each step of the way. It might be a feelgood moment to buy a Heritage instead of an oriental knockoff, but you'll interact with literally thousands of products and services made and performed by the Chinese home boys' and organ donors' shopping network before you get it home and open your chinese garage door with a Chinese lock and step onto your living room through a Chinese front door onto a Chinese olefin carpet and put the case down near the coffee table made of Chinese oak in view of your television set with Chinese guts. I'm not saying something shouldn't be done, I think it should, but where in hell do you start cleaning the mess up? We could, I think compete in some kind of ideal fair trade global market where there were trade sanctions against ALL human rights violators and polluters imposed by ALL countries, but we need a lot more global organization and accord than we've ever had. If third world countries and foreign nuclear powers were made to clean up their acts or face heavy sanctions or boycotts, they'd have a lot of the cost of operations we have to bear, and prices would even out a bit more. More still if there were a ceo salary cap - I mean if you can call any settlement of a medical negligence lawsuit over $250k 'frivolous', I expect you'd have a basis for determining what a human's really worth. Right now, we have something akin to a global home boys' shopping network and an ever increasing army of unemployed americans. I don't like paying chinese for guitars, but I like their flooding our steel market with their scrap, intellectual property theft and our shift of vital defense manufacturing to a hostile nuclear power even less. It's hard to find any factory-made item that isn't at least part Chinese any more. Fair trade isn't even close to isolationism, it's just sanity. But for anything to happen, government would have to be about something other than corporate profit, and this one hasn't been for some time, regrettably. Clif Kuplen |
Toby Rider
jazzclif wrote:
I knew it was just a matter-of-time before the whole anti-corporation/leftist point-of-view on this thread got expressed. As a Libertarian, I don't buy your arguments, and of course this forum isn't the appropriate place to get into a debate over free markets, regulation or global economics. However I respect your right to hold these opinions :-) |
--- In jazz_guitar@..., "jazzclif" <jurupari@a...> wrote:
Here's a fact you may not like, but you can't dispute it.Chinese money your government did not have and had to borrow from oursovency! And guess where they got that money from? Just about all products are labeled now where they are made. What's even worse than what you mention above is the fact that the U.S. consumer borrows the money from Visa or mastercard the money he doesn't have to purchase a product he doesn't need (which is probably too big and not energy efficient)... If you really track down the real problems, it's usually not as simple as us versus them... There's plenty of blame to go around! ;) Anyway, way off topic... Sorry. Ken |
jazzclif
--- In jazz_guitar@..., Toby Rider <high-tech-
hillbilly@b...> wrote: jazzclif wrote:for If you are a libertarian you ARE a leftist.some time, regrettably.I knew it was just a matter-of-time before the whole If you're proud of your philosopy, why lie about it? The old joke is the only difference between you and a communist is you can't spell dialectic materialism. That's not all joke, either. It's a free country so long as you don't advocate violent overthrowl of the government so think what you want, hang with Tom Cruise if you like these crazy quilt autogenerated cultist ideologies but don't think you're being honest if you say you're not a leftist. You are. You have to earn the label conservative by practicing it. Fiscal responsibility and pay as you go would be a good start. I can demonstrate your left leanings to you or anybody any time just using your 'state will wither away' imitation Marxist philosophy and your libertarian comrades' positions vis a vis current events. Any high school political science student could do the same. Meanwhile, the force is probably not going to be with you. Here's a libertarian riddle to help explain why: If you came back from Katrina and found a 500 lb dead hog in your living room and you could get Captain Marvel, Superman, two libertarians or Steven Hawking to help you remove it, who would you choose? Go with Hawking. There's no such thing as Captain Marvel, Superman or two libertarians who can pull in the same direction. Ciao, and tell Neil Boorst I said it's a tax on financial transactions, not wealth, and he's a conniving moron. :o) We're both lucky tv isn't interactive or he'd be limping around with an inverted foot suppository and I'd have a peg leg. Never thought I'd find myself longing for Nixon, but if I had a choice...by comparison, he was so honest. Incidentally, I brought up the trade and banking interconnection with china because someone posted he din't want to trade with a human rights violator. I had hoped to assuage some guilt by reminding him he can't extricate himself from our entanglement with china. I've never understood if libertarians, any of them since they never agree on anything had anything like a moral compass, or is that one blowing in the wind too? Seems like it. Clif |
DAVID RUDICK
Hi Gang,
Wow all of this economic talk...I for one am not an expert in those lofty areas, but I do know something interesting...Alan Greenspan was a professional jazz sax player! He gave it up when he realized that he was pretty good but not great, BTW, he was also the guy in the band in charge of the finances! DR |
MJU
Anyone who is also tired of this being treated as a political forum raise your hand.
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Didn't we go through this a few weeks ago with the hurricane and the subsequent political banter that followed. Please keep this out fo the forum - email this crap to each other off list. We get enough of this in our everyday life by TV, newspaper and radio. Let's get back on topic - JAZZ GUITAR. ----- Original Message -----
From: "jazzclif" <jurupari@...> To: <jazz_guitar@...> Sent: Sunday, September 25, 2005 11:25 PM Subject: [jazz_guitar] Re: Imports/Guitar Teacher Tactics/ Clif --- In jazz_guitar@..., Toby Rider <high-tech- |
Please can we close this thread down and stay on topic
- Jazz Guitar. The group is international and our membership cover the spectrum of political, social, economic and religious views. Political, social, economic or religious views are bound to upset someone, and there are better forums to discuss these topics. Thank you. |
Chris Smart
At 01:58 AM 9/26/2005, you wrote:
Hi Gang,Wow, interesting! I wonder if they ever played for free? :) |
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