| ▲ | Scene_Cast2 4 hours ago | |
It also percolates into reviews, too. When a nontrivial fraction of the community is buying dreams and is about collecting as opposed to using whatever it is, some reviewers style their content towards that crowd and overlook issues or benefits that pop up when actually using the gear. I don't have a problem with collecting, but I'd love for the distinction to be more upfront. | ||
| ▲ | rjh29 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
On that note I absolutely love Matt Johnson (Jamiroquai)'s youtube channel because you can tell he likes gear but spends a huge amount of time actually playing it and making his own patches. So much of the review market is just GAS-inducing paid promo stuff. | ||
| ▲ | embedding-shape 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> It also percolates into reviews, too It's kind of easy to detect though. I usually read three/four paragraphs before I realize that the person reviewing doesn't actually make music and doesn't consider the music making parts of the hardware, and instead focuses on very generic stuff that basically the manufacturer handed to them and said "make sure this is included". | ||