Re: GAS: There is hope!
I couldn’t agree more and that is why I practice every day and we have a 4 hour band practice every week. But it is folly to suggest that practice alone will give you the tone you want.
Would this John Suhr be the same one that makes and sells an extensive range of guitars, amps, cabinets, pedals and even items that he groups under the heading of “Tone Tools”. I don’t think I’ll be taking any lessons from him on practicing to solve tone problems.
I believe that from my finger tips to the speaker in my amp, every component along the signal chain has an influence, to a lesser or greater extent, on the “tone”. Key parts of my gear are the same as Matt Schofield’s but I sound nothing like him (even when he is playing through a Deluxe Reverb amp) and no amount of practice will change that. But by using the same ingredients I can get a similar flavour.
Give me any combination of equipment and I could get a usable tone but would it be the tone I want? Possibly or possibly not. Many people like the Les Paul and Marshall tone but there is no way I could recreate it with my Strat and Fender amp no matter how much I practice. Gear has a huge part to play in developing tone.
You could of course argue that tone is not relevant and all that matters is the technical ability to play the instrument and interpret the music. But that would be just silly.