If you would use hardware only these days im sure you would have even bigger collectionchk071 wrote:TBH, i'm not sure that "musicians" don't have similar GAS issues, especially when i look at pictures like these:Elektronisch wrote:I disagree with something. It has nothing to do with being a musician and buying instruments. Musician makes music. I make music, i have alot of collegues (professionals) who make music but they dont have this insane craze of buying things, on a contrary they have few favorite instruments and dont even update them for years. Being a member in KVR what i learned is that alot of people here are not really musicians, but rather synth enthusiastsStanoli wrote:For women it is shoes and for musicians instruments.
Buying is an investment into the future and therefore unconsciously it feels like I defy death.
In fact for this rewarding system it does not matter what you buy, it matters that you buy.
Test: Do I always use the things I have bought or am I instead looking for the next sale?And buying things that you are not having much use of is not really investment but a money loss
![]()
Rather makes me think that some of the big inspirations actually hail FROM buying stuff. Or at least, that it's something which "keeps the engine running".
But, as you say, we're probably all different in that regard. I don't think i could live with so much stuff catching dust in my plugin folder. Or, worse, with so much hardware keeping dust in the corners of the room. Because THAT really would make me think why i spent so much money in the first place, when it doesn't get any use anyway.
And muscians also can have GAS issues, especialy when they make a good amount of money so they can buy toys. But really, i wonder how many professional musicians out of 100 would really have GAS

