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  <title>TL Toneworks Podcast</title>

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  <description><![CDATA[<p><b>TL Toneworks</b> is a podcast about<em> guitar tone</em>, <em>gear</em>, and the changing music industry.<br><br></p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, it explores<em> amps, pedals, digital modeling,</em> and how players are thinking about their <em>rigs</em> in the modern age.<br><br></p><p>Each episode is an in-depth look at what guitarists want, what they buy, and how the gear world is evolving — without all the hype.</p>]]></description>
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    <itunes:title>Who Will Fix Your Amps In 20 Years?</itunes:title>
    <title>Who Will Fix Your Amps In 20 Years?</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In today’s TL Toneworks Podcast episode, we take a deep dive into the future of tube amplifiers, amp repair, and the shrinking ecosystem supporting the guitar gear industry. From aging amp techs and disappearing electronics knowledge to tube shortages, rising repair costs, and disposable digital products, this conversation goes far beyond the usual “tube amps vs digital modeling” debate.  As more guitar players move toward digital modelers, plugins, profiling amps, and software-based rigs, an...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>In today’s TL Toneworks Podcast episode, we take a deep dive into the future of tube amplifiers, amp repair, and the shrinking ecosystem supporting the guitar gear industry. From aging amp techs and disappearing electronics knowledge to tube shortages, rising repair costs, and disposable digital products, this conversation goes far beyond the usual “tube amps vs digital modeling” debate.<br/><br/>As more guitar players move toward digital modelers, plugins, profiling amps, and software-based rigs, an important question is starting to emerge:<br/><br/>What happens to tube amps when the people who know how to repair them begin retiring?<br/><br/>We’ll discuss:<br/><br/>* The future of tube amplifiers<br/>* The growing amp tech shortage<br/>* Why tube amp repair may become harder in the future<br/>* Aging electronics knowledge and repair culture<br/>* Shrinking tube and component suppliers<br/>* Rising prices of vacuum tubes and replacement parts<br/>* Boutique amps vs disposable gear<br/>* Firmware dependency and modern digital gear<br/>* Planned obsolescence in music technology<br/>* The future sustainability of guitar gear<br/>* How AI could help preserve repair knowledge<br/>* Why digital modeling may eventually become the norm<br/><br/>This episode is not about fearmongering or declaring the death of tube amps. It’s about looking honestly at where the guitar industry may be heading — and discussing possible solutions before these problems become impossible to ignore.<br/><br/>Whether you’re into vintage amps, boutique guitar gear, digital modelers, amp repair, analog electronics, or the future of music technology, this is a conversation every guitarist should probably start paying attention to.<br/><br/>Podcast Audio Format: https://arksolva.podbean.com/e/who-will-fix-your-amps-in-20-years/<br/><br/>Chapters:<br/>00:00 Who will fix your tube amps in 20 years?<br/>01:00 The Issues with Tube Amps<br/>02:59 How Amp Repair Works in 2026<br/>07:11 Difference in Mentality Between Different Generations<br/>10:51 Issues with Hybrid Amps<br/>13:12 Here are Some Solutions I thought of...<br/>17:37 Digital Modelers Could Become The Standard?<br/>23:15 What Do We Do With the Disposable Gear Model?<br/><br/><br/>#tltoneworks #stringjoy</p><p>TL Toneworks is a podcast about guitar tone, gear culture, amp modeling, pedals, recording, and the changing world of music equipment.</p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, each episode explores the real conversations happening in the guitar community — from digital vs analog gear to the future of guitar content creation and the music industry itself.</p><p>🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TL_Toneworks<br/>  📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tl_toneworks/</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today’s TL Toneworks Podcast episode, we take a deep dive into the future of tube amplifiers, amp repair, and the shrinking ecosystem supporting the guitar gear industry. From aging amp techs and disappearing electronics knowledge to tube shortages, rising repair costs, and disposable digital products, this conversation goes far beyond the usual “tube amps vs digital modeling” debate.<br/><br/>As more guitar players move toward digital modelers, plugins, profiling amps, and software-based rigs, an important question is starting to emerge:<br/><br/>What happens to tube amps when the people who know how to repair them begin retiring?<br/><br/>We’ll discuss:<br/><br/>* The future of tube amplifiers<br/>* The growing amp tech shortage<br/>* Why tube amp repair may become harder in the future<br/>* Aging electronics knowledge and repair culture<br/>* Shrinking tube and component suppliers<br/>* Rising prices of vacuum tubes and replacement parts<br/>* Boutique amps vs disposable gear<br/>* Firmware dependency and modern digital gear<br/>* Planned obsolescence in music technology<br/>* The future sustainability of guitar gear<br/>* How AI could help preserve repair knowledge<br/>* Why digital modeling may eventually become the norm<br/><br/>This episode is not about fearmongering or declaring the death of tube amps. It’s about looking honestly at where the guitar industry may be heading — and discussing possible solutions before these problems become impossible to ignore.<br/><br/>Whether you’re into vintage amps, boutique guitar gear, digital modelers, amp repair, analog electronics, or the future of music technology, this is a conversation every guitarist should probably start paying attention to.<br/><br/>Podcast Audio Format: https://arksolva.podbean.com/e/who-will-fix-your-amps-in-20-years/<br/><br/>Chapters:<br/>00:00 Who will fix your tube amps in 20 years?<br/>01:00 The Issues with Tube Amps<br/>02:59 How Amp Repair Works in 2026<br/>07:11 Difference in Mentality Between Different Generations<br/>10:51 Issues with Hybrid Amps<br/>13:12 Here are Some Solutions I thought of...<br/>17:37 Digital Modelers Could Become The Standard?<br/>23:15 What Do We Do With the Disposable Gear Model?<br/><br/><br/>#tltoneworks #stringjoy</p><p>TL Toneworks is a podcast about guitar tone, gear culture, amp modeling, pedals, recording, and the changing world of music equipment.</p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, each episode explores the real conversations happening in the guitar community — from digital vs analog gear to the future of guitar content creation and the music industry itself.</p><p>🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TL_Toneworks<br/>  📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tl_toneworks/</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 10:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>The Golden Age of Guitar Gear Is Ending (And No One Wants to Admit It)</itunes:title>
    <title>The Golden Age of Guitar Gear Is Ending (And No One Wants to Admit It)</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Are we seeing the first signs of the end of the Golden Age of Guitar Gear?  After 8 years on YouTube and 600+ demos covering amps and pedals, I've been  noticing something shift — both in the audience and across the industry.  This isn't clickbait. This is data, observation, and a few uncomfortable questions.  In this episode, I break down: - Which major retailers have closed or declined (Sam Ash, Sweetwater, Guitar Center) - Why analog companies like EHX, JHS, and Wampler are ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Are we seeing the first signs of the end of the Golden Age of Guitar Gear? <br/>After 8 years on YouTube and 600+ demos covering amps and pedals, I&apos;ve been <br/>noticing something shift — both in the audience and across the industry. <br/>This isn&apos;t clickbait. This is data, observation, and a few uncomfortable questions.<br/><br/>In this episode, I break down:<br/>- Which major retailers have closed or declined (Sam Ash, Sweetwater, Guitar Center)<br/>- Why analog companies like EHX, JHS, and Wampler are pivoting to digital and courses<br/>- The shift from traditional retail to direct-to-consumer models<br/>- What Reverb.com&apos;s growth tells us about where buyers actually are<br/>- Why the standard gear demo format is dying — and what comes next<br/>- The real-world economic pressures (inflation, tariffs) squeezing everyone<br/><br/>This is TL Toneworks going full podcast mode. Chapters below — jump to whatever hits closest to home.<br/><br/>Podcast Audio Format: https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-swrkm-1ac401d<br/><br/>---<br/>🕒 CHAPTERS<br/>00:00 Is the Golden Age of Guitar Gear Ending?<br/>00:36 What “Golden Age” Means for Guitar Players Today<br/>02:24 Guitar Gear Companies That Shut Down (2020–2026)<br/>02:32 Why Music Stores Are Closing (Sam Ash, PMT, Bax Music)<br/>04:21 Why Guitar Pedal Companies Are Going Digital<br/>06:44 Why Brands Are Selling Direct to Customers (DTC Shift)<br/>11:07 How Inflation &amp; the Economy Are Hurting Guitar Gear Sales<br/>12:57 Guitar Center, Sweetwater &amp; the State of Big Retail<br/>17:34 Reverb.com &amp; Why Used Guitar Gear Is Exploding<br/>21:46 Why Guitar YouTube (Gear Demos) Is Losing Interest<br/>25:14 What Happens Next for Guitar Gear?</p><p>TL Toneworks is a podcast about guitar tone, gear culture, amp modeling, pedals, recording, and the changing world of music equipment.</p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, each episode explores the real conversations happening in the guitar community — from digital vs analog gear to the future of guitar content creation and the music industry itself.</p><p>🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TL_Toneworks<br/>  📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tl_toneworks/</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Are we seeing the first signs of the end of the Golden Age of Guitar Gear? <br/>After 8 years on YouTube and 600+ demos covering amps and pedals, I&apos;ve been <br/>noticing something shift — both in the audience and across the industry. <br/>This isn&apos;t clickbait. This is data, observation, and a few uncomfortable questions.<br/><br/>In this episode, I break down:<br/>- Which major retailers have closed or declined (Sam Ash, Sweetwater, Guitar Center)<br/>- Why analog companies like EHX, JHS, and Wampler are pivoting to digital and courses<br/>- The shift from traditional retail to direct-to-consumer models<br/>- What Reverb.com&apos;s growth tells us about where buyers actually are<br/>- Why the standard gear demo format is dying — and what comes next<br/>- The real-world economic pressures (inflation, tariffs) squeezing everyone<br/><br/>This is TL Toneworks going full podcast mode. Chapters below — jump to whatever hits closest to home.<br/><br/>Podcast Audio Format: https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-swrkm-1ac401d<br/><br/>---<br/>🕒 CHAPTERS<br/>00:00 Is the Golden Age of Guitar Gear Ending?<br/>00:36 What “Golden Age” Means for Guitar Players Today<br/>02:24 Guitar Gear Companies That Shut Down (2020–2026)<br/>02:32 Why Music Stores Are Closing (Sam Ash, PMT, Bax Music)<br/>04:21 Why Guitar Pedal Companies Are Going Digital<br/>06:44 Why Brands Are Selling Direct to Customers (DTC Shift)<br/>11:07 How Inflation &amp; the Economy Are Hurting Guitar Gear Sales<br/>12:57 Guitar Center, Sweetwater &amp; the State of Big Retail<br/>17:34 Reverb.com &amp; Why Used Guitar Gear Is Exploding<br/>21:46 Why Guitar YouTube (Gear Demos) Is Losing Interest<br/>25:14 What Happens Next for Guitar Gear?</p><p>TL Toneworks is a podcast about guitar tone, gear culture, amp modeling, pedals, recording, and the changing world of music equipment.</p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, each episode explores the real conversations happening in the guitar community — from digital vs analog gear to the future of guitar content creation and the music industry itself.</p><p>🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TL_Toneworks<br/>  📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tl_toneworks/</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:title>8 Years and 601 Demoes Later... YouTube Buried My Channel</itunes:title>
    <title>8 Years and 601 Demoes Later... YouTube Buried My Channel</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[After 8 years and 601 videos, I never expected to record an episode like this. In this episode of the TL Toneworks Podcast, I talk openly about burnout from making guitar gear demos, the growing problems inside the guitar gear industry, and how YouTube’s 2025 algorithm changes impacted creators in the gear space. This isn’t a rant or a “YouTube is dying” video. It’s an honest discussion about where guitar culture is heading in 2026, why audience behavior has changed, and why many players are ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>After 8 years and 601 videos, I never expected to record an episode like this.</p><p>In this episode of the TL Toneworks Podcast, I talk openly about burnout from making guitar gear demos, the growing problems inside the guitar gear industry, and how YouTube’s 2025 algorithm changes impacted creators in the gear space.</p><p>This isn’t a rant or a “YouTube is dying” video. It’s an honest discussion about where guitar culture is heading in 2026, why audience behavior has changed, and why many players are asking better questions before buying new gear.</p><p>We discuss:<br/> • Why traditional guitar gear demos stopped feeling sustainable<br/> • The changing mindset of guitar players and consumers<br/> • Why many pedal companies struggle with long-term marketing<br/> • The reality of gear saturation and declining resale value<br/> • How YouTube algorithm changes affected gear-focused channels<br/> • Whether Gear Acquisition Syndrome is fading<br/> • Tariffs, inflation, and the hesitation around buying gear in 2025–2026<br/> • What creators like That Pedal Show, Phil McKnight, and JHS Pedals understood early<br/> • What’s next for TL Toneworks and the future of the channel</p><p>If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by constant gear releases, changing algorithms, or the pressure to always buy the “next thing,” this episode will probably resonate with you.</p><p>⏱️ Episode Chapters<br/> 00:00 — Burned out after 8 years of gear demos<br/> 00:50 — How the channel started<br/> 04:46 — When audience behavior began shifting<br/> 05:26 — Why viewers watch gear demos differently now<br/> 06:53 — Why companies keep releasing new pedals<br/> 08:00 — The marketing problem in the guitar gear industry<br/> 10:16 — Why selling gear feels harder now<br/> 11:00 — The resale value problem with smaller brands<br/> 12:42 — How YouTube’s 2025 algorithm changes hurt gear channels<br/> 16:01 — Is Gear Acquisition Syndrome fading?<br/> 17:11 — How gear creators accumulate massive collections<br/> 19:11 — Buying guitar gear during inflation and tariffs<br/> 22:31 — The consumer mindset shift nobody talks about<br/> 23:21 — What successful gear creators understood early<br/> 26:05 — Why new gear releases feel less exciting<br/> 27:24 — What’s next for TL Toneworks</p><p>TL Toneworks is a podcast about guitar tone, gear culture, amp modeling, pedals, recording, and the changing world of music equipment.</p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, each episode explores the real conversations happening in the guitar community — from digital vs analog gear to the future of guitar content creation and the music industry itself.</p><p>🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TL_Toneworks<br/>  📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tl_toneworks/</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After 8 years and 601 videos, I never expected to record an episode like this.</p><p>In this episode of the TL Toneworks Podcast, I talk openly about burnout from making guitar gear demos, the growing problems inside the guitar gear industry, and how YouTube’s 2025 algorithm changes impacted creators in the gear space.</p><p>This isn’t a rant or a “YouTube is dying” video. It’s an honest discussion about where guitar culture is heading in 2026, why audience behavior has changed, and why many players are asking better questions before buying new gear.</p><p>We discuss:<br/> • Why traditional guitar gear demos stopped feeling sustainable<br/> • The changing mindset of guitar players and consumers<br/> • Why many pedal companies struggle with long-term marketing<br/> • The reality of gear saturation and declining resale value<br/> • How YouTube algorithm changes affected gear-focused channels<br/> • Whether Gear Acquisition Syndrome is fading<br/> • Tariffs, inflation, and the hesitation around buying gear in 2025–2026<br/> • What creators like That Pedal Show, Phil McKnight, and JHS Pedals understood early<br/> • What’s next for TL Toneworks and the future of the channel</p><p>If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by constant gear releases, changing algorithms, or the pressure to always buy the “next thing,” this episode will probably resonate with you.</p><p>⏱️ Episode Chapters<br/> 00:00 — Burned out after 8 years of gear demos<br/> 00:50 — How the channel started<br/> 04:46 — When audience behavior began shifting<br/> 05:26 — Why viewers watch gear demos differently now<br/> 06:53 — Why companies keep releasing new pedals<br/> 08:00 — The marketing problem in the guitar gear industry<br/> 10:16 — Why selling gear feels harder now<br/> 11:00 — The resale value problem with smaller brands<br/> 12:42 — How YouTube’s 2025 algorithm changes hurt gear channels<br/> 16:01 — Is Gear Acquisition Syndrome fading?<br/> 17:11 — How gear creators accumulate massive collections<br/> 19:11 — Buying guitar gear during inflation and tariffs<br/> 22:31 — The consumer mindset shift nobody talks about<br/> 23:21 — What successful gear creators understood early<br/> 26:05 — Why new gear releases feel less exciting<br/> 27:24 — What’s next for TL Toneworks</p><p>TL Toneworks is a podcast about guitar tone, gear culture, amp modeling, pedals, recording, and the changing world of music equipment.</p><p>Hosted by Jonathan Guillemette, each episode explores the real conversations happening in the guitar community — from digital vs analog gear to the future of guitar content creation and the music industry itself.</p><p>🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TL_Toneworks<br/>  📷 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tl_toneworks/</p>]]></content:encoded>
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