So tweeted my friend Boris a couple of weeks ago, not knowing that I was working on this article. “Gearhead versus Minimalist” struck me as another aspect of the issue I presented in “Do you find a sound or make one?” The issue being: how much of this stuff do you lug around to make music? In my mind there is a simple answer to this question: you lug around just enough.

Boris and I chatted later that night about being a minimalist and musician. We didn’t come to an accord on what is just enough. He said “it depends on the project.” He also pointed out that: “The pursuit of simpler and minimalist can be ironically expensive.” When we brought up a friend of ours who is a notorious gearhead, Boris offered the sage observation that when he listens to that friend’s records, “it sounds so good because of the multiple amps and stuff.”

I added that the musicians’ taste is a huge part of that. “The more gear you have,” I said, “The better you have to be at picking out the great from the noisy.”

Boris and I are both minimalists and what makes conversations like this one so fun for us is that we pursue it in different ways. Neither of us fits into a neat category of minimalist. Nonetheless, I see several points on a scale teetering towards gearheadedness.

The Minimalist

The true minimalist probably has one piece of gear. It’s a ukulele or a keyboard or a Kaossilator. It’s the one instrument that gets everything done.

The Futurist

A step away from the minimalist is the futurist. Amps and pedals are yesterday when you can feasibly contain an arsenal of effects and emulators on your tablet or phone. The Futurist saves space but doesn’t always remain minimal. A slim tablet full of every digital sound you desire is going to lead right into the paradox of choice: which of my thousands of tones for this song?

The Purist

A step to the other side of minimalism is the purist who is drawn to the analog and physical. There is something minimal not wanting to fool with technology. The Purist might bring a few pedals to a gig but that’s actually easier than trying to do it all through a multi-effects or tablet.

The Pragmatist

Once you attach those pedals to a pedal board, you’ve headed down the path to gearheadom. The Pragmatist walks a tightrope between what they absolutely need on that pedal board for a show and what might just be fun.

The Maximalist

After you cross the pragmatic point, it’s a slippery slope to full-on, Maximalist. These musicians bring more to the show than they need. The excessive gear comforts them. There is always something else they can use to make noise.