Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Which of these guitars is a better choice?

cheap vintage acoustic guitars
 on Fender Acoustic Guitar Vintage Made In Usa | Vintage Acoustic Guitar
cheap vintage acoustic guitars image



Cheese


http://altomusic.com/shop/Takamine-EG444CVV-NEX-Acoustic-Electric-Guitar-in-Vintage-Violin_pid121193.am
http://altomusic.com/shop/Ibanez-V-Series-V70CE-Dreadnought-Cutaway-Acoustic-Electric-Guit_pid104633.am

They're both electric acoustic. altomusic is the only place that has the Takamine this cheap, It's $250 on one and over $400 on most other sites. Ibanez is the same everywhere though. Is buying the Takamine a better deal, or is something wrong with this one? I'm leaning towards it because it looks great and the supposed savings. I have some basic knowledge, I'm a beginner so knowing nothing about guitars, I'm asking which should I get?



Answer
Neither. They're both all-plywood guitars (if it doesn't say SOLID wood, it isn't. The wood used for the top layer makes no difference to the sound - plywood is plywood), with electronic capabilities that a beginner doesn't need. An acoustic-electric guitar is meant for performers who frequently need to amplify the instrument and want the convenience of being able to plug it in directly. Electronics are sometimes included on entry-level guitars as a selling point, but serve little useful purpose. By the time you reach the stage of giving frequent public performances, you will have outgrown a plywood guitar.

You can buy a guitar with a solid spruce top, which is far superior to plywood, for $200 - check out the highly regarded Yamaha FG-700S and FS-700S.

Buy your guitar in person at a guitar store if at all possible, after making sure it feels comfortable in your hands and is easy to play.

Is Bridecraft a good brand for acoustic guitar?







I am shopping for a guitar online, and it says the brand is Bridgecraft - is that a good brand?


Answer
Bridgecraft is a make known for being low-end, which means cheap. Not only price, perhaps, but also the way they are made and put together. I wouldn't give them time of day, not a bit.

If you are starting out or not, don't you agree that it's best to go for a guitar that is reliable and is well made? Sure you do.

Me? I could never see a time when i would buy a guitar on line unless it was a known good make from a known good supplier, or a collector's model, vintage guitar. We need to know what we're getting up front, and trust the information.

By known good make, I mean Gibson, Fender, Martin, and more.


It also depends how much you want to pay. I wouldn't recommend paying less than a few hundred even for a starter guitar. Acoustic or electric, I regard "cheap" as, say, $300 and under. So, preferably more than that.

Best thing: go to a music store. Try out the cheapest guitars. Then go to the expensive ones ($1700 and up). See the difference and find out what you're prepared to go with.

Some good guitars are around $500-700. Try second hand models if you can't go that high, but get someone who knows guitars to go with you. They will know what to watch for (bad frets, chinese slipper necks, loose bits, missing bits, etc.) and you'll get some knowledge from them.

Try to find a store where they treat you as they should a new player. Where they will set the guitar up for you cheap or free, because most of the time, even a new $3000 guitar needs setting up. If they don't do that, walk out the door and go where they do.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Title Post: Which of these guitars is a better choice?
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Unknown

Thanks For Coming To My Blog

No comments:

Post a Comment