It seems I had written this post long enough ago that I actually purchased a new guitar in the time after I saved it and then posted it. So, here is the edit, including the newest.***
Surprisingly, this post is not about a person.
I thought i'd take this time, and this opportunity to update my weakly updated blog, and write about my guitars. Notice I said weakly, and not weekly.
This will go in chronological order. Starting with number one:
1) Yamaha Pacifica

This is first on the list, and it was basically inherited by me when my brother moved away. It originally had some electrical issues, and was given to many different people when they asked to borrow a guitar to learn with. It has a good clean sound, and a terrible neck and tuners that can't hold pitch for much more than a few minutes of playing. But it looks nice.
2) Martin DCX-1kE

3) Peavey JF-1

Yes, it's a Peavey. I understand that. But, it's also an electric guitar, so I had my mind made up that looks won over the name. And this guitar was very, very, pretty. And, when you plug it in, it sounds....like an electric guitar. I got it at a weird music store in Edmonton, hidden away off the main roads, and made up of just a big carpeted warehouse. Pretty strange, but they had decent prices and this guitar caught my eye from across the....warehouse. I traded in my Takamine jumbo acoustic for this guitar, which was a hard thing to do, but sometimes you just have to move on.
4) The Lyon

5) Martin 000C-16RGTE

6) Epiphone SST Studio

This is the latest guitar to be added to the collection. I have wanted one of these for a very long time, and finally Epiphone started bringing them back into production. This is the guitar (well, the Gibson version at least) that Dave Matthews used for the beginning of the band's career, up until he made the switch to playing Taylor acoustics live. It is amazing because it has the feel of an electric guitar, yet the sound is of a really expensive acoustic guitar. There is no sound hole, instead there are computer designed chambers inside the body that create a sound that really closely represents an acoustic guitar when it is plugged in. I played a few Taylor T5's in the last couple of years, and I always found I had to play around with the tone knobs for a long time until I found a sound that was somewhat decent and not completely hi-mid driven. With this SST, It sounds great with everything right in the middle, and even with no EQ on a P.A. or acoustic amp. The best part about all of this, is that it is the least amount of money i've spent on a guitar. (Well, not less than the LYON, but that doesn't really count.)
Hope that wasn't too boring for some of you. But sometimes I can't think of what to write about, and this is, at least, something.
Eric
the worst part of this whole post is that you stabbed the SST in the back.
ReplyDeleteChuck Atkins would roll over in his grave if he found out.
How dare you.