Best guitar for my range??
stylo17
Posts: 1,001
so i've been looking to getting a guitar lately, and since i've never been in the market for a guitar (i play the bass tho) i was wondering what was the best i could probably get for something around $600. I recently played a Fender Tele (i think American Deluxe??) and it was great, but i think it's about double my range. i've also looked into a Strat. Does anyone recommend the "Standard" Strat or is it worth to go a little higher for a better quality instrument??
6/11/08 WPB
♬♪♫ and I will not, grow tired of crayon stars and fire
♬♪♫ cause a soldier's death is so much better than defeat just hanging around
♬♪♫ and I will not, grow tired of crayon stars and fire
♬♪♫ cause a soldier's death is so much better than defeat just hanging around
Post edited by Unknown User on
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JEFF HARDY AND JEFF AMENT USED TO LOOK THE SAME
"Pearl Jam always eases my mind and fires me up at the same time.”-Jeff Hardy
very true, and i haven't tried one yet but i will. is it worth spending more on a "Deluxe" or one of those if the feel is the same?
♬♪♫ and I will not, grow tired of crayon stars and fire
♬♪♫ cause a soldier's death is so much better than defeat just hanging around
JEFF HARDY AND JEFF AMENT USED TO LOOK THE SAME
"Pearl Jam always eases my mind and fires me up at the same time.”-Jeff Hardy
The basic things to figure out are what type of pickup sound you like, humbucker or single coil... after that just try playing a lot of instruments. Fender and Gibson are just brand names. There have been great Fender and Gibson guitars, and there have been so so ones. In your price range you might get an amazing schechter, or Ibanez, or Fernandes... or a great Fender or Gibson. Don't be afraid to look at used instruments... (just make sure the frets are in decent shape). The only real "golden rule"... *play* a guitar before you buy it... and buy the *exact* guitar you deicide you want. Again, who spots a dog, plays with it, and then asks for "another model like this one". Well, maybe some people do... but they are probably looking for decorations and not to play.
check out some of the product descriptions here and maybe sweetwater or so.
Also check out Reverend guitars, they make some outstanding stuff in that price range.
http://www.reverendguitars.com/index.html
♬♪♫ and I will not, grow tired of crayon stars and fire
♬♪♫ cause a soldier's death is so much better than defeat just hanging around
As far as the standard vs. deluxe players etc., get a standard. If you really want to later, you can upgrade pickups, change the pickguard or do whatever, and that way you can do it if you want to (and probably for less than what a deluxe model might cost you).
7/9/06 LA 1
7/10/06 LA 2
10/21/06 Bridge 1
This is a great guitar for $479, and has a tone of great features Hamer Sunburst Archtop Quilt. Arched Quilted Top, Mahogany body, Rosewood
Fingerboard, Set Mahogany Neck, Humbuckers, Abalone inlays surrounding entire guitar, Mother-of-Pearl crown inlays, Tune-O-Matic bridge, Double Cutaway.
- Ian
<b><font color="red">CONTACT ME HERE</font>: www.myspace.com/ianvomsaal</b>
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The best guitar for you isn't necessarily the best guitar in any of our minds. The best guitar for me might be a Strat or Tele, or a Les Paul or a Danelectro or something entirely different, so getting me to recommend something for you is near impossible. In the price range you've got, I'd be looking at either an Epiphone Les Paul or a Fender Strat HSS.
In fact, the Fender Strat HSS is one of my favorite budget recommendations for a first guitar. It's got a lot of versatility in the sound because of the classic Fender single-coil pickups combined with a bridge humbucker, and it's the kind of guitar that is instantly recognizable, fairly universal, and generally has good build quality and reliability.
I'm a big fan of the Mexican-made Fender guitars, and my current Strat is a Made-in-Mexico Squier-series Strat from the 80's. They're great guitars. I'd avoid the Korean and Chinese guitars, including the newer Squiers. I'm not as familiar with the MIJ stuff. But, since quality control is becoming a lost art, be sure to play a few of them to see which one has that "mojo"... you can play 10 strats in a row, all of them the same exact model, and 1 or 2 will be good, 5 or 6 will be average, and the rest will be crap. In fact, you can play a Squier, a MIM standard, a US standard, and a US deluxe, and the most expensive one may not be the nicest.
If you have a couple or three models that you kind of like, and want some feedback on the differences, trade-offs, etc., then we'll all be able to help out a lot more. But let your ears and hands be the ultimate judge.
2008: MSG 1, Hartford, Mansfield 2, Ed Solo NYC 1
2009: London (O2), Philly 1, 2, 3, & 4
2010: Hartford, Boston, MSG 1 & 2
2011: Ed Solo Hartford
2012: Philly (MIA Fest)
2013: Worcester 2, Brooklyn 1 & 2, Hartford
~Edward
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word. this is great advice.
This is very good advice. Think outside the box in this price range. An Asian or Baja made guitar will be at least as good, and usually better in this price range. I would put my ESP ltd Viper 601 up against anything for fit and finish, Made in Korea !!!
Mind you, I saw Gibson SG faded cherry for $600 at GC recently, which would be hard to beat, seriously good value.
Yeah I've been pleased with ESP lately too. I think they are also the ones that build the Edwards stuff.
What do you think of Schecters Korean offerings? The fretboards are not my deal I prefer a thicker rounded back and more rounded board but damn, for the money... They give you a hell of a lot of bang for the buck. Tone Pros bridges, great pickups... etc. same with ESP.
This advice may led you to look more seriously at used instruments. $600 could get you a real jem used. Try craigslist.org, to also get to know local players, or the used section of your music store.
Get to know the instrument before you buy. How you like the tone and features is what is important not how impressive the brand is.
Finding the right fit will keep you happy and the quest will teach you a lot.
1 <> 2 <> 3 4 <> 5 <> 6 <> 7 8
I haven't bought a guitar for a few years, but I went looking for and Epi Les Paul that I was dead-set on, and after playing a bunch of guitars, I came home with a Schecter C1+ (http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/Schecter-C1-Plus-Electric-Guitar?sku=513010)
It had the best feel and sound of all of the guitars I tried out.
was like a picture
of a sunny day
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.”
― Abraham Lincoln
Just a little over $600
That guitar will be mine... Oh yes it will be mine!
"Its a secret to everybody."
Yeah, ESP do the Edwards LP that put the real deal to shame.
The ltd modles range from cheap stuff to professional style gear like my Viper. All the ESP JApan stuff is superb build. Korea is very much now where Japan was 20 yr ago in terms of industrial development etc.
The Schecter stuff is pretty good. The young guy I teach got a Schecter Demon 6, cos it was the best value available. Humbuckers, 24 fret, nice neck, good tuners, nice upper fret access, and coolc satin black. I know it won't be made from the best tone wood in the world, but that is a much lower consideration for a first guitar. Stable tuning and playability are paramount for a first guitar.
Yeah, Vipers I think go for a shade less than 660 US here and already have EMG 81/85's installed. The ESP LP's come with either the 81/85 combo or if you get the sunburst I think it's got Seymour Duncan's in it so if active is not your thing they have you covered. Nice to buy a guitar with the common upgrades already done under a grand. Schecter even has a great semi hollowbody with some inpiration from the PRS Hollowbody 2's complete with acoustic bridge and everything for $700. It's no hollowbody 2 but damn it's 700 bucks.
That's what started my angst with some of Gibson/Fender/Kaman Music practices. Samick in Korea is building almost everyones korean stuff, if schecter spends a couple dollars extra on tone pros hardware good tuners and pro setups back in the US to ensure quality... why can't Fender and Gibson? They can easily, it's just not necessary for their bottom line because they can sell the name on the headstock. The same thing swayed me away from Marshall originally too.
I sold a lot of first time acoustic buyers Mitchells because they came with grovers and they held their tune well.
Actually, I think they do the set-ups in the USA to convince the market of the guitars quality, not because Korea can't do it right.
Korea is leading the world in building supertankers, so I think they could probably build a guitar OK.
Guitars are so cheap for you guys anyway, and in a lot of ways Gibson/Fender etc are driven more by teh essential overwhelming conservatism of the guitar market than anything. Whenever they try something new, they get howled down and it never sells. People just want more of the same old, same old.
What I want as a standard on every guitar is locking tuners.
+1
Heck, I'd just settle for decent quality tuners. It's amazing how crap the tuners can be even on the low to mid instruments, even guitars that are otherwise tremendous. Ok.. ok... they are easy enough to replace... but it's such a pet peeve of mine. I actually have one of the Hamer Sunburst Archtop Quilt guitars Ian mentioned and I can +1 that too. It's an incredible guitar. Made to the exact spec of the amazing Hamer studio guitars. I swapped the pickups on mine for EMG and it's just wonderful. I have to get off my arse and change the bloody tuners however... I can't believe I haven't done it yet. They are horrendous. Ok... pet peeve venting done.
+1
Absolutely true. An amazing amazing guitar for the money. Of course again the trick is to get a guitar that suits your individual tastes (and hands!) but this is one that should definately be tried in your price range. If it floats your boat is an absolute steal.
I bought my first guitar used from Long and Mcquades about 5-6 years ago for $100, and I wouldn't give it up for the world. I'll defend that acoustic to the death. I've yet to play anything that "just fits" as well as it does with me.
I've got a 1967 Fender Stratocaster(debatable) here, and I don't even like to play it. It just doesn't sound good to me when I play it. Not like the acoustic.
So just do yourself a favor, and play everything you can see until you find something that feels like it just belongs in your arms.
Paul "Mikau" Brown
http://tibbius.com