The best piece of advice given so far is go out and play a bunch of guitars to: A) get a feel for what type of finger board scale you like. Fenders are way different in feel than gibson types. It took about 15 years of playing before i figured out how to live with a fender. B) after you think you know what type of guitar you want you need to find that particular one that you can "be friends with". I've owned a bunch of Les Pauls and there is one '78 standard that is still near and dear to me (made during the the bad years of gibson if you believe the stereotypes)and it killed all others before and since in tone and playability. I've also played cheap mexi-fenders that were killer and bested the $1200 american versions...play a lot of them and be patient. I traded a new gibson firebird for an 2nd epiphone johnny smith because i couldn't form a bond with the former and fell in love with the latter despite getting killed financially on the deal(and i love firebirds). Moral of overly long story: you will know when you find the right piece. Play it un plugged. Is it resonant and alive? If it's dead unplugged no amp is going to save it. If it seems like you are 90% there but it don't play quite have it set up. A god (that was a typo but on reflection, accurate)tech can make an alright piece killer with a 2 minute truss rod/action adjustment worry about intonation later. If you go epiphone or mexi/jap fender plan on less than $300 new and $around $150-200 used. Epiphones should get you for about $600 or less new for the 335 sytle to less than $300 for some of the solid body lines (take a copy of musicians friend along with you for mail order prices and go to a pro oriented shop rather than one that sells grand pianos along with a couple of squire strats. Get a cheap practice amp. Your home speakers should be able to handle your guitar but you will need a direct box or something like a line 6 pod to use as a pre-amp into your stereo (I'm not a modeling amp person but for the cash a pod and a pair of headphones is an unbeatable practice combination period end of discussion) Sorry for the disertation mut you've hit me in my true love. my guitar collection is worth a bunch more than my high end system...it is a TRUE addiction. I Think of myself as a caretaker of fine instruments, not an owner. good luck and feel free to email me with any questions
Guitar beginner question
I'm looking for beginner's electric guitar that I want to practice on blues, jazz and some rock.
My main influence guitar players are Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix in the blues side and Mike Stern on the jazz side.
How much money am I looking to spend?
Can I use e-guitar through home speakers and how?
My main influence guitar players are Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix in the blues side and Mike Stern on the jazz side.
How much money am I looking to spend?
Can I use e-guitar through home speakers and how?
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