<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"><tr><td class="SmallText"><b>fourr3al wrote on Tue, 27 February 2007 21:24</b></td></tr><tr><td class="quote">
<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"><tr><td class="SmallText"><b>cytania wrote on Wed, 21 February 2007 15:00</b></td></tr><tr><td class="quote">
Number one advice is to go along to many guitar shops and pick-up/play guitars irrespective of brand. Then as you get an idea of what you like consider price. For instance in my own recent search I picked up a lovely olympic white Stratocaster, American series and very heavy - but it cost two or three times what I paid for my Brawley which has a pretty much equivalent sound. Maybe my ears aren't connoisseur's ears but since they aren't I don't need to pay above the odds <img src="images/smiley_icons/icon_smile.gif" border=0 alt="Smile">
Beware guitars which try to give you a retro experience. Guitar technology has come a long way sisnce the 50s/60s so no matter have lovingly made a relic tele or strat might be genuine era passive electronics won't be as much fun as a good modern guitar (had great fun with the push/pull pot of my Brawley - pull and the coils are cut giving a telecaster-esque sound).
If you don't have a specific yen for a particular sound look for a guitar that gives lots of tonal variation with the minimum of fuss. My Brawley proves two knobs can do a huge amount. Likewise beware low output low quality pickups, I played a Peavy Rockingham which was fun but obviously faint and fuzzy.
Get the shop to give you a clean zero-gain tone and set the volume then play various makes and prices points through it - you'll be surprised. The Yamaha Pacifica is a nice feeling guitar but it's pickup is faint at a level where I could happily play a Bolin and a Brawley (the Bolin is very, very expensive).
If I was looking again I'd avoid collectable name makes like Gibson and Fender as a rule (unless of course I found something heavily discounted for decent reasons). Ibanez and Jackson tend to do death-metal specials, at least the shops I looked in didn't stock the more unusual parts of their ranges. Semis and archtops tend to be pricey and less robust so unless your particularly want a particular vintage sound keep looking (I can dial up a decent 'Searchers'/Brit invasion from the Brawley without spending huge amounts on an Epiphone Casino, which commands a price due to the Beatles connection).
Losing my point now, I'm sure others will add what I've missed and counter me <img src="images/smiley_icons/icon_wink.gif" border=0 alt="Wink">
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Nice post but I don't think you really answered his question. I do agree with not always going with the standard Gibson or Fender, but here is one point I like to make with people who are buying guitars. Unless you plan on never truly upgrading and keeping that guitar forever, playing a Fender, Gibson, EPI for one gives you a decent sounding nice axe and two they are a hell of a lot easier to sell over something like a Brawley. Nothing personal but I could re-sell a thousand strats or les pauls in the time you sell the Brawley.
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I understand you statment in regards to the resale value and the ability to resell a particular brand of guitar. But I think the point that Cytania is trying to make is that he found a guitar that he was happy with and is not looking to resell it (yet?) he is looking to play it. For what you paid for you american strat you could have made a semi custom strat style guitar choice of woods (swamp ash or alder) colors and or dye and type of pickups that you wanted for about $500.00 american (depending it you did the wiring and set up yourself). That price is still cheaper than an EPI LP standard (usually around $549.00 american). Just keeping it real.
Bootlegger.
Bootlegger guitars.