Inflames626
New member
Re: Neck thru and Floyd Rose--cross purposes?
Edgecrusher, that may be so. But then you have to ask whether, tonally and feel wise, a guitar that's between $1000-2000 is worth that amount of money. That's a good chunk of a payment toward a car--for a single guitar. This isn't practical in my case where I need a Floyded guitar for every tuning as well as different pickup combinations. I have 12 guitars and I am nowhere near finished. That doesn't count basses.
Bluntly, increasingly, I think the answer as to whether expensive guitars are worth it is no, especially as the quality of imports increases. I have a 70s lawsuit Korean P Bass and the difference between it and my newer Japanese imports is like night and day. Of course, the best thing is to try out guitars on a case by case basis, but I am making a very general argument.
One could say the inverse as well, saying that you feel better because you spent a lot of money on a handmade instrument that makes it intrinsically better, which would be the inverse of the "my partscaster is as good as your custom shop job" argument. I don't blame you. I would want my $2000 guitar to sound like a $2000 guitar and I would feel offended if someone said their $600 guitar sounded as good. But you don't always get what you pay for.
I can't say for sure. But I do think the general trend is that you are getting less for your money when it comes to custom shop guitars as import guitars quality improves.
If import guitars and "partscasters" were really so awful, they wouldn't have displaced a majority of US guitar manufacturing beginning in the 1970s.
Of course, much of it is simply the human ear's inability to tell the difference in nuances in sound, which is what most of this is about. The influential, early records of many bands were made with cheap gear, yet people rave about the tones.
Most of the time, you can't tell what they're playing unless you look at the liner notes.
Would I have a custom shop guitar? Sure. Do I think they're worth the money? Not really--not unless they had a lot of features I would want in them that are difficult to find on one guitar (OFR, variety of wiring options, killswitch, sustainer, piezos, phase switch, MIDI capability--all in one guitar). Most of the reason for this is due to the woodworking required. If a premade, prepainted body were available, I'd do it myself.
Edgecrusher, that may be so. But then you have to ask whether, tonally and feel wise, a guitar that's between $1000-2000 is worth that amount of money. That's a good chunk of a payment toward a car--for a single guitar. This isn't practical in my case where I need a Floyded guitar for every tuning as well as different pickup combinations. I have 12 guitars and I am nowhere near finished. That doesn't count basses.
Bluntly, increasingly, I think the answer as to whether expensive guitars are worth it is no, especially as the quality of imports increases. I have a 70s lawsuit Korean P Bass and the difference between it and my newer Japanese imports is like night and day. Of course, the best thing is to try out guitars on a case by case basis, but I am making a very general argument.
One could say the inverse as well, saying that you feel better because you spent a lot of money on a handmade instrument that makes it intrinsically better, which would be the inverse of the "my partscaster is as good as your custom shop job" argument. I don't blame you. I would want my $2000 guitar to sound like a $2000 guitar and I would feel offended if someone said their $600 guitar sounded as good. But you don't always get what you pay for.
I can't say for sure. But I do think the general trend is that you are getting less for your money when it comes to custom shop guitars as import guitars quality improves.
If import guitars and "partscasters" were really so awful, they wouldn't have displaced a majority of US guitar manufacturing beginning in the 1970s.
Of course, much of it is simply the human ear's inability to tell the difference in nuances in sound, which is what most of this is about. The influential, early records of many bands were made with cheap gear, yet people rave about the tones.
Most of the time, you can't tell what they're playing unless you look at the liner notes.
Would I have a custom shop guitar? Sure. Do I think they're worth the money? Not really--not unless they had a lot of features I would want in them that are difficult to find on one guitar (OFR, variety of wiring options, killswitch, sustainer, piezos, phase switch, MIDI capability--all in one guitar). Most of the reason for this is due to the woodworking required. If a premade, prepainted body were available, I'd do it myself.
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