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Imagine - you have inherited £2,000 from your rich Uncle.
You are fed up playing shit Guitars, and you want to own a good one before you die.
What would you buy ??
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Personally, if a couple of grand landed in my lap I'd add another couple of hundred quid to it and go looking for a good used model by one of the boutique US "variations on the Martin theme" makers like Bourgeois, Santa Cruz (would say Collings but am covered there) etc
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
(Except obviously I wouldn't, since I'm selling it. But still...)
Trading feedback here
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
This isn't meant to sound patronising - but if you're not used to higher end acoustics - don't be in a rush to spend your money. Spend time learning what you really like in the sound of various guitars.
£2000 should get you a 'guitar for life' if you chose well.
Good luck with journey.
Nil Satis Nisi Optimum
Spruce/rosewood has a certain sound, which is different from spruce/mahogany, or spruce/koa. If you start looking at other materials for the tops like cedar then you have yet more options, and again you can have different woods for the back and sides. The cork sniffers get into the difference between Sitka spruce, Engelmann spruce and Adirondack spruce as well.
While the woods make a difference, the body style makes a difference. If I use Martin body styles as a reference, a dreadnought will be loud and have big low end, an O or an OO will be quieter and possible better suited to finger pickings. The OOO/OM will be somewhere in between and be a good allrounder. Talking of the OOO/OM the scale length makes a difference as well. The OOO is shorter scale (24.9" I think) where the OM is longer (25.4"?). It does make a difference to the sound and to the feel of the guitar.
Bracing is also important. Compare a base model Martin D28 to an HD28V with scalloped pre-war style bracing and there is a significant difference.
The other thing to be aware of is neck dimensions. I love the sound of Brook guitars but they have a shallow neck with a very flat radius which I can't get on with. I also like Lowden but their normal necks are too wide. You can custom order a Lowden with a narrower neck but that would be way outside the £2k budget. Some Martins have V profiles on the necks which I quite like but others don't.
All of these factors - wood selection, body style, bracing design, plus playing comfort - combine together to make the whole. As others have said, it's probably best to go and try a bunch until you find one you like. Think about how you will use it. Even if you like the sound of a dreadnought or jumbo it won't be comfortable if your main use is on the sofa at home.
My better half was all for me indulging myself but once u'r in the position that you can have what you want - you start to evaluate things differently.
I needed something I could take out and about with me and not worry about it and the kinds of places I play either they wouldn't notice the quality of others guitar, it tends to be more about the music you play.
I'm enjoying the 'freedom' this guitar allows me - allowing others to play it and leave it lying around (unattended).
We've all bought guitars and then "moved on" from them. It's only by spending time with individual instruments that we get to realize what we like and don't like. Plus, our preferences change over time.
Best way to think about the £££s is to assess how much you'll lose on resale and then consider whether that loss is a price you are willing to pay for 1/2/5/10 years of experiencing playing that guitar. You're paying for the experience, not the product.
(Plus, you'll realize that an apparent loss of a grand on a high end guitar might be no more costly than buying 2 or 3 cheapos with no re-sale value).
Strangely, though I love electric instruments as well, I never feel quite the personal attachment developing that I can with an acoustic guitar.
I have always fancied a Banjo !
After years and years of hard graft to finance a total of 17 guitars, it has only taken me a year to get rid of 16 of them.
Quite theraputic actually. Am l nuts ?, or could it be a case of less is more ?
If l sell this last one, l will be guitarless for the first time since l was 14 years old ...many moons ago.
How long could you live without a guitar ?........
In an ideal world I'd be a one-guitar man - I love the idea of having a really deep familiarity with just one instrument, but I just can't quite get away with it, especially after getting back into playing bottleneck which I went off for a long time.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
If you're a strummer, I'd go for an all-mahogany OM sized Martin.
For fingerstyle I'd go for something from a smaller UK builder.
Actually, scrub that, just get an Atkin
Pick one .....no pressure