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So where do you draw the line? I have one guitar which was crazy expensive, beautifully decorated, and (much more important) made from very rare and special timber. Do I play it?
Too right I do! I bought it because I loved the way it played and sounded. I was both attracted and repelled by the decoration and the fancy timbers. So I'm careful with it, and it is (touch wood!) ding-free so far, but I bought it to play and I play it long and hard. Wonderful guitar! If it ends up looking hard-worn after countless thousands of playing hours one day, well, I'll have had those thousands of hours with it and that is the main thing.
But that one is pretty close to the line. Make a guitar much more beautiful (in the fine woodworking sense) than the Angel and it would become a bit of a crime to play it.
And if you can't play it, it's not a guitar anymore.
(And my granny's tea set wasn't a tea set.)
I think that particular guitar above looks pretty awful
It’s still ok to say that about expensive things,
Im glad I don’t lust after this kinda gear, would put me out of house and home.
Equivalent of 16.74 Yamaha FG5's - also if anyone's interested - (although that's really like comparing a very useful steel alloy with a precious metal )
As with all things I have never bought anything I wanted as an investment so my view is use them play them. Otherwise you might as well just get a picture to hang on the wall.
most of this stuff is still designed to be a very high standard sonically it’s not just a D28 with a load of Pearl and abalone strewn across.
not sure I will ever have that sort of splash cash but nice to dream
The particular guitar featured is hardly outrageously blingy while giving a nod to certain iconic New York jazz arch tops. Non of the prices currently on Dream Guitars web site are particularly out there for the particular builders involved.
It seems to me that guitars are both works of art and made to be used. I might buy a work of art as an investment but I’d also make sure I enjoyed it by looking at it rather than leaving it in a vault in Zurich.
Similarly, for me, guitars are made to be played. If they’re not played one could, quite cogently, argue that they had never been truly fully appreciated or even approached realising their potential.
I am fortunate enough to own some guitars way beyond what my humble upbringing ever suggested might be possible or I ever imagined I might own. They are all looked after carefully, but they are also played (not as much as I would like) and the wear that results is part of the life and use that makes them part of my life and therefore enjoyed and valued for the joy they’ve brought.
I have no intention of lying on my deathbed and regretting not playing them because their beauty
somehow enslaved me, held me captive and prevented me from realising their full beauty as living, and vulnerable, musical instruments.
As they say, your mileage may vary!
But, whatever you do enjoy the guitars you have to the max!
But when they're really, really beautiful, the work involved in making it beautiful must have some bearing on the cost.
Luckily I don't like the look of fancy blingy guitars.
If I was mega rich I think I'd quite like a cool guitar to put on the wall as art. I'd probably appreciate that as much as a painting or sculpture or something.
For some, they'd never think of spending £1,000 on a guitar, for others, maybe £5,000 or £10,000... or £100,000!
I've been guilty of shying away from taking my nice guitars out before. Its daft. I'm over it now and love to play and hear them. I'm sure everyone else does too.