UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
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After many, many happy months and hours looking for my next guitar true love, I snuck in for a quickie today. No, not one of the several long-desired high-end instruments I'm always struggling to choose between, just a good, practical everyday guitar to put some solid hours into.
Lately I've been playing the Cole Clark Angel a lot. I always play it a fair bit - all things considered it is my best guitar - but I don't want to hammer the poor little thing into the ground just practicing and noodling around. It's less than two years old and I can see the first signs of play wear on it. Yep, sure, they are made to be played, but the Angel would cost close to $6000 to replace and it is made from very rare timbers it would be sinful to waste. Instead, I tend to play the little Maton Dreadnought. It's a much cheaper guitar, but arguably still a bit good to hammer every day as much as I do. And the other Maton is a Messiah 808 - i.e., another one better not sacrificed to the daily grind.
Only one thing for it. Buy another guitar!
(Logic like the above is what helps me stay married.)
Now the guitars I've been looking at all year - yes, I have gone the whole of this calendar year without buying a guitar, not even one, not since December 2020! - have been fairly high end models: a custom shop Maton is top of the list at present, and I've been considering others in that broad category. One that I reluctantly rejected a few weeks ago was a late 1980s Guild GF-60 R - a truly lovely small jumbo with more top end than most jumbos and a remarkably balanced sound. Sadly, it was getting a bit close to neck reset time and if I'm spending $3500 (£1900) on a guitar, I don't want to be dropping another thousand on it sometime in the next few years.
But last night I noticed this nice little Guild advertised by my local used guitar shop. It is a 2007 CO-2, Red Spruce over mahogany and they were asking just under $1500 (about £800). That is a crazy low price for a proper made-in-America Guild. So I did my research - more on this in another post - and then drove into Hobart and tried it out.
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Congrats.
Anyway, I fixed it. Well, my favourite luthier fixed it for me. Ebony and mother-of-pearl. More dollars than I care to admit to, but what the hell. It now has a proper Guild badge.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
@bertie yes. I subscribe to the view that dots or markers on the fretboard are completely useless most of the time. If you can see them at all, you are holding it wrong! Side dot markers are a different matter. In fact, I wish they were a bit bigger and easier to see in poor light. I would have said that I don't look at my hands when I'm playing at all, but obviously I do (if only with peripheral vision) because I start making mistakes when I play with the light very low. The one time when fret markers come into their own is when you are looking at another player trying to follow his moves. (There is a guitar teacher on You-tube who plays an instrument with no markers - why not pick up a different guitar to make the video with you dunce?)
90% of my playing these days is laid back sitting in an easy chair (it would be in a rocker on a front porch with ma hounds at ma feet, if I had a front porch.........and a rocker got the hounds tho) - so a position where you always see the fretboard,
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Not sure how Guild do it with the constant upheaval they have been through, maybe being the less obvious choice means they have to try harder.
As I say, I could be wrong. It wouldn't be the first time!