Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused). Expensive Acoustics. A waste of money? Or not. - Acoustics Discussions on The Fretboard
UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45

Expensive Acoustics. A waste of money? Or not.

What's Hot
DavidRDavidR Frets: 595
edited July 2022 in Acoustics
Having just been perusing a review of a very nice new acoustic in this months Guitarist magazine, I was left wondering whether, with the market as it is, these expensive instruments are really worth it.

OK, they're extremely desirable and nice objects and maybe everybody's journey towards finding the acoustic right for them individually has to include owning one or two of them over the years, as funds allow. But your'e now looking at £3 to £4 K for a top mid-range instrument. If for example you ultimately decide that the instrument you need is e.g. a spruce top, rosewood back and sides OM the market is absolutely crammed with that format of instruments. And most other formats too. Exactly what more are you getting for £4K that you wouldn't get for, say, £800? OK, different, but better? Not really imho. With good builds, computer aided mass production, and a multitude of really top manufacturers around the world, it's at least a theory that you're just paying for bling, a name and the kudos of owning a Martin or Taylor or Lowden or Atkin etc.

In most of our hands, with a good setup, much of which you can learn to do yourself, you're really not going to get a radically better tone or enjoy playing more by virtue of having an expensive instrument. Even though you might choose to own one.

Even instruments in the £2-400 range are pretty darn good. Not all of them but lots. 

These days, how good does good enough have to be?
0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
«1345

Comments

  • VimFuegoVimFuego Frets: 14862
    as with all things, it's in the ear of the beholder. However, IME, there is an immediacy when you play a really well made acoustic, a sense that's there's a lot of tonal options available to you. How you pick, where you pick, the angle you pick at and so on. There is an intrinsic pleasure that comes from playing a really nice instrument, the way you can feel it vibrate against your body, it's almost (at the risk of sounding hippy) an organic experience.

    I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • malcolmkindnessmalcolmkindness Frets: 151
    edited July 2022
    This is a complex and interesting question, and as has been said, it's largely in the ear of the beholder and of course,  the size of your wallet.
    I have a couple of guitars costing over €4,000 each and they are lovely instruments there's no doubt, but I also have two Recording King guitars costing only a few hundred each. The expensive ones I just play at home and the RK's I use for travel and gigging and they work fine.
    Personally I don't like "bling" on a guitar so I can't see any point in paying thousands extra for it, but a high quality instrument kept for a few years will always sell for a good price, often increasing in value, if the maker is in demand.
    On the other hand, if you can't hear any difference between a £400 guitar and a £4000 one, you might as well save your money.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • BillDLBillDL Frets: 5615
    edited July 2022
    With a solidbody electric guitar there is only so far a manufacturer can go in price before everything above that is for adornment, impeccable fit and finish, and prestige of ownership.  The limitations are the solid wood (cue "tonewood" debate), hardware, and pickups.

    On an acoustic guitar a luthier can, and usually needs to, go many steps beyond that in terms of tweaking the tone.  For example the shape, thickness and positioning of the bracing, the choice and thickness of woods used, the choice of material and size of the bridge plate, the size of the soundhole, etc, etc.  A skilled luthier can "sound" the wood for resonance by tapping it and can balance the expected response against the other wood choices and carving braces thinner in places.

    Given that you can see right inside the body of most acoustic guitars and that the majority are clear-coated to show off the natural wood grain rather than being of an opaque or tinted/dyed finishes found on most electric guitars, an absolutely perfect fit and finish both inside and out is obviously expected on very high end expensive acoustic guitars.  Most electric guitars use plastic binding and even on ones with wood binding there is often an opaque finish on the sides up to the binding that can be used to disguise slight flaws with the binding.  That kind of exacting workmanship that is usually also coupled with real wood binding and intricate inlaid rosettes all comes with a price.

    Do all the fine details and attention to those details involved in building an expensive acoustic guitar justify some of the prices and make the very well built ones sound as many times better than the difference in price from lower cost ones?
    DavidR said:

    Exactly what more are you getting for £4K that you wouldn't get for, say, £800?.........
    In most of our hands, with a good setup, much of which you can learn to do yourself, you're really not going to get a radically better tone or enjoy playing more by virtue of having an expensive instrument.
    Your key word is "radically".  Like everything else, whether it's a racing bicycle, a prestige car, or even a sofa, there comes a point when the differences between budget and premium converge and anything costing more than that point of convergance is aesthetic or prestige.  I am not going to name names, but I watched a video of an upcoming new female luthier where she painstakingly used a vernier caliper and an online fret spacing calculator to mark out the fret slots on a fingerboard and cut them with a very expensive Japanese saw.  Given that for now she is only making one model of guitar apparently all with the same very standard 25" scale length, wouldn't it have taken much less time and effort to print off a scale template or buy a metal fret scale ruler to mark out the increments?  Would it make a guitar less "artisan" if the fret slots were all cut on a CNC machine?  No, but I suppose in this case you aren't actually paying the luthier by the hour so it doesn't matter how the results were achieved.  If you were it would form good grounds to complain about overcharging for a process that can be done far more quickly and for less cost.

    When it comes to acoustic guitars costing about £1,500 and upwards owners are definitely expecting a fully "hand built" guitar.  In reality, and by necessity due to the nature of the instrument, an awful lot of time spent building an acoustic guitar needs to be hands-on anyway (certainly in comparison with a solidbody electric), even if machine cut parts are used and it is more "assembly" in a factory using mechanised jigs than "building".   An expensive acoustic guitar that is hand-made from blank wood, bone, abalone and lengths of fretwire using hand tools goes through much the same stages of assembly and eventually reaches the same stage as an acoustic guitar comprising machine-cut parts (top, sides, back, neck, inlays, bridge, nut, saddle, fretboard, kerfing, etc all pre-cut and shaped), that is being assembled and finished by a skilled technician.

    There is obviously a point where a factory assembled guitar made from pre-cut parts and hand finished is as good as it can get and there will be a very distinct overlap in quality and sound with many "hand-made" much more expensive guitars.

    From a personal perspective if I was ever able to afford and could justify £4,000 for an acoustic guitar I would probably want to see some evidence of it having been hand made from scratch, but how do you really tell if all the internal glue squeeze-out has been cleaned and there are no stray wood fibres left where the braces slot into the kerfing?
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • stickyfiddlestickyfiddle Frets: 24852
    edited July 2022
    I’m not going to sit and tell anyone it’s always worth the money, and that every expensive guitar is better than every cheap one. 

    But.. my Bourgeois is the best dread I’ve ever played and by quite a long way.

    I would agree that Recording Kings are some of the absolute best cheap guitars I’ve played
    The Assumptions - UAE party band for all your rock & soul desires
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • "When it comes to acoustic guitars costing about £1,500 and upwards owners are definitely expecting a fully "hand built" guitar."

    I really can't see how you can expect a "hand built" guitar for this price.
    It is generally agreed that it takes an experienced builder about 100 hours to make a guitar, before you even consider the cost of the materials, then there is VAT and a case. In my experience a quality hand made guitar is impossible under £3000.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • Danny1969Danny1969 Frets: 9752
    I'm fine with cheap electrics, there's not a huge difference to me between a £250 electric and a 2K one. With acoustics though I can hear the difference. A friend of mine has a large collection of Martins, Taylors, Emeralds and similar and they sound so much better than anything I can afford. I actually sound a better guitarist on them which doesn't happen with electrics. 
    www.2020studios.co.uk 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • MellishMellish Frets: 945
    edited July 2022
    There's no answer to "How good does good enough have to be?", at least not that suits everyone.

    If I'm going in a guitar store with buying one in mind, I'm not interested in brand. I'll look at the price tag, sure, cos I want to know if I can afford it if I like it. 

    But it's tone I'm after. I can put up with bling if it sounds great, and bad action won't put me off cos that can be fixed. 

    Right now I have a Dove, but I've had a Seagull S6 I was happy with and before that a GS Mini  
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • earwighoneyearwighoney Frets: 3380
    This is a complex and interesting question, and as has been said, it's largely in the ear of the beholder and of course,  the size of your wallet.
    I have a couple of guitars costing over €4,000 each and they are lovely instruments there's no doubt, but I also have two Recording King guitars costing only a few hundred each. The expensive ones I just play at home and the RK's I use for travel and gigging and they work fine.
    Personally I don't like "bling" on a guitar so I can't see any point in paying thousands extra for it, but a high quality instrument kept for a few years will always sell for a good price, often increasing in value, if the maker is in demand.
    On the other hand, if you can't hear any difference between a £400 guitar and a £4000 one, you might as well save your money.
    I'm into a similar situation as yourself.  I've recently been playing my Marklund 00-21S repro (not Red Spruce/Brazilian but Moon Spruce/Amazon Rosewood), which has a deep beautiful tone, lots of sustain.  The whole guitar resonates with the slightest touch.

    For some of the songs I have written, the deep basses and sustain of the Marklund 00-21S can be a bit too much, for some songs some of my other guitars which are Sitka/Mahogany work a lot better.  Some of my songs that I play with a slide, they work the best with my cheap 0 sized Recording King which has the least amount of sustain of all my guitars, but works beautifully for certain things, eg playing with fingerpicks.

    My Marklund and my nice flamenco guitar (also made with the same woods) are incredibly reactive to humidity as well. I'd never gig either of those guitars! 

    I really enjoy having different types of guitars at different budgets, I believe they satisfy different needs and functions.  Ultimately I could play all my songs on one guitar if needs be, but it's nice to have some variety.

    So, I could never answer the question for anyone else.  I've enjoyed my journey and all the guitars I have bought at different points of the market, I'd recommend others find their own paths as well.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • BillDLBillDL Frets: 5615
    edited July 2022
    "When it comes to acoustic guitars costing about £1,500 and upwards owners are definitely expecting a fully "hand built" guitar."

    I really can't see how you can expect a "hand built" guitar for this price.
    It is generally agreed that it takes an experienced builder about 100 hours to make a guitar, before you even consider the cost of the materials, then there is VAT and a case. In my experience a quality hand made guitar is impossible under £3000.
    I wasn't talking about me and my expectations.  Allow me to rephrase that sentence so that it makes a lot more sense in context with what I was trying to say both before and after it:
    "When it comes to acoustic guitars costing about £1,500 and upwards many prospective purchasers will definitely have an expectation of getting a fully hand-built guitar".

    I was also trying to make a point that a lot of the time taken by luthiers could easily be reduced by automation/mechanisation without the build quality being reduced, but because luthiers don't actually charge against the clock it doesn't really matter in the end.  I wonder how much of the 100 hours is taken up by the glue drying, whereas in a mass production environment where parts are already rough sawn or shaped the builder/assembler can be doing other tasks on other guitars.

    I regularly see adverts by even quite reputable guitar stores in which they refer to £450 to £600 acoustic guitars as being hand built.  Less informed people selling through classifieds continually and mistakenly refer to factory made guitars lying between budget and premium grade as being hand made.  Those are the prospective buyers I was referring to.  There's a fine line between building and assembly at some prices.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TheMadMickTheMadMick Frets: 213
    edited July 2022
    Two things about an expensive acoustic:
    1. You should be assured of good quality and longevity
    2. You should get a very even balance across the strings and it should be easy to play

    I'm fortunate that I can afford such guitars but I wouldn't write off cheaper stuff. I have 2 Chinese built instruments and they sound superb. But with cheaper stuff, it tends to be more luck of the draw wherether or not you get a good 'un.

    Is the more expensive instrument worth it? Who knows. Value is in the mind of the buyer,
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • darthed1981darthed1981 Frets: 10322
    But.. my Bourgeois is the best dread I’ve ever played and by quite a long way.
    There is a brand of expensive guitar called a "bourgeois"?

    That's brilliant - do they do a cheap range called a "prole"...? (Or do HB do a copy called a "prole").

    The adverts would be great ("hope lies in the proles..." etc. etc.)

    We have to be so very careful, what we believe in...
    2reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • stickyfiddlestickyfiddle Frets: 24852
    edited July 2022
    But.. my Bourgeois is the best dread I’ve ever played and by quite a long way.
    There is a brand of expensive guitar called a "bourgeois"?

    That's brilliant - do they do a cheap range called a "prole"...? (Or do HB do a copy called a "prole").

    The adverts would be great ("hope lies in the proles..." etc. etc.)

    It's actually the builder's name - Dana Bourgeois. He was basically born to sell high end something D 

    But they're genuinely awesome guitars. There was talk of a tie-up with Eastman for some more affordable models but I'm not sure if it came to anything. 

    https://www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/228328/ngd-bourgeois-aged-tone-d




    The Assumptions - UAE party band for all your rock & soul desires
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • darthed1981darthed1981 Frets: 10322
    But.. my Bourgeois is the best dread I’ve ever played and by quite a long way.
    There is a brand of expensive guitar called a "bourgeois"?

    That's brilliant - do they do a cheap range called a "prole"...? (Or do HB do a copy called a "prole").

    The adverts would be great ("hope lies in the proles..." etc. etc.)

    It's actually the builder's name - Dana Bourgeois. He was basically born to sell high end something D

    Crikey - he was wasn't he! :lol:
    We have to be so very careful, what we believe in...
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • earwighoneyearwighoney Frets: 3380
    edited July 2022
    @stickyfiddle the Collab with Eastman are out there. AFAIK there is one with a new name on the headstock, they have the Bourgeois bracing. Also there are a number of Eastman models that have their double bolt neck joint. I think these are gradually drifting out.

    https://www.maksguitars.co.uk/collections/acoustic-guitars/products/eastman-e40d-tc-thermo-cured-adirondack-rosewood-7374
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • VimFuegoVimFuego Frets: 14862
    @stickyfiddle the Collab with Eastman are out there. AFAIK there is one with a new name on the headstock, they have the Bourgeois bracing. Also there are a number of Eastman models that have their double bolt neck joint. I think these are gradually drifting out.

    https://www.maksguitars.co.uk/collections/acoustic-guitars/products/eastman-e40d-tc-thermo-cured-adirondack-rosewood-7374
    ooooh would love to try one of them.

    I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • stickyfiddlestickyfiddle Frets: 24852
    edited July 2022
    Ooh, a bit more money than I expected but I'll bet those are fabulous instruments and likely at least on par with a similarly-priced Martin

    I would also add that Bourgeois are utterly loony money new if you're outside the USA. The closest Coda have in stock is this Aged Tone Country Boy D which is over £6k. I paid about half that for mine (used!) in the US, which still took a good couple of days umming and aching over!
    The Assumptions - UAE party band for all your rock & soul desires
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • jellyrolljellyroll Frets: 3073
    It’s the same as the Ford vs Mercedes argument.  They do the same thing…is the Merc worth 4 times as much as the Ford? To some yes, to others no. 

    It largely come down personal finances. To some, the £4k+ that a high end guitar costs is months or years worth of discretionary spending. Others earn that in an afternoon. The latter group don’t need to agonise so much over whether “it’s worth it.”  
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    with acoustics,  99% of the time,  you most definitely get what you pay for

    you dont "need" to spend north of £3k  -  something eastern European or Eastman will easily get you into "yes I can really notice the difference"  land
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • Jimbro66Jimbro66 Frets: 2394
    edited July 2022
    I think the OP's post could fairly be summed up as "I can't see the point in paying for an expensive acoustic"

    It's a valid stance. If a cheaper guitar does all you need there is little incentive to pay more.

    As others have said above those upper-range acoustics do have qualities that the lower ranges don't but if you can't hear them or don't need them then don't pay for them.

    I use two acoustics, an Atkin OM and a £550 Chinese built OM. I use the latter when traveling and when playing at venues where I'd worry about the Atkin. For the price it's a perfectly acceptable and playable guitar but, side by side, the Atkin knocks spots off it in just about every quality. They are chalk and cheese.

    In the past I've played Bougeois, Santa Cruz and Collins acoustics. All have been superb. Are they worth the price tag? It depends on your needs and your available budget.

    Anyone believing a mass produced acoustic costing a few hundred pounds is the equal of the boutique guitars is kidding themselves (like those who claim their HB is equal to a Gibson CS LP) BUT if the cheaper guitar does all you need then don't pay more!
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • DavidRDavidR Frets: 595
    edited July 2022
    Interesting stuff and I accept the point that if you can't differentiate between acoustics then there's little point in forking out megadosh.

    I think the point I am making though is that, although there used to be quite a big gap between the average and the superb, now, in 2022, that gap has narrowed, because of competition upping commercial standards. Everywhere.

    Blindfold me and play me a Guild D140 (£594), a Yamaha FG5 (£1,149) and a Martin D18 (£2,499) and ask me to pick out the Martin and I would struggle. Ask me to pick out the Guild and I would struggle too I suspect. These 3 just given as a 'for example'.

    We're spoilt for choice. That's great. I just wonder how many players are paying over the odds for an instrument not hugely different to one they could find at a more budget price point.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • jellyrolljellyroll Frets: 3073
    DavidR said:
    Interesting stuff and I accept the point that if you can't differentiate between acoustics then there's little point in forking out megadosh.

    I think the point I am making though is that, although there used to be quite a big gap between the average and the superb, now, in 2022, that gap has narrowed.

    Blindfold me and play me a Guild D140 (£594), a Yamaha FG5 (£1,149) and a Martin D18 (£2,499) and ask me to pick out the Martin and I would struggle.

    So might a lot of people I suspect.
    Agreed. But I’m a brand snob, so I’d still buy the Martin :) 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    edited July 2022
    DavidR said:


    Blindfold me and play me a Guild D140 (£594), a Yamaha FG5 (£1,149) and a Martin D18 (£2,499) and ask me to pick out the Martin and I would struggle.

     
    its not all about what it sounds like to the person not playing it.

    But I do get the "point"  and its something I often relate to when people talk about any "audio" experience,  an amp,  CD, hi-fi, speakers, headphones   yadda yadda  - there comes a point in the "ability to differentiate/appreciate" that is different for everyone,  ie my ears cant "appreciate" expensive hi-fi or vinyl  -  (which TBH is lucky !)


    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • DavidRDavidR Frets: 595
    jellyroll said:
    DavidR said:
    Interesting stuff and I accept the point that if you can't differentiate between acoustics then there's little point in forking out megadosh.

    I think the point I am making though is that, although there used to be quite a big gap between the average and the superb, now, in 2022, that gap has narrowed.

    Blindfold me and play me a Guild D140 (£594), a Yamaha FG5 (£1,149) and a Martin D18 (£2,499) and ask me to pick out the Martin and I would struggle.

    So might a lot of people I suspect.
    Agreed. But I’m a brand snob, so I’d still buy the Martin :) 
    :-)
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    The reason this discussion is so confusing is that we are actually talking about two different things - price and quality. They are NOT equal!

    In particular, some of the famous-name US makers are now charging around $6000 (say £3500) for their standard models.

    Not their cheap models, the standard ones on which their name is made. I'm not going to mention any names here, but their initials are Gibson and Martin, and examples are D-18, J-45, OM-28, and so on. I've played quite a few examples of those models, and others like them and they are excellent guitars, but if you think they are any better that the standard, mainstream models of a dozen other manufacturers you've got rocks in your head. (You may or may not like them better - matter of personal taste - but on any objective level they are no better than many a Tamakine, Furch, Maton,  Lakewood and are, in short, overpriced to buggery.)

    So let's forget the price. Price means nothing. Here in Oz you can but first-class, all-solid, all-sustainable timbers, first-world-manufactured guitar good enough for anyone sensible person's needs for $1229 (£690.)  That is a Maton S60. No frills at that price, but it's a bloody good guitar you could play a gig with in any venue. And no crappy cheapskate tricks like not even binding the body to protect it against dings. (Cough, cough, Gibson.) Now you don't get that model in in the UK (well you do, but you pay serious money for it) but you have local alternatives of apparently similar value. 

    Quality is a non-negotiable. 

    Price beyond let's say £1000 is something you pay only if you want to. And if you do want to, then sure! There are some utterly lovely guitars, and if you've got the money, bloody spend it! But you don't have to.

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • Benm39Benm39 Frets: 606
    "When it comes to acoustic guitars costing about £1,500 and upwards owners are definitely expecting a fully "hand built" guitar."

    I really can't see how you can expect a "hand built" guitar for this price.
    It is generally agreed that it takes an experienced builder about 100 hours to make a guitar, before you even consider the cost of the materials, then there is VAT and a case. In my experience a quality hand made guitar is impossible under £3000.
    Brook are extremely good value, at around £2600 .
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    Benm39 said:

    Brook are extremely good value, at around £2600 .
    even better at £1700............................ ;)


    (that was 2008 mind you  LOL  ) 


    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • jellyrolljellyroll Frets: 3073
    I remember Jeremy Clarkson talking about a particular Porsche (a Boxter, I think) saying that it was great,  fantastic, brilliant. But he wouldn’t get one because if he pulled up at the lights and the car next to him was a Carrera (or something, I’m not well up on Porsche models) he’d feel like he cheaped out. 

    I think of guitars a bit like that. Especially Gibsons. Yes, you can buy a great Mahogany sloped dread for a grand and it will sound fine and play well. But when the next guy shows up with a Gibson J-45, you’ll hear that yours isn’t a Gibson. 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    edited July 2022
    I have 7 guitars. All of them are better than a J-45. They sound better. They play better. 3 or 4 of the 7 cost less. 

     And they don't have that bloody awful black paint! :)


    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • DavidR said:
    Interesting stuff and I accept the point that if you can't differentiate between acoustics then there's little point in forking out megadosh.

    I think the point I am making though is that, although there used to be quite a big gap between the average and the superb, now, in 2022, that gap has narrowed, because of competition upping commercial standards. Everywhere.

    Blindfold me and play me a Guild D140 (£594), a Yamaha FG5 (£1,149) and a Martin D18 (£2,499) and ask me to pick out the Martin and I would struggle. Ask me to pick out the Guild and I would struggle too I suspect. These 3 just given as a 'for example'.

    We're spoilt for choice. That's great. I just wonder how many players are paying over the odds for an instrument not hugely different to one they could find at a more budget price point.
    You are absolutely correct that the difference between a budget guitar and an expensive one today is much less than it used to be. I'm in my 70's now and my two Recording King guitars are excellent instruments considering what they cost.
    When I was a teenager a budget guitar was made of plywood and very hard to play, and the high quality American made guitars were hard to find and prohibitively expensive. 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • RocknRollDaveRocknRollDave Frets: 6075
    Diminishing returns, innit.

    If you compare an £80 guitar to an £800 guitar, you could argue with some conviction the latter is ten times better.
    compare £800 with £8000, however, and that ratio will be massively reduced.

    In real terms, paying twice or three times the price of a decent upper-mid-priced guitar will not usually get you a guitar that is 200-300% better. But, are you happy spending 200% more for a, say, 25% increase in perceived quality? Only you can answer that.

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
Sign In or Register to comment.