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New guitar


Bravus

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I was chatting with an online friend about guitars, and he offered to give me one! I love playing guitar, and although I already have one it's not particularly good. I actually did the unselfish thing and suggested he give it to another friend of ours instead of me, but he was determined to give it to me... and I have to admit I didn't resist *too* hard. bwink

Cool serendipity.

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Is this an online guitar?

May we be one so that the world may be won.
Christian from the cradle to the grave
I believe in Hematology.
 

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Well, an electric one... bwink

It's a Paul Reed Smith (PRS) Santana SE, if anyone wants to look it up and see what it looks like.

Actually, I'll save you the trouble...

gt_sesantana_ts.jpg

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It appears to be an air guitar.

<p><span style="color:#0000FF;"><span style="font-weight:bold;"><span style="font-style:italic;">"Do not use harmful words, but only helpful words, the kind that build up and provide what is needed, so that what you say will do good to those who hear you."</span></span> Eph 4:29</span><br><br><img src="http://banners.wunderground.com/weathersticker/gizmotimetemp_both/US/OR/Fairview.gif" alt="Fairview.gif"> Fairview Or</p>

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This will be number 4 - which is a little embarrassing to admit. One is a (nylon-string) classical guitar that my parents bought me for $50 about 30 years ago, another a steel-string acoustic-electric like the one olger pictured above that I picked up in a pawnshop for my birthday a couple of years ago for about $120.

The third of the current 3 is an electric guitar - a friend wanted to buy it for $200 in the 80s, but only had $100, so I loaned him the money. We passed the guitar back and forward a few times as collateral on the loan over the years, but in the end he lost interest in playing and I kept the guitar.

Add my $100 amp and the $45 effects pedal I just bought, and you can see that although it sounds like a lot of guitars, it's not that much of an extravagance! (I wouldn't mind betting the one olger wants is worth more than my entire collection, probably several times over.)

The new one is another electric, as shown above, and is a much better guitar than the electric I currently have, which was built very cheaply and has virtually no sustain.

I could probably sell my old electric and have just 3 guitars to cover the possibilities, but I've sold two guitars in my life, a Fender Jaguar and an Ibanez Iceman, and later deeply regretted both sales, so I think I'll just hang onto it. It has some sentimental value. bwink

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Oh, definitely find another teacher! I've been playing since I was about 12 years old, but have only taken maybe 2 years of lessons in those 20 or so years of playing. Apart from that it's just self-taught and enjoyed. It's well worth learning enough that you can play a song, then just figuring out new skills and styles and techniques.

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Bravus, I just sold my tenor sax and am debating on a 6-string guitar or bass guitar.

I got tired of taking too much time to set-up the sax to play, then the time to clean it after use. I'm too lazy. At least with a guitar, you pick it up, maybe tune a string or two, and off you go. No spit to worry about.

Question... how difficult is learning a bass over a regular guitar? Anyone...? Anyone at all?

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Probably similar. There might be a little less fingertip pain to get through before you develop calluses, since the bass strings are much thicker. You might want to think about what kind of playing you'd mainly want to do. If it's quick setup and break-down you want and quick playing, a steel-string acoustic guitar is probably your best bet. There are few acoustic basses around, and as soon as you go electric there are amps and leads to set up and it may not be that much quicker. Bass is also less of a 'play by yourself' instrument. If you want to play in the band at church (or anywhere else) you'll usually get a gig as a bass player, but otherwise it can be kind of boring to just play for pleasure at home...

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Perhaps a better question may be... which guitar should I learn to play first? I could always plan on playing both someday. If I learn a six string first, would picking up on a bass be easier?

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Yep, definitely. I've played bass before a number of times, based purely on my guitar skills. The layout of the neck is the same, and so is where the notes are (unlike going ukelele to guitar) between the 4 strings of a bass and the 4 lowest-pitched strings of a guitar.

I'd say go for guitar first for ease and fun, and learn bass later - but I'm biased!

And for a first guitar go for a steel-string acoustic. A nylon-stringed classical guitar is easier on the fingers, but it sounds muddy for just strumming chords, which is where most people start. Of course, you could start actually learning classical guitar, which I did a year or so of and is very enjoyable, but almost like a whole different instrument.

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I might even lash out and do a little video for this thread when I get home - will see who's using what computers where and how I feel...

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<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="

name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="
type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>

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Bravus,

That was great! (Thanks for helping get the video posted, Stan). I think I will do the steel-stringed acoustic as a beginner.

With the electric, did I sense a touch of Hendrix and Led Zep in there?

Thank you for taking the time to shoot that instructive piece. I really appreciate that.

Les

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No worries at all. By the way, I'm not *quite* that wide either: my daughter shot the video in 'portrait' style (longer in height than width, I then had to rotate it 90 degrees in the editing process, and YouTube squished it into 'landscape' mode when it was uploaded.

I hope it didn't seem too condescending - I mean, I know you've seen guitars before. But I had fun doing it.

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