biggsy
New Metal Member
my dad has an old acoustic somewhere so i might as well save some money and play that. i prefer the sound of acoustic anyway. done deal
I've got 6 Jacksons - an SL3, KE3, RR3, DK2, DK2M, JDR-94; an Epiphone Black Beauty Les Paul and an old strat copy. I've put Seymour Duncan, EMG and Bill Lawrence pickups in all of them.
I'd definetely recommend an Epiphone Les Paul, or SG, or a Jackson. Get a used one, you can find good Jacksons, like the KE3 or DK2 on ebay for very good prices. You'll also get better pickups in a Jackson than Epiphone - the Epiphone pickups are very microphonic and will feedback horrendously if you ever join a band.
The important thing is that the guitar is set up correctly - even a more expensive guitar can be set up badly so the action is high, trem won't stay in tune etc. My crappy old cheapo strat copy (a Marlin!) plays well cos I set it up properly and put nice pickups in it for not a lot of £££.
Buy a decent used Jackson off ebay, get one of Dan Erlewine's maintenance books at the same time and learn how to look after the guitar.
I also have a black beauty, in fact i picked it up half price (reduced from £675 to £345) just because some one had put some tiny dents in the back (you can harldy see them unless you get close and let the light shine across the back in certain way). It's a nice guitar, the sustain is fantastic and so is the tone. Not cheap wood at all, the body is mahogany and the fretboard is maple. I seriously doubt there is any discernable difference between that and a Gibson, when it is set up nicely (as I had done for about £40). Plus one can always put better pickups in when you have a bit of spare cash (as the poster above did). It keeps tune very well. the fret board may not be as fast as a very good strat or an Ibanez, but what it lacks in this dept, it makes up for in tone and sustain.
Sure a Gibson would be lovely, but an Epiphone is more than fine (especially when you're going to be doing nothing but messing around at home and have no ambition to be a professional musician - e.g. me).
I've played Gibsons and my Epi sounded better, looks better, and played better than any of them. It also weighs a lot more which I like!
It may be because my Epi is set up perfectly, and has three Seymour Duncans in it, I don't know, but it proved to me that for my needs an Epiphone is fine.
As for your comment about the fret board not being fast - well, it's all in the fingers. I can play as fast on my Epi as I can on any of my Jacksons.
Point is - you're right, an Epiphone is a fantastic first guitar, and after some upgrades like a setup and new pickups, will last for a lifetime.
Sure a Gibson would be lovely, but an Epiphone is more than fine (especially when you're going to be doing nothing but messing around at home and have no ambition to be a professional musician - e.g. me).
how is acoustic harder? usually youll finger pick which a totally different technique that wont really help your electric guitar picking technique at all. when on alot of gain on your electric guitar every mistake you make will be 10x more obvious and you got to learn how to mute properly, something that isnt as necessary on an acoustic. you barely ever bend on an acoustic, vibrato isnt remotely as important as on an electric, legato isnt used as much; all these techniques take many years to fully master.
decent post I guess but lol @ "usually youll finger pick" and you're forgetting the part where a steel string acoustic is all around much harder on your left hand (for barring stuff and all) than an electric will ever be. Also I think mistakes on a distorted guitar are much LESS obvious than on an acoustic.
so what, suddenly we are talking about the first few weeks in ones progression as a guitarist?
lol yes we are
my point was its only something thatll matter the first few weeks, if youre gna decide what guitar to choose depending on that, then youre not exactly thinking of the future. most people go from nylon to electric to acoustic with steel strings. first shock will be from nylon to the electric and the other step wont really be noticeable.