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Conference napalm::guitar

Title:GUITARnotes - Where Every Note has Emotion
Notice:Discussion of the finer stringed instruments
Moderator:KDX200::COOPER
Created:Thu Aug 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:3280
Total number of notes:61432

293.0. "Test Driving Guitars" by ERLANG::SUDAMA (Living is easy with eyes closed...) Mon Jul 13 1987 16:15

    I'd like to get some opinions (I'm sure I will) about how to "test"
    a guitar before buying it.  I'm not talking about checking the neck,
    electronics, body, etc.  I'm talking about the *sound*.
    
    I've seen it mentioned numerous times in this notes file that "if it
    feels right and it sounds right, buy it".  Feel is one thing, but
    it seems almost impossible to me to try a guitar out once and tell
    how it is really going to sound for the rest of your life.
    
    For example, go into the typical music store and ask to try out some
    guitars.  Assuming you get past the sales-hungry clerks, etc., they are
    probably going to set you up in a corner somewhere, plugged into a
    rental amp, with a noisy patch cord.  In the first place, this is
    obviously not a conducive environment to try out the thing, unless you
    are a natural-born showboater.  The store probably has lousy acoustics,
    and if you play at any volume at all everybody in the store is going to
    be giving you dirty looks the whole time.  Secondly, the strings are
    probably dirty and rusty, the guitar will definitely not be set up they
    way you would like it, if it is even in a tuneable condition, and
    the amp is probably nothing like what you would be using.

    On top of all this, conditions are going to vary significantly from
    store to store, so what sounds good in one place might sound lousy
    in another.  The same basically holds true for buying used equipment.
    You typically sit down in somebody's living room or basement and
    try the guitar on their equipment the way they have it set up.
    
    The bottom line is, how can you really do comparative shopping and
    choose a guitar for the quality of its sound under these circumstances?
    The ideal thing is obviously to know people who use every type of
    guitar you might be considering and are willing to let you borrow it to
    try out on your own.  Even in this kind of a dream world you still
    aren't going to be able to narrow it down to the specific axe that you
    will want to buy, unless you buy one of your friend's.  The same
    things apply to buying acoustics, although there may be fewer variables
    to account for.

    One suggestion that I have for this is to take along a guitar whose
    sound you are thoroughly familiar with and use it as a point of
    comparison with others.  That provides some kind of a "reference
    standard".  Another suggestion would be to try to arrange to rent some
    of the final selections for a couple of days before making a choice, so
    that you can try them out more thoroughly (I've never heard of a music
    store providing "demo" guitars, the way some tennis racquet stores do,
    but it wouldn't hurt to ask). 
    
    I also wanted to make a point that one of the reasons people tend
    to buy guitars based on the name (Fender, Gibson, Martin, etc.)
    is precisely because of this problem.  You place some trust in the
    reputation of the manufacturer, because it is so difficult to tell
    anything from a test drive.
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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293.1sound roomsCSSE::CLARKI'm not BeethovenMon Jul 13 1987 16:236
    well, some of the fancier music stores (notice I didn't say nicer)
    have separate amp rooms that are soundproofed. You can check out
    guitars and amps at 'reasonably' loud volume. Kurlan's in Worcester
    is one place that does this.
    
    -Dave
293.2I did it MY wayDREGS::BLICKSTEINDaveMon Jul 13 1987 18:4219
    The way I try out a guitar for SOUND is to plug it directly into
    an amp with a good clean sound and only moderately loud (i.e. loud
    enough for me to hear myself over the guy at the other end of the
    store blasting out "Eruption").  
    
    I then try to go through as many possible settings that guitar is capable
    of as I can (tone, volume level, pickup combinations, coil taps,
    polarity, preamps, etc.)
    
    Thus, for me, I find the atmosphere that most stores provide to
    be quite acceptable.
    
    But one visit to a place like Daddy's Junky Music and you'll find
    that mine is the minority opinion.  You will find the majority of 
    people checking out guitars by plugging them into cranked up Marshall 
    stacks.  If you ask me, this is the way to SELL guitars, not the way 
    to BUY them.

    	db
293.3try to bring your own amp.HAMSTR::PELKEYGoodnight Ms Kalabash, wherever u rTue Jul 14 1987 15:0122
	Two practices I've used.  And the first has really helped out.

    1    Bring your own amp.  Then there's no doubt in your mind as to how
    the axe will sound through your amp.  It's right there.  (this is a
    drag, and maybe impractical if you have a large amp BTW)  And  don't
    worry about how impressed they'll be with your playing.  Everyones
    trying to play a ba-zillion-notes-a-second these days.  Just be
    concerned with the sound clean, and overdriven.  If the voice is what
    you're looking for, you can "erupt" out when you get it home. 
    
    2    Ask if you can put a new set of strings on it if the exsiting
    ones look like hell.  Maybe just an alchol wiping will clean them
    enought, but not usually.  Any guitar thats been hanging for a few
    months, will have dead strings.  The air and dust alone will kill
    em just as quick as greasy hands playing it.
    
    If they really want to sell it, they'll usually oblige and let you
    put on a new set on it.  Afterall, when you think of it, if it
    was my store, I'd be tickled pink if someone would do that to some
    of the better guitars when they needed to be restrung.  I'd doubt
    too many people who came in to try the cheaper ones would even notice
    the grunge on the strings anyway.
293.4Shop during off hours !!!MORRIS::JACQUESTue Jul 14 1987 18:4419
    One more suggestion for test driving anything musical. Stay away
    from music stores during prime time, ie. Friday Evenings 5:00 pm
    to 8:00 pm, saturday late morning to early afternoon. If you go
    into a music store during prime time hours your going to be in 
    competition with every other customer in the store. If your
    considering a purchase as important as a new axe, take a day,
    or at least an afternoon off from work on an odd day, like
    a tuesday or wednesday afternoon, and visit your favorite store.
    You will find the stores are pretty much empty at this time, and
    you can play around all you want with the equipment, plus the
    sales help is free to help you or answer your questions when the
    store is empty. 
    
    	If you think its tough shopping in music stores during prime time
    hours, try doing it with a 6 month old baby under your arms. The
    loud noise tends to scare the baby, needless to say, you can't stay
    in the store long enough to try anything. Being a new father, I
    have been faced with this problem a lot recently.
    
293.5try some phonesNEXUS::DICKERSONTue Jul 14 1987 20:1817
In a crowded, noisy store it is often useful to bring along
a good set of circumaural headphones ( i.e. phones which form
a tight seal around your ears ).  This eliminates distractions
from noise in the store and also eliminates the speaker(s) in 
the amp as a variable.

I also agree with replies above recommending new strings.  This
is essential when auditioning an acoustic guitar.  A "generic"
set of strings costs a store less than a dollar.  If they are
unwilling to invest a dollar in a customer who's contemplating
a purchase of several hundred to several thousand dollars, find
another store.

Happy shopping!

Doug Dickerson

293.6RHETT::MCABEESupport live musicWed Jul 15 1987 13:388
    You can sorta get around the dead string problem without replacing
    them.  Wound strings can be briefly brought back to (semi-)life 
    by just loosening and then retuning them.  Won't do much for the
    rust, though, and won't do anything for unwound strings (except
    maybe break them).
    
    Bob
    
293.7Wurlitzer's Boston store is the worstCOUGAR::JACQUESWed Jul 15 1987 20:3419
    The absolute worst music store in the world for trying out anything
    is Wurlitzers in Boston. A freind of mine bought a Gibson ES artist
    there about 5 years ago. Fortunately, he was already sure he wanted
    one before he got there. He went there mainly because they had the
    cheapest price. He asked if they would change strings and set up
    the intonation before he left the store with it and the salemen
    said no problem. He then proceeded to change the  strings and
    set the action and intonation right on the store countertop with
    people breathing down our necks the whole time. The worst thing
    was that with all of the noise in the store, he actually had the
    nerve to set the intonation by ear. We asked him if we could take
    the guitar into a quiet back room somewhere and set the intonation
    with a quartz tuner. He replied "this is it, there is no back room".
    We're talking about a $950.oo purchase here. If the price hadn't
    been so reasonable, theres no way he would have gone through with
    the purchase. We felt like telling him to stick the axe where the
    sun don't shine. He ended up buying it and brought it to Mcduff's
    Music in Shrewsbury and had Rich set it up for him for $10.oo.