T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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218.1 | got a yen for Ibanez | NEXUS::DICKERSON | | Wed Apr 22 1987 14:53 | 20 |
| I've played both and, to me at least, the major differences are
1) tone... subtle but they do sound different 2) price... Gibson
is considerably pricier.
I bought my Ibanez Artist from a shop that was going out of business
and got it new for a used price. The Gibson and Ibanez are both
very well made. If you can find an Ibanez used then it will be
MUCH cheaper than the Gibson.
Bottom line is whether or not the sound of one axe compells you
to buy it rgardless of cost.
ps.. If you can find a used "Lee Ritenour" model ( same as the
Artist but with different pickups ) at a reasonable price ( ie
less than $450-500 ) buy it. In my opinion it is at least the
equal of the Gibson.
Regards
Doug Dickerson
|
218.2 | ps | NEXUS::DICKERSON | | Wed Apr 22 1987 14:57 | 5 |
| Just noticed note 211 above. Did you try getting in touch with
this guy? Price is pretty reasonable.
Doug D....
|
218.3 | hmmm.... | FDCV20::CUMMINGS | | Wed Apr 22 1987 16:48 | 9 |
|
re.2 and .1 yes i did check that out briefly. do you still own
your Artist? how much of a difference is there, sound wise/feel
wise? compared to the ES335? i hear the ibanez is made of plywood?
is the 335 a deeper sound?...
paul
|
218.4 | $500 will buy you a 335 | AKAMAI::BOUCHARD | OA$SURF | Tue Apr 28 1987 20:49 | 12 |
| What can you afford? Its quite possible that you can afford a 335
though you may not think so. I've seen them recently for as low as $300
w/ the case (that is, used, & anyway your better off w/ an older one
than a new one). If your looking for a deeper sound you may want
to consider an 175. Their harder to find but depending upon the
seller you may be able to obtain one for $250 or less. I think
you'll probably find ES330's to be as common if not more so than
the 335 so you may want to be on the lookout for those as well.
Good Luck!
Joel
|
218.5 | I swear by my ES345sv | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Thu Apr 30 1987 16:37 | 26 |
| I have a Gibson ES345SV. This is very similar to an ES335, except
that it is wired in stereo, and has a varitone switch (6 position
switch with a capacitor network inside. I love the sound and action
of this instrument. The neck is about the most comfortable neck
I have ever tried and allows easy access to all 24 frets. One word
of caution though, ES's are known for neck problems. Some of them
twist while others crack just below the headstock. If you plan to
buy an ES guitar be sure to use light gauge strings (.010 E or smaller)
to avoid to much tension on the neck.
I paid $525.oo for my 345, used of course. I would imagine you could
pick up a nice 335 for around 500.oo as well.
I have nothing against Ibinez, but if resale value is important
to you the Gibson will hold its value almost indefinately, while
Japanese intruments don't hold their value as well.
As far as the ES330 is concerned, I had one years ago and it was
a real dog. It has the short neck which doesn't allow easy access
for playing leads. Also the single coil pickups don't sound very
hot.
If you do decide to by an ES, look for one with a stock trapeze
tailpiece. Stay away from one with a Bigsby tremelo tailpiece.
|
218.6 | that cheap? | FDCV20::CUMMINGS | | Mon May 04 1987 14:47 | 7 |
|
re .4 ES175? that's the fat one, with single cutaway right?
it's not possible to find one of those for 250 is it?... that
sound outrageously cheap!
paul
|
218.7 | HELP FOR A BEGINNER | GLORY::BLAIR | | Fri Nov 13 1987 16:40 | 5 |
| I would like some advice, I have been thinking of taking up the
guitar. I would like to know what to look for and what are some
brand that are good, but not to expensive. I don't want to invest
to much money at this time, but I don't want to get something that
will discourage me. Thanks for the help.
|
218.8 | Be Specific | AQUA::ROST | Nervous on the Road | Fri Nov 13 1987 16:46 | 19 |
|
Check the directory of this notesfile, there are some other notes
on choosing guitars.
Some general questions:
What type of guitar, acoustic or electric?
If acoustic, classical (nylon-string) or steel-string?
If electric, what kind of music do you plan on playing?
Also, what is your budget?
Also, where are you located, so we could suggest some dealers?
|
218.9 | Help Jazzmaster/D50 (in one guitar) Wanted.. | RANGLY::GREVE_STEVE | If all else fails, take a nap... | Tue Jun 07 1988 17:32 | 86 |
| RE:< Note 218.8 by AQUA::ROST "Nervous on the Road" >
-< Be Specific >-
> Check the directory of this notesfile, there are some other notes
> on choosing guitars.
Ummmm... I did a DIR /TITLE=HELP and found this note, so I assume it's
a good place to post my "help" request.
I've been playing on and off for 20 years+. Started out as a beginner
and wound up almost 20 years later as a novice.... just never "stuck with" the
practice schedule or played regularly enough. Been through (and sold, cos I
never used them more nice guitars than I care to mention, 66 mustang, 77
custom, 74 guild d25... <sigh>). Anyway for the past year I've been taking
lessons every week and I'm feeling like I'm finally ready to make a commitment
each day to playing. When I was a kid, I played three chord rock and roll and
now I like so much different stuff that I find myself switching from acoustic
to electric every 20 minutes or so.... but my budget can barely afford one
good instrument (unless they make one guitar nowadays that can sound like my
mustang did and then with a "flick of a switch" sound like my guild <grin>).
I'd like to choose an acoustic (but it depends on what time of day that I ask
myself) instead of electric guitar. I'd like to spend 500-700 (actually, I'd
like to spend nothing... but that doesn't work).
What I like to play:
Blues (ZZ variety)
Tom Rush
Some country (Merl Haggard, mostly... but amazing grace gets me going)
Beatles (White album)
Neil Young
Chuck Berry (move chuck to the top on Sundays)
Joni Mitchell (some of it)
My skill level:
I can read music (about a note a minute)... read TAB but only the
simple stuff (put your finger here, Steve, now pull it off). I can play
chords easily with some bass notes. I can stumble through basic rock scales
but never as fast as I'd like and never as tasty... beginning to understand
how passing tones and bends ought to work. I can get through Blackbird pretty
easily, picking with three fingers, almost got Mood for a Day (How does Steve
do that?)... struggling with D tuning (at least I think it's D) on Rockport
Sunday (really haven't got a clue on this one) and Joni's Circle game.
Rockport Sunday and understanding alternate tunings are where I'm at right
now.
What I've got:
1 really cheap electric guitar... can't remember the brand
1 Epiphone with a neck going south fast
What I want:
An instrument that doesn't intrinsically limit me (I need all the help
I can get right now) Low fast action. Steel strings. Lots of volume.
Machines that are accurate and don't "poing" me out of tune like my present
ones do. And lastly a way to resolve the issue of what ONE guitar allows me
to play Jesus just Left Chicago and then Blackbird without switching guitars.
I've tried out some Martins (used) but to be honest, I felt that they had
great volume, but that the action buzzed a lot when adjusted... and they are
expensive as heck. Tried Alvarez and wasn't impressed a bit (even with the
spruce and ebony model) Guilds don't seem to have the volume I'd like (or
maybe my hearing's going)....
HELP!!! Please...
Steve
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