T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
330.1 | "Unfinished ?" | COUGAR::JACQUES | | Mon Aug 31 1987 15:50 | 7 |
| Are you sure that this guitar is completely unfinished ?
It must at least be oiled or sealed somehow, or else it
would fall apart in no time. I suppose the cedar could go
unfinished, but the spruce top would have to be sealed.
Mark Jacques
|
330.2 | Polyurethane? | AQUA::ROST | You used me for an ashtray heart | Mon Aug 31 1987 16:57 | 5 |
|
The Seagulls I have seen are sealed but they do not have a gloss
finish applied. I think the seal is a polyurethane but don't quote
me.
|
330.3 | Where? | PLDVAX::JASMIN | | Mon Aug 31 1987 17:27 | 3 |
| Where did you get this guitar? What music stores have them?
Dave Jasmin
|
330.4 | In MA, Try Mr. C's in Marlboro | AQUA::ROST | You used me for an ashtray heart | Mon Aug 31 1987 18:05 | 6 |
|
Re: .3
Once again, Mr. C's in downtwon Marlboro, MA has them. Outside
of MA....????
|
330.5 | | GIBSON::DICKENS | Distributed System Manglement | Thu Sep 03 1987 13:16 | 7 |
| I got mine at Liberty's in downtown Framingham, which is moving
to Saxonville soon, right across from the old Roxbury carpet factory.
It might have some kind of finish, but I can't see or feel it.
-Jeff
|
330.6 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Fri Sep 04 1987 08:04 | 6 |
| I played a seagull severl years ago...according to the shop owner
they are unfinished.
Seemed like a nice guitar for the price.
dave
|
330.7 | And half a year later.... | AQUA::OCONNOR | The law dont want no gear-gammer | Fri Feb 19 1988 15:36 | 14 |
| Hi,
I have a Seagull I bought from the music emporium in porter square
in cambridge. Mine has a cedar top and cost about $250. It is
best acoustic I have owned, though my previous acoustic was a $50
Harmony. It has a nice mellow sound to it and the cedar top always
gets comments.
BTW I bought it for 2 reasons, first it is a lefty and it sold there
for the same price as a righty, second the cedar top made it look
nice. I know you are supposed to buy guitars more objective criteria
but sometimes ....
Joe
|
330.8 | danger | CVG::MCCORMACK | | Fri May 27 1988 09:31 | 6 |
|
Warning-
I've had a Seagull for 3 years,and everything was fine.
Then this spring out of the blue, the bridge started coming off
and the neck fucked up, etc. beware
|
330.9 | New neck or new board | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Sat Apr 29 1989 18:13 | 4 |
| Mr C sold me a Kramer Baretta, he says it has a Seagull neck.
The rosewood fingerboard looks like it has pore filler in it.
Places look like car oil has touched the wood. I don't like the
fingerboard.
|
330.10 | Seagull 12 string | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Sun Oct 27 1991 15:50 | 19 |
| I looked at a Seagull 12-string the other day. I guess this is their
better model. It had the following features:
o Solid cedar top
o (apparently) Mahogany back and sides
o Rosewood fingerboard and bridge
o High gloss finish
The body was dreadnaught size, but with very rounded shoulders.
Anyway, it played very nice, and sounded alot better than anything
I've played in its price range ($519 list, the store was asking $395).
The guitar appeared to be well constructed. Has anyone had any
experience with Seagull 12 strings?
Jim
|
330.11 | MORE | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Sun Oct 27 1991 15:53 | 3 |
| RE: -.1
Correction: The top was spruce, not cedar.
|
330.12 | Bought a Seagull SM 12 | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Wed Feb 19 1992 16:00 | 28 |
| I stopped in the store I mentioned in .10 again last week-end and
they had another Seagull 12 string. I tried it out, and was pretty
pleased with it, except for some string buzz caused by a lack of
neck relief. A quick neck adjustment cured that problem. After
a couple rounds of negotiations, the store owner offered the guitar
to me for $440, tax included, and with a nice hardshell case. I
said yes.
The model is S.M. 12. Solid spruce top, mahogany sides and back.
The store owner claimed the sides and back were solid, but I suspect
that they are laminated.
I really like the sound of this guitar. Outside of a Guild JF30 and
a Martin 1228, I sounds as good or better than any 12 string I've
played. It has good quality tuners (Grovers), seems to be well
constructed, and isn't excessively neck-heavy (as many 12-strings
seem to be). The overall workmanship is pretty good, although the
inside of the guitar is a bit messy (you can see glue here and there
and stuff like that), but for the price, I certainly don't expect
the same attention to detail as on my Martin HD-28.
My only complaint is the neck. It just doesn't seem real comfortable.
It has a satin finish (unlike the gloss finish on the body) and is
a little fatter than I like. It is too bad, however, and I'm sure
it is something I can get use to.
Jim (who now has a Fender F350 12 string acoustic to sell...)
|
330.13 | Godin Electrics | AIMHI::KERR | Livin Life By The Drop | Fri Feb 04 1994 07:10 | 13 |
|
I understand that the same company that makes the seagull guitars
(Do-Si-La or something like that) are the same folks that make the
Godin electrics. The Godin parts are made in Canada and manufactured
in Berlin, N.H. (interesting choice, I grew up just over the border in
Maine). Guitar Player just gave a fairly glowing review of the Godin
ST-1. It looks like a nice guitar in the pictures, anyone know
anything else about them? Any dealers locally where I could get a
first hand look?
Thanks,
Al
|
330.14 | Two MA Area Dealers, At Least | TECRUS::ROST | Fuzzbox Voodoo | Fri Feb 04 1994 07:49 | 9 |
| What's local to you? Tewksbury Music in Tewksbury, MA has the Godin
line. Music Emporium in Cambridge, MA stocks the acoustic/electric
models only.
I have a Godin Acoustibass fretless and like it a lot. The wood used
and the quality of the workmanship is better than similar priced axes
from Fender.
Brian
|
330.15 | great white north | RICKS::CALCAGNI | kant sheck dees bluze | Fri Feb 04 1994 08:15 | 6 |
| Rumor I heard is that Godin was building (all?) necks for Kramer, and
just recently decided to branch into full guitars. I've tried the
Acoustibass and a couple of 6-strings, one Tele style and one Strat.
Well made, nice players, seem like very good value for the money.
/rick
|
330.16 | | AIMHI::KERR | Livin Life By The Drop | Fri Feb 04 1994 08:16 | 9 |
|
Brian,
Thanks, I live in Nashua, so Tewksbury is within striking distance.
I'll check out these guitars.
Al
|
330.17 | Another (recent) convert | DECWET::TEAGUE | | Thu May 26 1994 14:13 | 25 |
|
For lower-priced guitars, consider me converted.
I had all but settled on a Guild D-4 (around $525). I was on vacation
last week in my home state of Tennessee, however, and thought I'd drop
by some of the local guitar shops just for grins.
I picked up a Seagull S6 DLX (deluxe) that had a solid spruce top, and
cherry sides and back. Its voice knocked me out, though the new John
Pearse strings didn't hurt. I was convinced that this guitar would
blow away the Guild D-4 in an A/B comparison, but there was no Guild
around to compare it to. This guitar, including a nice hardshell case,
was more than $100 less than the Guild.
I had played another Seagull earlier (back in Seattle) that I didn't
really like: it had a cedar top and cherry body, and as I recall it had
a somewhat muddy tone. The spruce/cherry guitar was last years model:
spruce apparently isn't available anymore a top material. I bought it.
I think it's hard to beat Seagull for the price.
Jim
|
330.18 | I'm not the only Seagull owner! | DECWET::TEAGUE | | Mon Sep 19 1994 16:56 | 12 |
|
I went to see Crash Test Dummies last night and was pleased to
note that Brad Roberts played Seagull guitars exclusively (except
when he used an electric guitar...then he used a Fender).
I still like my Seagull, though my John Pearse strings sounded better
at four months than brand new Martin Phosphor Bronze...I'm ready to
cut 'em off after a week and buy some John Pearse.
Jim
|
330.19 | impulse shopping | RICKS::CALCAGNI | just back'in over the cats | Wed Jun 05 1996 09:39 | 26 |
| I wandered into Music Emporium recently, just to do some window
shopping, and wandered out with a new Seagull S6. They had several
to choose from, all excellent but of course each with their own
personality. I chose a spruce top over the cedar; the cedars did
sound good, but seemed a little brighter and edgier than the spruce
in general.
This guitar is an amazing value. Well made, nice wood, and a great
sound. I've been looking around for a nice, inexpensive flat-top to
bang around with. Since I tend to favor old wood and well played,
broken in instruments, I've been keeping a lookout at the shows
and vintage shops for a good bargain. I'm somewhat surprised that
the first thing to really grab me was a *new* instrument. What
cinched the deal was, they had a really sweet 60's D-18 nearby.
I went back and forth between the Martin and the Seagull several
times; the similarities were surprising. I'd give the Martin a bit
of an edge in tone, but not much; and volume and projection-wise,
the Seagull ate it's lunch. A tone cannon.
List price was $440, tagged at $370 (without a case). I was so taken
with this guitar that I *forgot* to bargain em down! Probably could
have knocked another $50 off easy. No problem, I still think I got
a lot of guitar for my money.
/rick
|