The benefits of unplugging
If you play the guitar and you don't own a reasonable quality
acoustic instrument, half of your life is missing. And I'm not talking
about that dusty, unplayable GSO (guitar- shaped object) that you can't
quite bear to throw away yet. That piece of junk is the stringed
equivalent of holey shoes with nails poking through the soles: you're
never going to wear them as long as you have something more comfortable
around.
A straw poll of non-enlightened Guitarist staff, friends and alumni
confirms the situation. For many, a 'decent' acoustic seems to be at
best a fourth or fifth purchase, and in some cases, neverth. You have
your main electric guitar, main amp, then second electric guitar...
third... fourth? Just when do you stump up for a good steel-string flat
top.
I know many friends and colleagues who will spend hours coming up with
reasons why they need the next same-but-different electric, while the
quality acoustic remains the elusive, reluctant purchase. And yet which
option offers you a wider visual and creative opportunity to sound
different?
One of the acoustic guitar's problems among predominantly electric
players might be as a result of its mainstream omnipresence. According
to figures from the UK's Music Industries Association, as many as one in
seven UK households has an acoustic guitar. You might also be surprised
to learn that the humble acoustic was even added to the Retail And
Consumer Price Index basket of goods in 2004 and has remained there ever
since.
Sadly, the majority of those guitars are little more than
the unloved junkies I mentioned above; cheap GSOs that are near
impossible to tune and deeply uninspiring to play. Those factors may not
have been a problem for the young, guitar-obsessed BB King or Hank
Marvin when they started out, but times have changed, choices have
widened and there's now no way you'd choose to play the nail over one of
your more sumptuous electrics.
The result – for the
unenlightened – is that the acoustic remains maligned to a position of
rudimentary stepping stone on the way to a 'real' (usually electric)
guitar. The flat-top steel-string acoustic guitar deserves far more than
that.
For the record, I'm not suggesting for a second
that you disengage with the electric guitar. It has a glorious place in
our hearts, minds and on our stages – life would be frankly rubbish
without it. What I am saying is that you really owe it to yourself to
also own a good – preferably a great – acoustic or electro-acoustic
guitar.
Issue 358 of Guitarist should help you well on
your way to choosing one and getting the most from it. What I hope
you'll find when you take the plunge is that you'll unlock a whole new
and fundamental human/instrument connection that is both immediate and
profound, both to you personally as a player, and to anybody listening.
Play it often and it will make you a better guitarist and musician, and
soothe your soul. A great acoustic guitar will, I am quite certain,
change your life.
*) source: http://www.musicradar.com/news/guitars/why-you-have-to-own-an-acoustic-guitar-556714#null




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