I think even that’s getting cheaper over the last couple years. Mid range guitars are getting premium features & qc out of Philippines and Indonesia is pretty solid, modelers are making a big collection of amps and pedals unnecessary for chasing tones. As long as you’re not a collector gathering signature serieses or looking at all the new releases giving yourself fomo it’s not too bad.
Comment on surely your hobby can't be that expensive
BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 19 hours ago
Take up the guitar.
whotookkarl@lemmy.dbzer0.com 19 hours ago
BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 16 hours ago
Oh, yeah, that’s what gave me the bug. I bought a Monoprice strat copy for $99, including a padded gig bag and shipping, and I couldn’t believe how nice it was. I still have it, still play it often.
I got a Harley Benton Les Paul copy for $158 (with $85 shipping from Germany, ouch), and loved it. Then I visited Nashville, and went to the Gibson Garage, where they had the exact same guitar, with all Gibson branding, of course. Both guitars are a copy of a popular style/color from the early 70s, neither is an original model. Yet, while my copy was $158, the Gibson version was $6700! You could argue that the Gibson hardware makes a huge difference, but even if I replaced all the hardware with Gibson branded stuff, it would still be only about $1000. You could try to argue that the QC is better on the Gibson, but $6700 better? I don’t think so, especially since my HB is perfect. I’ve had it a couple of years now, and I’ve never found any flaw in it at all. You could never rationalize that the Gibson copy is thousands of dollars better than my HB copy.
I’m a big cheapskate. I love to find old beat up guitars, fix them, clean them, restring them, set them up, play them for a while, then sell them. Or keep them if I like it enough.
It’s fun, but the money pit is bottomless.
n4ch1sm0@lemmy.zip 14 hours ago
Gibsons’ been lacking so much lately anyway; they charge so much for a guitar that can barely stay in tune (at least for the one’s in the last decade). Brands like Harley Benton have been squashing them for dirt cheap for the last few years.
BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 13 hours ago
Yeah, they’ve been coasting on their legacy for a long time.
Kolanaki@pawb.social 19 hours ago
I have had a guitar for a few years and I haven’t spent a dime since buying it. Haven’t even broken any strings yet, which I already have 3 packs of replacements for.
n4ch1sm0@lemmy.zip 19 hours ago
You definitely don’t play enough, or your strings a gnarly and should be replaced anyway by now dude lol
BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 16 hours ago
That explains it. You haven’t played enough to get GAS, Guitar/ Gear Acquisition Syndrome yet. One day, it will get in your head that the reason you aren’t improving is because you need a better guitar, and life as you know it, will be over.
Rubanski@discuss.tchncs.de 13 hours ago
I didn’t have GAS when I was playing guitar, but when I switched to synthesizers, oh boy
Kolanaki@pawb.social 19 hours ago
Is there any real reason to replace them if they aren’t broken? I know they can get stretched out, but I thought that would affect the sound. They still sound okay as long as I tune it.
dejpivo@lemmings.world 18 hours ago
They lose some of their sound, literally. This is very audible with the mandolin, it gets quite muted as the strings age. What a difference when you change them.