I love my Peavey Ecoustic amp. It’s designed for acoustic instruments and so also works very well for voice. I use it for guitar, in parades, for performances, as a sound system at sporting and other events, etc. The best is the dual channel so I can use it simultaneously for instrument and voice.
i play guitar. and i reccomend that you use an acoustic to learn. and if you get serious about it… save up for an electric guitar.
I just had a good idea(of course I didn’t get it from my mom;) ) I’m going to first see if any of my friends have extra/old guitars I can use to learn, to make sure I want to stick with it, and if they don’t buy a used semi good acoustic to learn on. Thanks for the help,
Miles
Don’t get a guitar based on how it looks. Get one based on how it sounds (and feels). Music is for the ear not the eye.
If you’re serious, I say get the acoustic and learn how to play music. Then go electric. Its easy to quickly sound big and huge behind the zippy electronic sound manipulation on the electric side. But with electric, you’re always tethered to an amp.
My college roommate had both. He used the elec for speed practice and the acoustic for strength. He was good at both.
Listen to Pat Donahue and Andre Segovia. Listen to Jimmy Page and Eric Clapton. Then pick (pardon pun).
Its just like unicycles. If you’re into it, you can’t stop with just one anyway.
yea, I figured that if I really got into it I would end up with at least one acoustic, electric, and probably a ucalele(sp?)
also, the electric looked good, sounded really nice, and felt nice on my knee when I was sitting down. It also had a skinny neck, wich was really nice for me because I have seriously small fiingers.