Having accumulated 17 guitars over the years, if I could turn back the clock I would have bought an expensive guitar at the beginning and spent the cost of the additional 16 guitars on a good motorhome.
Not sure what you consider an expensive guitar but I found mine at 18 and aggressively saved for my American standard tele for $1500 but I got it at $1000. Still play it today and in 30 now lol
Everyone has a different tale. Mine is the opposite of yours. Saved up and bought an expensive guitar Fender Mexican Strat... then a few years later i started trying out other guitars and realised the fender wasnt ideal for me. But i have spent so much money on it I forced myself to keep playing it. Fast track to now... i have about 7 guitars, all from cheaper brands... some Chinese and I love the versatility of just picking up a different guitar and playing something different every time.
Bought a 2004 Martin SWDGT that had never been owned in 2006/2007. Paid 750$ Worth about 1.5 to 2k nowadays but would never get rid of it. The cherry wood is the shit. A very underrated guitar amongst Martin. Almost every loves ‘em. Now I want a Gibson Southern Jumbo or a Yamaha-F180 Red Label…..I rlly want a Waterloo, though. Badly.
Yep… I am strictly an acoustic player, and am now down to one 6 string, a somewhat expensive,($3,100), RainSong jumbo, with LR Baggs Stagepro Anthem… sounds and plays great in the living room or on stage through the board, or a BlackStar Core 30 amp... I just can’t think of a real reason to buy another 6 string flat top…BUT, don’t have an 8 string baritone, or a 12 string, or a resonator, or a…
I owned the Acoustasonic Tele for 18 months, and gigged with it hundreds of times. I like the guitar, but it was in the shop 6 months out of that 18. At the end I just couldn't trust the damned thing to make it through a gig without something blowing up, going wrong, or it would just quit working. Think of it this way: The Acoustasonic Telecaster and the Acoustasonic Stratocaster are basically guitar modeling computers stuffed into a guitar-shaped body. There is a *reason* why you replace your cell phone every two years - the hardware becomes old, slow, and eventually obsolete. The computer hardware that these guitars run on is NOT going to age gracefully, and the firmware is very difficult to update - it has to be done in the shop. There are 50+ year-old telecasters that are still playable, and valuable. A regular telecaster can be fixed on your kitchen table with a little bit of UA-cam knowledge and a soldering iron. The Acoustasonic is NOT like that. ANYTHING that goes wrong means a trip to the shop to fix the computer, or the battery, or there's a string-end that has fallen into the circuit board, or whatever. Plus, if you gig a lot like I do, you have to plug the damned thing in to charge it - every night, without fail, and the battery pack starts to degrade pretty badly after a few months from the constant charge/discharge cycle. It also has the old-style mini-usb rather than the new style USB-C power connection. I had to buy one of those magnetic converters for it because I was afraid plugging it in and unplugging it would weaken the crappy mini-usb connector over time. Frankly, I would be ASTONISHED if a 2019 model Acoustasonic Telecaster was still playable in ten years. That being said, when it was working, it is a joy to play and gig with - which is why I hung onto it for so long. At the end, however, I just didn't trust it anymore to get through a gig. The last time I tried to play it, it started to howl like it was feeding back. It wasn't the amp, or the PA, it was the silly electronics in the guitar screwing up again. I called my Fender rep (who I had gotten very chummy with during the course of my owning that guitar), and told him I wanted a full refund - and Fender agreed and gave me a full refund. I returned it to them beat to hell from gigging for a year (plus the 6 months it was in the shop being repaired over and over again.) Now I play a nice acoustic, and switch to my Gretch Electromatic when I need an electric guitar.
You probably dont give a shit but does anyone know of a way to get back into an Instagram account?? I stupidly forgot my password. I appreciate any assistance you can give me.
@Tatum Cairo I really appreciate your reply. I found the site on google and Im trying it out atm. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
This is the reveiw I've been waiting for, thank you Tony, I really needed to know what YOU thought of this guitar because your primarily an acoustic player and didn't have anything negative to say about the acoustic tones, which to me speaks volumes on the work Fender have done on the electronics. Its a lot of money to spend on a guitar, so until somone of your acoustic prowess give it the green light, I wasn't going to buy one. Thank you Tony your reveiw is much appreciated here in the UK. PS with all those tatoos you look like you should play heavey metal, and I'm sure you could if you wanted. Love this channel, its like sitting around the fire conversation, so friendly and relaxed. Stay well.
Fender should have had you demoing this guitar right from launch. Literally the only review I've seen that brings out the acoustic aspect in a way that actually sounds like an acoustic. Again, it's in the fingers I guess. Good work Tony
I was very skeptical when Fender rolled this out, even though I'm a big Fender fan. I thought they had pushed a little too far trying to come up with something new. I listened to the demos, and of course they sounded great, Kenny Wayne Shepard could make any guitar sound great. I didn't even bother to go test one out, and they've been out for what, more than a year I think. But I kept reading good reviews, and this one got me to go try one out. I trust Tony more than any of the other testers. Tried a Tele at one store, it was ok, then I went to Guitar Center last (I usually try to give my locally owned shops the business). They had a used Stratocaster with the black top hanging up there, and that was all they had. Played it for a while, and liked it so much I bought it. What happened after that was what surprised me. The more I play it, the more I like it. It took a while to explore all the sounds it makes, but the middle setting with the body pickup enabled just blows me away. I play a kind of percussive style a lot of the time where I kind of beat on the bottom strings with my palm, and boy does that sound great with this thing. Yes, of course it's not as good as a good acoustic or a good electric, but that's not the point, it's just really fun to play. And like Tony says, it's a great sitting around on the couch guitar. And I did take it camping once.
How does it sound without an amp? Loud and full enough? I have an acoustic guitar but I truly prefer electric guitar because of the body style. I just feel more comfortable. I don’t gig or anything but I think this guitar could be great for me because it’s an acoustic with an electric body. At least that’s what I hope. I haven’t encountered one in the flesh
@@LuisDiaz-bp7tv It's just loud enough for you to hear what you're playing. Not something to play for the sound of it, just for practice while sitting around. Won't annoy others nearby ( much). It's not going to compete with your favorite acoustic when not plugged in. I take mine camping and use it with a NUX Mighty Air, with headphones or the amp speaker. Yes, the body style is what I like, too, and it's pretty light. Very comfortable to sit around with.
@@markcalvert7492 Rubbish! It's more than 'just loud enough' I played one acoustically yesterday for the first time. Sure, its not acoustic guitar loud but it doesn't share any real acoustic dimensions. So for its shape/build etc its rather loud and pleasing to the ears. Oh yeah......I bought it.
Like the others mentioned here. I love the comfort of a electric guitar. I’ve been trying to replicate an acoustic sound for some time. My body just doesn’t take to those large acoustic guitar body shapes.. I’m going to try one of these today .. praying it will be the answer !!
Seriously. Go spend $2k on your first guitar. I’ve been playing for 30 years, and just got my first Martin which btw is way cheaper than this. Maybe you’re fabulously wealthy, go ahead.
@@Firusdhf I'm iffy on the rite of passage sentiment, but for practicality it makes sense for someone to pick up a cheap guitar as a beginner as they haven't found whether or not they will stick with the learning to play the guitar, or maybe the sunk cost fallacy will motivate a potential guitar player to stick with it. I'm not sure there is a definitive path to choose when picking your first guitar but I'm leaning towards cheaper, as dealing with sunk cost might not be the most pleasant experience. There may be more freedom to cheaping-out at first.
My experience with my Tele version of the above is very similar. As an acoustic-only player, I‘d add that the playability is buttery-sweet, making some licks and hammerings stuff that can be challenging on some of my acoustics really easy. I also love having a guitar with a cutaway (Tele shape) so I can more easily play way up there. That said, the guitar doesn‘t like it when you dig into it like you might a real acoustic. If you want it to growl, you‘ve got to be more gentle than normal, and still won‘t end up with quite the raw and dirty feel an acoustic can deliver. That‘s only to be expected given the narrow body (which still has a very nice, resonant unplugged sound for the couch), but there‘s also something about the modeling used. I think they have tossed in some kind of compression/limiter, for example. This is most noticeable when fingerpicking without picks. A thumb strike has a tad more attack to it than it normally would in the first millisecond. And the rest of the picking sounds a tad more homogenous than I‘d expect. All that is a good thing, though the thumb-strikes produce a very slightly unnatural feel at times. But I‘m not complaining. I love this guitar a lot, and use it through my Bose S1 Pro to great advantage. It gives me a wide sonic spectrum in a small, easy-to-tote, non-hyper-temperature-sensitive package. I still prefer the subtlety and complex harmonics of my Martin D-35, my Voyage Air solid-wood dread, my Lowdon Jumbo or even my new Yamaha FG-TA (with built-in chorus and reverb, sort of ToneWood Amp-style). But being able to ALSO rock out with „Mary Jane‘s Last Dance“ or whatever using the dirty electric sound, all without pedals and in a well-balanced way, is brilliant! Would buy it again for sure.
Cory Britton I always appreciate when others contribute their personal experience on gear, just in case anyone out there is interested. The Internet is a great source of user impressions, and sometimes I choose to take a couple minutes and contribute myself, instead of just consuming. ;-) If it ain‘t for you, then think whatever you wish to of me, my intentions, my abilities or lack thereof, or my possibly excessive chatiness... :-) I‘m absolutely fine with being a dork if that‘s what you think I am. Peace.
@@scottbecker3485 Scott, I always appreciate when people share their experiences on gear, so thank you. As a beginner fingerstyle player, I can gain a lot of knowledge from more experienced players like yourself, sharing your expertise. Keep doing what you do.
@Hulk Hogan I‘m afraid I never have tried out the PRS, mainly because I know from various reviews and users that it leans a bit more to the electric side of the sonic mix, as opposed to the other way around for the Fender. And I’m mainly an acoustic guy.
I have a fender 'stratacoustic' and got laughed at many times that I made it up and that its fake. Its nice to see they continued to make the low profile gorgeous acoustic models. I love mine and the one in the video is both retro and futuristic. Nice video. Thanks.
@Robbi Rose im good with what I do. Don't know what you think you know about it. Just wasting 2 grand on something I'll barely use is stupid at any income level.
@Robbi Rose I'm not the one trying to impress randos on the internet with how much money I have. What a full and impressive life you must have. I bet you're one of those poser gear snobs who can't play worth a shit.
I saw all these bad reviews or not worth $2k and this and that. Picked one up today at my local guitar store, and never wanted a single guitar more in my life. I would’ve spent $2k for sure. Just would’ve had to save up a bit more but went home and found one in mint I mean mint condition on reverb, American version for $1k shipped. Literally half off retail. Thing was in my cart n ordered in less than 2 minutes. Didn’t think twice. Even w the countless comments of “unimpressed” guitarists. Idk how. I picked it up and strummed a simple E, A, and G chord and was sold from 3 notes.
I had a chance to play an Acoustasonic at a guitar store and didn’t want to put it down. I am an acoustic finger style guitarist. I found the guitar fun and extremely easy to play. Two attributes I liked was the guitars great sustain, and the even volume when fretting up the neck when playing cord melodies. It was plugged into a Fishman Acoustic amp and sounded very convincing as an amplified acoustic guitar. I am not qualified to comment on how well the different voicings replicated the different tone woods and guitar types Fender advertises (EX. parlor guitar to a dread naught). I wish you would have.
When I got mine (2 years ago) it didn’t have a string tree on and the high E kept popping off the nut. I solved that problem by installing one myself. I use mine at gigs, I’m the guitarist in a couple of local bands. The major dilemma I had was when it kept going silent on me, as if it came unplugged or the cable were pulled out. This happened at gigs, while I was playing! I took it in to a guitar shop and they replaced the internal circuits and board. It was, thankfully, still under warranty. It hasn’t happened since being repaired. And I see that new ones are now coming with an already installed string tree. 😎🎸😎
@@americanbystandard it's perfect for someone who plays electric but wants to play an acoustic song or two at a gig. Or a cover musician who can only bring one guitar to a gig
Its great for loopers. Great. Unbelievably great. If you are a solo singer songwriter who loops or you are into Frippertronics type stuff this is the best of what you can get. I also own a Godin Multiac, couple of Taylor acoustics , Tele, Strat, Jazzmaster, PRS. The PRS has a Piezo. The idea is not new, the execution however is nearly perfect. If I could have helped Fender design it I would have added a 13pin out or a built in Fishman Triple Play.
It sounds very bright and piezo like to my ears, at least listening to the demo. Not necessarily the sound I would want if I were recording something and was going for an acoustic vibe, you know? Though I suppose you could always process and EQ it and get it a little bit closer. I found it very odd the reviewer didn’t really mention his personal opinion about the plugged-in sounds at all, and didn’t offer any comparisons at all to an actual acoustic guitar that has some kind of pickup, be it magnetic or piezo. Just weird...
I usually use a Martin 1970 D35s for finger picking when recording, both with a mic and through a Fishman system with modeling. I used to just use the mic but I’ve found the modeling has come a long way and now I can get the sounds of orchestra sizes, auditorium sizes etc. without having to change instruments, and no piezo coloring (or at least very little) at all. I’ve heard some Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle demos on the Fender UA-cam channel that, to me, sound very acoustic, although they’re flat picked which is not my style, but still.... You might want to check them out. And, as always, don’t believe everything (or anything?) you hear through the sound of the UA-cam algorithms. Best to go to your nearest music store. Since I occasionally do live electric blues i think this may be the perfect all size fits one approach to live gigs. Show up, plug in and play.
@@5urg3x I agree with your comments. I thought the review might have been from the perspective of an acoustic guitarist, and the comparison to the tones he normally enjoys. Instead, after listening to the waffle about waiting for all the hype to die down before reviewing the instrument, we watched a Fender advertorial. Zero value at all.
@@Callbutton This guy actually went in and deleted my main comment about this being more of an advertisement and less of a review. It's unfortunate that these types of "reviews" are the main stay on UA-cam these days, where people are even sent product for free...because I'm sure that won't influence their "review" at all!
To me this seems an option for live players to do different thing and offer's different tone choice with out packing more guitars,but this guitar rubs a lot of players the wrong way, i never seen so much hate thrown at a musical instrument.the cost seems to be a big sore spot with many even though there are many more costly guitars.just red comments below it proves my point.
This is an excellent review, and you're generally an outstanding reviewer. Your reviews are the perfect length, you comment intelligently on these instruments and you play well. Thanks and keep up the good work.
As a 25-year "guitar player" that never really progressed much beyond strumming and some simple picking patterns, I've been playing an acoustic for most of that time. I'm not a performer and, up to now, I've never spent more than ~$600 on a guitar, which is pocket-change as far as acoustics are concerned. I'm having a hard time justifying a $2000 guitar for a hobby. But something about it seems so appealing. I'd love to play around with the electric side a bit. And as someone with shorter-than-average arms and fingers, the electric footprint seems like it would be easier to manage. I've never had a guitar with "active electronics", so having to worry about batteries, charging, power-injection makes me a little nervous, but from what I've been seeing, it's becoming more common. Thanks for the review. I appreciate your perspective as primarily an acoustic player.
Out of the many videos on this axe on YT - You get the most real acoustic tone from it. You obviously have worked on your sounds, and have a good ear. Well done! NOW - Have you tried a Yamaha Silent Guitar?
The 'ideal' guitar for a solo artist who needs to blend acoustic type sounds and electric in the same set/song. Now if they could make a full on acoustic, with 13 pin or Triple Play built in and a Telecaster bridge pickup that sounds like a Telecaster, I would buy that. Until then this is almost perfection. Fender is making incredible necks these days all up and down the line. These are no exception. Hard to justify the 2k if you already have a collection of guitars though.
thanks for the great videos! I was really caught up in the whole new shiny factor for this guitar and didn't jump on it. Your review changed my thinking. I think I'll go try one out.
Great look at this one. Have you ever looked at Yamaha's silent acoustic range of guitars? (I know they aren't exactly new now, but I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.)
Great playing and a fine example of the A-Strat’s acoustic and electric sides. I’ve had one for a few months and never use an amp in the evening for many of the reasons you advanced. Daytimes, I’m using a Fender Mustang GTX50 modeling amp and you cannot believe how many sounds I’m getting out of this instrument. Also, I play both flatpick and fingerstyle, comfortably getting a multitude of different tones. Worth noting is that altering your picking position from neck to bridge really affects the resonance. Thanks for running this pony through its paces. I’ve seen many videos and this one really caught my ear.
So, I’m looking for a good travel/beach guitar. This seems to be it, but I travel with family, so my only question is…how sturdy is it? Would it collapse or dent? Sounds crazy, for a 2g guitar, but I don’t really care about the looks, just the playability
My Godin Solidac is a solid electric guitar with a piezo pickup and two (electric and acousting) amp outputs. One of the body knobs adjusts the mix of electric and acoustic tones. All the way in one direction is pure electric and all the way in the other direction is pure acoustic. Everything in between is a beautiful blend of both.
I’m a longtime violinist but only picked up electric guitar a year ago. I never wanted an acoustic guitar because honestly, I’d rather play my violin. It’s the electric that is a novelty to me. But the perils of picking something up as an adult is that it’s hard to get used to something new. I love the idea of a tele, but never found one I liked - no resonance in the body, heavy and cumbersome, no ebony fretboard… But I love that tele twang/quack! I thought the acoustasonic was a gimmick but I tried it and fell in love. It has the familiarity of an orchestral string instrument I missed AND the tele quack I craved. I don’t think that was the audience Fender was targeting, but here I am.
I owned a Taylor T5z…very similar. I ran an acoustic amp to maximize that sound, and a Vox or Fender electric amp for the “electric” sound. I found that the sound was good but not excellent, and the electrics sound good but not excellent. What guitar trying to do to sales is very difficult to satisfy a discerning ear :)
One of the main reasons I hold back playing guitar is that I'm always worried about annoying someone else simply by playing. I think I have seriously stunted my own personal growth on guitar because of this.
Hey man don't worry about that. If you have a guitar you can practice unplugged or plug some headphones to the amp. If you were a trumpet beginner, then you should worry!
Seriously, my stepson plays the euphonium (basically a baritone with a different shaped bell) in HS band and when he practices there’s no getting away from it, even in the basement if he’s on the second floor.
I have never loved the electric sound This seems more of an in-between, would you say this sounds closer to an acoustic? Also do the acoustic voicings feel authentic e.g. the Mahogany or Rosewood etc settings?
I know I'm late to the comment party, but I am really interested in how you got it to sound so real? Other demos I've listened to sounded ok but yours sounds more authentic than others. I'm curious if there was much EQing in post or you just know how to dial it in up front?
Thanks for the review enjoyed it but was frustrated that none of the playing sections were unamplified it would for a review be useful to let use hear it played both with and without amplification. Nonetheless insightful. Thanks
Soooo how does the Fender Acoustasonic comparte with the Taylor T5? The Taylor Classic Mahogany comes in at about the same price and sounds like it does some of the same acoustic to electric tricks. Which one do you choose?
Would this solve my issues that I love the sound of acoustic but struggle playing them with my hands ? I’ve always wanted a guitar that sounded acoustic but played electric
have you ever done a comparison, the acoustasonic and the Taylor TZ5 12 string. Or what is your opinion on them. I really like the taylor I've never held one just watch your review and a few others. I'm going to buy one of the 2 and I'm leaning towards the Taylor. Your opinion would help! Thank you!!
I can see where some players would use it as a hybrid on stage if they needed a quick switch between electric to acoustic. Much better sounding than a piezo-equipped electric imo. It's a cool looking guit, but anything that's shaped like a strat, I'm gonna play it like a strat. That's why I have a strat, and a Martin. :)
I've been playing acoustic guitar I have Martin, Taylor, Seagull, Gibson, I loved my Martin but I have to say I had my doubts bout this guitar but it's very impressive and so much smoother,lighter less bulky than an acoustic guitar. It sounds 1 to 10 I give it a 9 straight thro a pa speaker a 10 thro an acoustic amp I love the telecaster pick up and body pick up I think the only thing I hate bout my fender acoustasonic is the stupid tuning knobs being to close together for quick string change during shows I love the blend knobs you can get both guitars in my opinion for one an electronic and an acoustic and there absolutely beautiful once you get a right sound you will absolutely love it
I guess this isn't for everybody. I think it sounds good though. I played one briefly at GC once and I've got to say that the neck and fingerboard were very comfortable and fast. I liked it a lot. Wish he would have gone through the different voicings but still a good review.
What kind of amp were you plugging into? I have a California Blonde that I use when I plug in my Taylor, but I also have more traditional amps (e.g., Fender, Vox, Marshall) made primarily for electric guitars. Thx.
Most reviews about this guitar are basically negative. That's the reason youtubers always review this guitar, because YT likes negativity. But I find interesting that you took the time to find it different uses. Only problem for me: the price
I really want the Tele version. But for that price? It does NOT come with a hard case? For 2 grand? I am considering it because I am an electric player that is just getting into acoustics. What I do NOT like about my new 2 grand Martin is how tiny the frets are. It SOUNDS fantastic though clear as a bell. The hard case that came with the Martin could easily be sold for 150 bucks it is so nice. But the acoustasonic having basically the neck and much bigger frets off a Professional is really appealing.
The voicings are slightly different on each model. Alamo Music has a great video where they compare both models. The differences are very subtle, but are there nonetheless. I went into the video wanting the Tele version and came out of it preferring the Strat.
Tom Marvan for the Tele version the electric guitar voice is a great sounding Tele; where the Strat electric vision is a great sounding Strat. One thing to keep in mind is that all voicing including the electrics sound best through an acoustic/ PA amp / system. The electric voices have cab simulation already in the voicing. I use my Strat through a loud box mini for our sets and love it. Very versatile.
I purchased one of these about 6 months ago. And after a 3 month struggle of trying to get a decent sound out of it in a worship band setting, I sold it. It's one of those a Jack of all trades but a master of none. I just cannot get over the plastic sound...
Are u plugging in directly? Or are you using any FX? I am running mine through EQ, comp, reverb and it sounds great! Also did you use acoustic guitar strings or electric? The guitar is way more easier to play with electric ones and still has enough body to get the acoustic sounds. Also, the guitars I played at the store did not sound good, as soon as the guitar was setup and added electric strings my reaction was "Wow"! Definitely no plastic sound at all on my end.
@@Athanlive played through a LR Bagg Venue di. Also paid for a setup when i purchased it. It plays nicely but I did not dig the sound, especially playing in solo gigs. Playing in a full mix was just ok..
I think these guitars are slicker than snot, and sound just great. They have a very folk type sound. Can't swing it though, so have to sit this one out :( Fender that doesn't do me or you any good.
I love the sound at 4:15. I kind of want to get a Gibson sst after listening to Travis Tritt but they are hard to find and pretty spendy. so this might be an option
I've seen these around for the past couple of years now, and as nice as they are I keep having the same common sense question come up in my head about them. So, we have had acoustic/electric guitars for a long while now in the world of guitars, with acoustic guitar bodies incorporating electronics, and now Fender has come up with the idea of an electric/acoustic guitar, with an electric guitar body incorporating acoustic tones. As nice as it is, (and it is nice), what... exactly is the difference?
I have got the Tele style one. I've seen a lot of naysayers on here, but for me its been great. I play in 3 piece band. I've received quite a few complements on it. We've been mostly acoustic, but have been adding more electric stuff. This lets me quickly switch between electric and acoustic tunes with a flick of a switch. Does it sound as good as my D35? No...of course not. How could it? I've always hated putting some overdrive on my acoustic while playing out. It sounds okay-ish, but I don't know. It's just kinda weird seeing someone playing something distorted on an acoustic. With this guitar though no issues at all and it sounds pretty good with the electric pickup on. It is definitely not the best of both worlds, but each the electric and acoustic sounds are completely serviceable.
Having accumulated 17 guitars over the years, if I could turn back the clock I would have bought an expensive guitar at the beginning and spent the cost of the additional 16 guitars on a good motorhome.
Not sure what you consider an expensive guitar but I found mine at 18 and aggressively saved for my American standard tele for $1500 but I got it at $1000. Still play it today and in 30 now lol
Everyone has a different tale. Mine is the opposite of yours. Saved up and bought an expensive guitar Fender Mexican Strat... then a few years later i started trying out other guitars and realised the fender wasnt ideal for me. But i have spent so much money on it I forced myself to keep playing it.
Fast track to now... i have about 7 guitars, all from cheaper brands... some Chinese and I love the versatility of just picking up a different guitar and playing something different every time.
You can never have enough . Come to your senses man !!!!!
Bought a 2004 Martin SWDGT that had never been owned in 2006/2007. Paid 750$ Worth about 1.5 to 2k nowadays but would never get rid of it. The cherry wood is the shit. A very underrated guitar amongst Martin. Almost every loves ‘em. Now I want a Gibson Southern Jumbo or a Yamaha-F180 Red Label…..I rlly want a Waterloo, though. Badly.
Yep… I am strictly an acoustic player, and am now down to one 6 string, a somewhat expensive,($3,100), RainSong jumbo, with LR Baggs Stagepro Anthem… sounds and plays great in the living room or on stage through the board, or a BlackStar Core 30 amp... I just can’t think of a real reason to buy another 6 string flat top…BUT, don’t have an 8 string baritone, or a 12 string, or a resonator, or a…
really appreciate you taking the time to let the novelty wear off
I owned the Acoustasonic Tele for 18 months, and gigged with it hundreds of times. I like the guitar, but it was in the shop 6 months out of that 18. At the end I just couldn't trust the damned thing to make it through a gig without something blowing up, going wrong, or it would just quit working.
Think of it this way: The Acoustasonic Telecaster and the Acoustasonic Stratocaster are basically guitar modeling computers stuffed into a guitar-shaped body. There is a *reason* why you replace your cell phone every two years - the hardware becomes old, slow, and eventually obsolete. The computer hardware that these guitars run on is NOT going to age gracefully, and the firmware is very difficult to update - it has to be done in the shop.
There are 50+ year-old telecasters that are still playable, and valuable. A regular telecaster can be fixed on your kitchen table with a little bit of UA-cam knowledge and a soldering iron. The Acoustasonic is NOT like that. ANYTHING that goes wrong means a trip to the shop to fix the computer, or the battery, or there's a string-end that has fallen into the circuit board, or whatever. Plus, if you gig a lot like I do, you have to plug the damned thing in to charge it - every night, without fail, and the battery pack starts to degrade pretty badly after a few months from the constant charge/discharge cycle. It also has the old-style mini-usb rather than the new style USB-C power connection. I had to buy one of those magnetic converters for it because I was afraid plugging it in and unplugging it would weaken the crappy mini-usb connector over time.
Frankly, I would be ASTONISHED if a 2019 model Acoustasonic Telecaster was still playable in ten years.
That being said, when it was working, it is a joy to play and gig with - which is why I hung onto it for so long. At the end, however, I just didn't trust it anymore to get through a gig. The last time I tried to play it, it started to howl like it was feeding back. It wasn't the amp, or the PA, it was the silly electronics in the guitar screwing up again. I called my Fender rep (who I had gotten very chummy with during the course of my owning that guitar), and told him I wanted a full refund - and Fender agreed and gave me a full refund. I returned it to them beat to hell from gigging for a year (plus the 6 months it was in the shop being repaired over and over again.)
Now I play a nice acoustic, and switch to my Gretch Electromatic when I need an electric guitar.
That was a helpful review. Thank you.
You probably dont give a shit but does anyone know of a way to get back into an Instagram account??
I stupidly forgot my password. I appreciate any assistance you can give me.
@Gage Jerome instablaster =)
@Tatum Cairo I really appreciate your reply. I found the site on google and Im trying it out atm.
Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Tatum Cairo it did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. I am so happy:D
Thanks so much, you saved my ass !
This is the reveiw I've been waiting for, thank you Tony, I really needed to know what YOU thought of this guitar because your primarily an acoustic player and didn't have anything negative to say about the acoustic tones, which to me speaks volumes on the work Fender have done on the electronics. Its a lot of money to spend on a guitar, so until somone of your acoustic prowess give it the green light, I wasn't going to buy one.
Thank you Tony your reveiw is much appreciated here in the UK.
PS with all those tatoos you look like you should play heavey metal, and I'm sure you could if you wanted. Love this channel, its like sitting around the fire conversation, so friendly and relaxed.
Stay well.
If you haven't tried one yet, hold your critique until you do. I really loved it, and am close to adding it to my other 35 guitars.
Fender should have had you demoing this guitar right from launch. Literally the only review I've seen that brings out the acoustic aspect in a way that actually sounds like an acoustic. Again, it's in the fingers I guess. Good work Tony
Go watch micheal Lemo with this guitar
This is one of the most intelligently aware and honest guitar reviews I've ever seen. Excellent job!
I was very skeptical when Fender rolled this out, even though I'm a big Fender fan. I thought they had pushed a little too far trying to come up with something new. I listened to the demos, and of course they sounded great, Kenny Wayne Shepard could make any guitar sound great. I didn't even bother to go test one out, and they've been out for what, more than a year I think. But I kept reading good reviews, and this one got me to go try one out. I trust Tony more than any of the other testers.
Tried a Tele at one store, it was ok, then I went to Guitar Center last (I usually try to give my locally owned shops the business). They had a used Stratocaster with the black top hanging up there, and that was all they had. Played it for a while, and liked it so much I bought it.
What happened after that was what surprised me. The more I play it, the more I like it. It took a while to explore all the sounds it makes, but the middle setting with the body pickup enabled just blows me away. I play a kind of percussive style a lot of the time where I kind of beat on the bottom strings with my palm, and boy does that sound great with this thing.
Yes, of course it's not as good as a good acoustic or a good electric, but that's not the point, it's just really fun to play. And like Tony says, it's a great sitting around on the couch guitar.
And I did take it camping once.
How does it sound without an amp? Loud and full enough? I have an acoustic guitar but I truly prefer electric guitar because of the body style. I just feel more comfortable. I don’t gig or anything but I think this guitar could be great for me because it’s an acoustic with an electric body. At least that’s what I hope. I haven’t encountered one in the flesh
@@LuisDiaz-bp7tv It's just loud enough for you to hear what you're playing. Not something to play for the sound of it, just for practice while sitting around. Won't annoy others nearby ( much). It's not going to compete with your favorite acoustic when not plugged in.
I take mine camping and use it with a NUX Mighty Air, with headphones or the amp speaker.
Yes, the body style is what I like, too, and it's pretty light. Very comfortable to sit around with.
@@markcalvert7492 Rubbish! It's more than 'just loud enough' I played one acoustically yesterday for the first time. Sure, its not acoustic guitar loud but it doesn't share any real acoustic dimensions. So for its shape/build etc its rather loud and pleasing to the ears. Oh yeah......I bought it.
Did it have fun?
Like the others mentioned here. I love the comfort of a electric guitar. I’ve been trying to replicate an acoustic sound for some time. My body just doesn’t take to those large acoustic guitar body shapes.. I’m going to try one of these today .. praying it will be the answer !!
I don't even play guitar, but this guitar makes me want to learn and play it.
well at 2 K you might wanna start w a less expensive axe
It's his drop dead gorgeous playing fosho
Seriously. Go spend $2k on your first guitar. I’ve been playing for 30 years, and just got my first Martin which btw is way cheaper than this. Maybe you’re fabulously wealthy, go ahead.
@@jackhaugh beginners are meant to start on crap instruments it’s part of the experience
@@Firusdhf I'm iffy on the rite of passage sentiment, but for practicality it makes sense for someone to pick up a cheap guitar as a beginner as they haven't found whether or not they will stick with the learning to play the guitar, or maybe the sunk cost fallacy will motivate a potential guitar player to stick with it. I'm not sure there is a definitive path to choose when picking your first guitar but I'm leaning towards cheaper, as dealing with sunk cost might not be the most pleasant experience. There may be more freedom to cheaping-out at first.
My experience with my Tele version of the above is very similar. As an acoustic-only player, I‘d add that the playability is buttery-sweet, making some licks and hammerings stuff that can be challenging on some of my acoustics really easy. I also love having a guitar with a cutaway (Tele shape) so I can more easily play way up there. That said, the guitar doesn‘t like it when you dig into it like you might a real acoustic. If you want it to growl, you‘ve got to be more gentle than normal, and still won‘t end up with quite the raw and dirty feel an acoustic can deliver. That‘s only to be expected given the narrow body (which still has a very nice, resonant unplugged sound for the couch), but there‘s also something about the modeling used. I think they have tossed in some kind of compression/limiter, for example. This is most noticeable when fingerpicking without picks. A thumb strike has a tad more attack to it than it normally would in the first millisecond. And the rest of the picking sounds a tad more homogenous than I‘d expect. All that is a good thing, though the thumb-strikes produce a very slightly unnatural feel at times. But I‘m not complaining. I love this guitar a lot, and use it through my Bose S1 Pro to great advantage. It gives me a wide sonic spectrum in a small, easy-to-tote, non-hyper-temperature-sensitive package. I still prefer the subtlety and complex harmonics of my Martin D-35, my Voyage Air solid-wood dread, my Lowdon Jumbo or even my new Yamaha FG-TA (with built-in chorus and reverb, sort of ToneWood Amp-style). But being able to ALSO rock out with „Mary Jane‘s Last Dance“ or whatever using the dirty electric sound, all without pedals and in a well-balanced way, is brilliant! Would buy it again for sure.
Cory Britton I always appreciate when others contribute their personal experience on gear, just in case anyone out there is interested. The Internet is a great source of user impressions, and sometimes I choose to take a couple minutes and contribute myself, instead of just consuming. ;-) If it ain‘t for you, then think whatever you wish to of me, my intentions, my abilities or lack thereof, or my possibly excessive chatiness... :-) I‘m absolutely fine with being a dork if that‘s what you think I am. Peace.
@@scottbecker3485 Scott, I always appreciate when people share their experiences on gear, so thank you. As a beginner fingerstyle player, I can gain a lot of knowledge from more experienced players like yourself, sharing your expertise. Keep doing what you do.
@Cory Britton dick
@Hulk Hogan I‘m afraid I never have tried out the PRS, mainly because I know from various reviews and users that it leans a bit more to the electric side of the sonic mix, as opposed to the other way around for the Fender. And I’m mainly an acoustic guy.
I have a fender 'stratacoustic' and got laughed at many times that I made it up and that its fake. Its nice to see they continued to make the low profile gorgeous acoustic models. I love mine and the one in the video is both retro and futuristic. Nice video.
Thanks.
Just played mine for the first time today. This video was a big help in the decision. Awesome content!
My brother got one and loves it. To rich for my blood. I'm waiting for the MIM version.🤞
I just wouldn't use it enough to justify 2 grand.
1200 tops
@Robbi Rose im good with what I do. Don't know what you think you know about it. Just wasting 2 grand on something I'll barely use is stupid at any income level.
Ok money bags. I'm really impressed. 🙄
@Robbi Rose I'm not the one trying to impress randos on the internet with how much money I have. What a full and impressive life you must have. I bet you're one of those poser gear snobs who can't play worth a shit.
@Robbi Rose Touche. You're one of the best trolls I've encountered. Shame on me for engaging. Have a fantastic rest of your day.
I saw all these bad reviews or not worth $2k and this and that. Picked one up today at my local guitar store, and never wanted a single guitar more in my life. I would’ve spent $2k for sure. Just would’ve had to save up a bit more but went home and found one in mint I mean mint condition on reverb, American version for $1k shipped. Literally half off retail. Thing was in my cart n ordered in less than 2 minutes. Didn’t think twice. Even w the countless comments of “unimpressed” guitarists. Idk how. I picked it up and strummed a simple E, A, and G chord and was sold from 3 notes.
I had a chance to play an Acoustasonic at a guitar store and didn’t want to put it down. I am an acoustic finger style guitarist. I found the guitar fun and extremely easy to play. Two attributes I liked was the guitars great sustain, and the even volume when fretting up the neck when playing cord melodies. It was plugged into a Fishman Acoustic amp and sounded very convincing as an amplified acoustic guitar.
I am not qualified to comment on how well the different voicings replicated the different tone woods and guitar types Fender advertises (EX. parlor guitar to a dread naught). I wish you would have.
I tried it yesterday at the store and was very pleased with it. Definitely added to my list!
When I got mine (2 years ago) it didn’t have a string tree on and the high E kept popping off the nut. I solved that problem by installing one myself. I use mine at gigs, I’m the guitarist in a couple of local bands. The major dilemma I had was when it kept going silent on me, as if it came unplugged or the cable were pulled out. This happened at gigs, while I was playing! I took it in to a guitar shop and they replaced the internal circuits and board. It was, thankfully, still under warranty. It hasn’t happened since being repaired. And I see that new ones are now coming with an already installed string tree. 😎🎸😎
Joe Bryant I have an Acoustisonic TELECASTER, not the Strat Acoustisonic. My bad, I ordered my Acoustisonic Tele on Jan. 22, 2019.
If you're an acoustic guitar aficionado, this guitar is probably not for you.
it's not for anyone tbh.
John John lol how are you going to decide what’s for anyone else? I think it sounds great!
@@americanbystandard it's perfect for someone who plays electric but wants to play an acoustic song or two at a gig. Or a cover musician who can only bring one guitar to a gig
Its great for loopers. Great. Unbelievably great. If you are a solo singer songwriter who loops or you are into Frippertronics type stuff this is the best of what you can get. I also own a Godin Multiac, couple of Taylor acoustics , Tele, Strat, Jazzmaster, PRS. The PRS has a Piezo. The idea is not new, the execution however is nearly perfect. If I could have helped Fender design it I would have added a 13pin out or a built in Fishman Triple Play.
I think its good for solo guitarists, who do loops, or guitar percussions. Since you can't really do percussions on a regular electric guitar
This has a tone you kind of have to get used to. It doesn’t sound acoustic enough for me. I’ll stick with my Martin and Taylor. 🙂
🤨
It sounds very bright and piezo like to my ears, at least listening to the demo. Not necessarily the sound I would want if I were recording something and was going for an acoustic vibe, you know? Though I suppose you could always process and EQ it and get it a little bit closer. I found it very odd the reviewer didn’t really mention his personal opinion about the plugged-in sounds at all, and didn’t offer any comparisons at all to an actual acoustic guitar that has some kind of pickup, be it magnetic or piezo. Just weird...
I usually use a Martin 1970 D35s for finger picking when recording, both with a mic and through a Fishman system with modeling. I used to just use the mic but I’ve found the modeling has come a long way and now I can get the sounds of orchestra sizes, auditorium sizes etc. without having to change instruments, and no piezo coloring (or at least very little) at all. I’ve heard some Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle demos on the Fender UA-cam channel that, to me, sound very acoustic, although they’re flat picked which is not my style, but still.... You might want to check them out. And, as always, don’t believe everything (or anything?) you hear through the sound of the UA-cam algorithms. Best to go to your nearest music store. Since I occasionally do live electric blues i think this may be the perfect all size fits one approach to live gigs. Show up, plug in and play.
@@5urg3x I agree with your comments. I thought the review might have been from the perspective of an acoustic guitarist, and the comparison to the tones he normally enjoys. Instead, after listening to the waffle about waiting for all the hype to die down before reviewing the instrument, we watched a Fender advertorial. Zero value at all.
@@Callbutton This guy actually went in and deleted my main comment about this being more of an advertisement and less of a review. It's unfortunate that these types of "reviews" are the main stay on UA-cam these days, where people are even sent product for free...because I'm sure that won't influence their "review" at all!
4:52 EXACTLY what I wanted to know! Nobody else seems to be talking about how it is unplugged!
not as good as a Montage..ua-cam.com/video/vtcnEss0VTA/v-deo.html
To me this seems an option for live players to do different thing and offer's different tone choice with out packing more guitars,but this guitar rubs a lot of players the wrong way, i never seen so much hate thrown at a musical instrument.the cost seems to be a big sore spot with many even though there are many more costly guitars.just red comments below it proves my point.
Man I feel old I started watching this guy when he started growing the beard!
This is an excellent review, and you're generally an outstanding reviewer. Your reviews are the perfect length, you comment intelligently on these instruments and you play well. Thanks and keep up the good work.
For someone like me that plays an electric and never had lots of experience with acoustics, I like this more for the snappy/tight sound.
As a 25-year "guitar player" that never really progressed much beyond strumming and some simple picking patterns, I've been playing an acoustic for most of that time. I'm not a performer and, up to now, I've never spent more than ~$600 on a guitar, which is pocket-change as far as acoustics are concerned. I'm having a hard time justifying a $2000 guitar for a hobby. But something about it seems so appealing. I'd love to play around with the electric side a bit. And as someone with shorter-than-average arms and fingers, the electric footprint seems like it would be easier to manage. I've never had a guitar with "active electronics", so having to worry about batteries, charging, power-injection makes me a little nervous, but from what I've been seeing, it's becoming more common. Thanks for the review. I appreciate your perspective as primarily an acoustic player.
Out of the many videos on this axe on YT - You get the most real acoustic tone from it. You obviously have worked on your sounds, and have a good ear. Well done!
NOW - Have you tried a Yamaha Silent Guitar?
The 'ideal' guitar for a solo artist who needs to blend acoustic type sounds and electric in the same set/song. Now if they could make a full on acoustic, with 13 pin or Triple Play built in and a Telecaster bridge pickup that sounds like a Telecaster, I would buy that. Until then this is almost perfection. Fender is making incredible necks these days all up and down the line. These are no exception. Hard to justify the 2k if you already have a collection of guitars though.
thanks for the great videos! I was really caught up in the whole new shiny factor for this guitar and didn't jump on it. Your review changed my thinking. I think I'll go try one out.
Great look at this one. Have you ever looked at Yamaha's silent acoustic range of guitars? (I know they aren't exactly new now, but I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.)
Great playing and a fine example of the A-Strat’s acoustic and electric sides. I’ve had one for a few months and never use an amp in the evening for many of the reasons you advanced. Daytimes, I’m using a Fender Mustang GTX50 modeling amp and you cannot believe how many sounds I’m getting out of this instrument. Also, I play both flatpick and fingerstyle, comfortably getting a multitude of different tones. Worth noting is that altering your picking position from neck to bridge really affects the resonance. Thanks for running this pony through its paces. I’ve seen many videos and this one really caught my ear.
So, I’m looking for a good travel/beach guitar. This seems to be it, but I travel with family, so my only question is…how sturdy is it? Would it collapse or dent? Sounds crazy, for a 2g guitar, but I don’t really care about the looks, just the playability
6 month old comment, but it’s built like a tank. Way more solid feeling than my Taylor 314ce. Travel and late night practice is why I bought one.
Tony, you need to review the Kiesel Zeus headless acoustic.
My Godin Solidac is a solid electric guitar with a piezo pickup and two (electric and acousting) amp outputs. One of the body knobs adjusts the mix of electric and acoustic tones. All the way in one direction is pure electric and all the way in the other direction is pure acoustic. Everything in between is a beautiful blend of both.
I have absolutely no musical ability. I marvel at musicians, even if they are not famous. Nice work.
I’m a longtime violinist but only picked up electric guitar a year ago. I never wanted an acoustic guitar because honestly, I’d rather play my violin. It’s the electric that is a novelty to me. But the perils of picking something up as an adult is that it’s hard to get used to something new. I love the idea of a tele, but never found one I liked - no resonance in the body, heavy and cumbersome, no ebony fretboard…
But I love that tele twang/quack! I thought the acoustasonic was a gimmick but I tried it and fell in love. It has the familiarity of an orchestral string instrument I missed AND the tele quack I craved.
I don’t think that was the audience Fender was targeting, but here I am.
Great review thanks. Do you play it through an acoustic amp or a regular electric guitar amp?
Id like to hear how it sounds recorded direct within the context of a song that would normally have an acoustic guitar.
As a guitar player and an ALF fan I like this channel already
love that ALF doll mate ... thanks for the review
I owned a Taylor T5z…very similar. I ran an acoustic amp to maximize that sound, and a Vox or Fender electric amp for the “electric” sound. I found that the sound was good but not excellent, and the electrics sound good but not excellent. What guitar trying to do to sales is very difficult to satisfy a discerning ear :)
Yay!!! You finally have your reviews separated from the #AcousticTuesdayShow! Thank-you and I can not wait to see more of your arsenal!!
One of the main reasons I hold back playing guitar is that I'm always worried about annoying someone else simply by playing. I think I have seriously stunted my own personal growth on guitar because of this.
Hey man don't worry about that. If you have a guitar you can practice unplugged or plug some headphones to the amp. If you were a trumpet beginner, then you should worry!
plug some headphones in!
Seriously, my stepson plays the euphonium (basically a baritone with a different shaped bell) in HS band and when he practices there’s no getting away from it, even in the basement if he’s on the second floor.
Did you say 🤔 Tony Polacaster, like in Stratocaster or Telecaster? Is Fender's next acoustisonic going to be a Polocaster?
I have never loved the electric sound
This seems more of an in-between, would you say this sounds closer to an acoustic? Also do the acoustic voicings feel authentic e.g. the Mahogany or Rosewood etc settings?
Thanks Tony, awesome review. Love your perspective and as someone that owns one, it is sometimes all I need for a set. Very comfortable to play!!
Would this guitar be good for an acoustic player wanting to add in some electric?
I play for my church and some songs just sound better with electric.
Thank you for playing it RIGHT AWAY !!
I think it's really cool. But is it worth waiting for an Ibanez one that can shred? 😁✊
I know I'm late to the comment party, but I am really interested in how you got it to sound so real? Other demos I've listened to sounded ok but yours sounds more authentic than others. I'm curious if there was much EQing in post or you just know how to dial it in up front?
Great playing
Sounds pretty good to me ☺️
Thanks for the review enjoyed it but was frustrated that none of the playing sections were unamplified it would for a review be useful to let use hear it played both with and without amplification. Nonetheless insightful. Thanks
Soooo how does the Fender Acoustasonic comparte with the Taylor T5? The Taylor Classic Mahogany comes in at about the same price and sounds like it does some of the same acoustic to electric tricks. Which one do you choose?
Would this solve my issues that I love the sound of acoustic but struggle playing them with my hands ? I’ve always wanted a guitar that sounded acoustic but played electric
Nice rendition of Freight train. :-)
Great review. Thanks for doing it.
have you ever done a comparison, the acoustasonic and the Taylor TZ5 12 string. Or what is your opinion on them. I really like the taylor I've never held one just watch your review and a few others. I'm going to buy one of the 2 and I'm leaning towards the Taylor. Your opinion would help! Thank you!!
I can see where some players would use it as a hybrid on stage if they needed a quick switch between electric to acoustic.
Much better sounding than a piezo-equipped electric imo.
It's a cool looking guit, but anything that's shaped like a strat, I'm gonna play it like a strat. That's why I have a strat, and a Martin. :)
I've been playing acoustic guitar I have Martin, Taylor, Seagull, Gibson, I loved my Martin but I have to say I had my doubts bout this guitar but it's very impressive and so much smoother,lighter less bulky than an acoustic guitar. It sounds 1 to 10 I give it a 9 straight thro a pa speaker a 10 thro an acoustic amp I love the telecaster pick up and body pick up I think the only thing I hate bout my fender acoustasonic is the stupid tuning knobs being to close together for quick string change during shows I love the blend knobs you can get both guitars in my opinion for one an electronic and an acoustic and there absolutely beautiful once you get a right sound you will absolutely love it
I enjoyed your review as well as your playing! Thanks for posting! :)
I just ordered one, it will a nice alternate guitar to my elite strat.
Hows the guitar??
Giveaway plzzz 🙏
Tony, it would have been helpful if you'd discussed the weight and balance of the guitar. Just sayin.
dont know if it's my pc or what but the volume difference between when you talk and when you play is great.
Where’s the Taylor T5z review/comparison?
I would consider one if it was in the $700-800 range.
Great insights and thank you- looking at a few of these from different brands.
Great review. Hey, is that an old TEAC A-3440 reel-to-reel behind you? I still have mine, too.
didnt dan electro do this in lpike the 50s?
I'm interested to hear your thoughts on the Acoustasonic Jazzmaster versus the Strat. Is that video on its way???
I guess this isn't for everybody. I think it sounds good though. I played one briefly at GC once and I've got to say that the neck and fingerboard were very comfortable and fast. I liked it a lot. Wish he would have gone through the different voicings but still a good review.
What kind of amp were you plugging into? I have a California Blonde that I use when I plug in my Taylor, but I also have more traditional amps (e.g., Fender, Vox, Marshall) made primarily for electric guitars. Thx.
Hi, which fender ampli is best suited for an Acoustasonic? Tks
Most reviews about this guitar are basically negative. That's the reason youtubers always review this guitar, because YT likes negativity. But I find interesting that you took the time to find it different uses.
Only problem for me: the price
Hello tony, do you think the acoustasonic is also suitable for funky nile rodgers grooves?
What is the song @ 3:22? And 4:15.
Took ten years for the novelty to wear off my Ovation. Won't be getting one when I get my new one but it was a great guitar. Still is.
Thanks, great review. As you say, guitars should be reviewed at length and not just for the shiny new appeal. That's been really helpful
I really want the Tele version. But for that price? It does NOT come with a hard case? For 2 grand? I am considering it because I am an electric player that is just getting into acoustics. What I do NOT like about my new 2 grand Martin is how tiny the frets are. It SOUNDS fantastic though clear as a bell. The hard case that came with the Martin could easily be sold for 150 bucks it is so nice. But the acoustasonic having basically the neck and much bigger frets off a Professional is really appealing.
I noticed you have the guitar plugged in or amped each of your demos..
So are you supposed to plug this into an acoustic amp or an electric amp?
Also, do you put electric strings or acoustic?
Great review, thank you for posting. Is there any difference between this and the Telecaster version (other than the shape)?
The voicings are slightly different on each model. Alamo Music has a great video where they compare both models. The differences are very subtle, but are there nonetheless. I went into the video wanting the Tele version and came out of it preferring the Strat.
@@Doppelgriffe Very interesting, thank you for your reply! The Stratocaster sounds great.
Tom Marvan for the Tele version the electric guitar voice is a great sounding Tele; where the Strat electric vision is a great sounding Strat. One thing to keep in mind is that all voicing including the electrics sound best through an acoustic/ PA amp / system. The electric voices have cab simulation already in the voicing. I use my Strat through a loud box mini for our sets and love it. Very versatile.
Thanks for this review; I’ve been considering buying one. Funny, my name is also Tony, my family came from Policastro, Italy, and I’m a fingerpicker .
I really wanted to hear it unplugged vs a normal acoustic
I purchased one of these about 6 months ago. And after a 3 month struggle of trying to get a decent sound out of it in a worship band setting, I sold it. It's one of those a Jack of all trades but a master of none. I just cannot get over the plastic sound...
Are u plugging in directly? Or are you using any FX? I am running mine through EQ, comp, reverb and it sounds great!
Also did you use acoustic guitar strings or electric? The guitar is way more easier to play with electric ones and still has enough body to get the acoustic sounds. Also, the guitars I played at the store did not sound good, as soon as the guitar was setup and added electric strings my reaction was "Wow"!
Definitely no plastic sound at all on my end.
@@Athanlive played through a LR Bagg Venue di. Also paid for a setup when i purchased it. It plays nicely but I did not dig the sound, especially playing in solo gigs. Playing in a full mix was just ok..
Really intelligently designed. If you drop a peanut in the sound hole you can easily access the offending nut by opening the rear black control plate.
I think these guitars are slicker than snot, and sound just great. They have a very folk type sound. Can't swing it though, so have to sit this one out :( Fender that doesn't do me or you any good.
Do you actually play it unplugged at any point in the video? It looks like it's always plugged in when you're playing.
I’m in love with your playing man❤️
Is it easier on the fingers than a standard guitar?
I love the sound at 4:15. I kind of want to get a Gibson sst after listening to Travis Tritt but they are hard to find and pretty spendy. so this might be an option
There apprears to be no EQ or BASS-TREBLE knob? Isn't that strange?
I've seen these around for the past couple of years now, and as nice as they are I keep having the same common sense question come up in my head about them. So, we have had acoustic/electric guitars for a long while now in the world of guitars, with acoustic guitar bodies incorporating electronics, and now Fender has come up with the idea of an electric/acoustic guitar, with an electric guitar body incorporating acoustic tones. As nice as it is, (and it is nice), what... exactly is the difference?
What’s with the flyers gritty doll? Are you from Philly?
Nice fingerpickin chops! Thanks for the review.
Somehow my Acoustasonic Telecaster works for me only with very high string action. Is it the same for you Guys?
I have got the Tele style one. I've seen a lot of naysayers on here, but for me its been great. I play in 3 piece band. I've received quite a few complements on it. We've been mostly acoustic, but have been adding more electric stuff. This lets me quickly switch between electric and acoustic tunes with a flick of a switch. Does it sound as good as my D35? No...of course not. How could it?
I've always hated putting some overdrive on my acoustic while playing out. It sounds okay-ish, but I don't know. It's just kinda weird seeing someone playing something distorted on an acoustic. With this guitar though no issues at all and it sounds pretty good with the electric pickup on. It is definitely not the best of both worlds, but each the electric and acoustic sounds are completely serviceable.
What was the song you were playing around 4:20? Was it Angeline the Baker? Good vid Thx
Very nice review. Very informative from the musician point of view. Thanks.
Does it djent?
The great Tony, tnx for another cool video.! Grettings from México
What strings who you suggests