I actually had to sell my first guitar pretty recently, but i'm okay about it, I wasn't super attached to it, it was just a basic Squier strat in candy apple red, I called it Rosie, after AC/DC's Whole Lotta Rosie. I got it as part of a starter kit to start learning on. The guy that bought it was looking for something basic for his daughter to start learning on, they came to collect it one evening and they were really happy with it, the expression on the girls face was one of complete joy and excitement, and I could tell she was grateful to her dad for getting it for her (I sold them the whole kit guitar, amp, gig bag, cable etc) it made me happy that a dad was supporting his daughters desire to learn, something I was sorta denied as a kid, so ultimately it was a positive experience for me, my only regret is that the money had to be put towards bills etc rather than a bass like I wanted haha. I'm way more attached to my 2nd guitar, a black Gibson SG that I'd saved up for with left over money from the Download Festival in 2019, so hopefully i'll never have to sell it, I would regret that for sure.
Please know that I say this respectfully.... I think that you are too young to understand the regret of selling your first guitar. Many years down the road, and after you've had many other guitars, some probably even very expensive, you will think about the guitar that you began your journey with and you might become sad. You might come to realize that your first guitar, even if not well-made, or expensive, was the one that you took your first guitar steps with. You might find that there is more meaning and symbolism in that guitar than you originally thought. Four years ago I purchased a guitar pedal that I had been looking to get for a long time. The pedal was a Danelectro Daddy-O. The person who sold me this pedal contacted me after four years and asked if i would sell the pedal back to him. He explained to me that it was the first distortion pedal that he purchased and he only sold it out of a need for money. He even offered to pay me five times what I paid for it! I told him to keep the extra money and to just give me back what I originally paid for it. As much as I loved this pedal, I knew that my love for it paled when compared to the connection he had for this pedal. I'm not saying this to make you feel badly, but rather, to clarify that sometimes what we feel today, is not what we end up feeling down the road. I say all respectfully.
THAT is the kind of case where I could see myself selling, or even gifting, my first guitar. When you know it would go to someone who's in actual need of one and will play the hell out of it
I felt the same about my first guitar. 30 years later I'm scouring the country to find it again. That candy apple red strat will haunt your dreams one day!
or any gear. man I sold my mpc live thinking I was gonna get a sweet drum kit with the money. money got tight after I sold it and that mpc turned into grocery and bills. and I got it for a used for a steal and ended up making money on the sale. I was so proud. now I just think of all the sick beats I couldve made on that beast, let alone run thinks through it for the endless effects. :C
The only guitar that I kind of regret selling, which I actually pawned, was my first guitar. We were super broke, and I sold the guitar in order to buy groceries. I don't regret it totally because we got to eat and I found a really good job the following week, so we bounced back nicely. The guitar was a Lotus, Les Paul copy, which I do own again today. And, even though the second guitar is almost identical to the first, it's just not my first guitar. I have tried not to dwell on the loss of that guitar, and I have since come to believe that somehow, maybe losing that guitar was a blessing. Because, in my quest to find this same guitar again, I came across so many other really nice guitars that I ended up buying. So, in my quest to find a copy of my first guitar, I was led to all of these other guitars which I ended up buying. I am pretty sure that the guitars that I ended up buying is something that would not have happened had I not lost my original Lotus LP copy. Today, I have about 35 guitars in my collection, but at one time it was closer to 80 guitars. I have since donated about 15 guitars and amps to students and music schools because I think it's important to help musicians who can't afford instruments. I also don't think that I would have been prone to donations had I not pawned my first guitar. So yes, I do believe that it's kind of been a blessing. And, as much as I love the guitars that I own today, I also don't want to get so attached to them that I can not part with them for the betterment of others. I recently gave my son a Gibson ES-355, Johnny Marr replica guitar, which I really loved. I bought this guitar because I am a huge fan of Johnny Marr, but I gave it to my son because I am an even bigger fan of his! Even though I loved that guitar, I want to be able to do things like that without any kind of regret. I've tried to turn regret into something positive, and I am hoping that I will still feel this way in the future.
I've had a few guitars that I missed greatly after selling. The first and most important was my 3rd ever guitar, my 1993 Jackson Dinky in the stone finish (which was only available for a couple years). I had seen it in a local music store and immediately fell in love with it. It played great and really fit the music I liked to play. My dad bought it for me at like 500 bucks or something. I eventually sold it to a music store on the way home from a Guitar Center because I wasn't sure I was going to make it home (I had no gas money). I took only 150 dollars for it, with the case, and then the guy handed me a check. It was an all-around bad deal for me, and I have no idea why I didn't at least ask for cash. At the very least, I didn't run out of gas on the way home. That story has a happy ending though. Once the regret set in, I started tracking stone finish Jacksons on eBay and Reverb for a couple years until I finally found the same model again in 2020. It's been my main guitar since, and I've recently had Dimarzios put in. Another guitar I regret selling is my Epiphone Les Paul Standard Pro. It was in a blue burst finish that was gorgeous. Most of the ones I had seen had flamed maple, but that one was quilt. I think that guitar had the best sound and playability of any guitar I've owned for a variety of styles. The Jackson is clearly best for shreddy distorted stuff, and the same goes for any other really quality instruments I've had. This Epiphone had a lot more variety, and I haven't been able to fill the void it left. I traded it at a guitar show for a Gibson SG Special, which I later realized had been repainted and had a neck repair. That SG played horribly, and the pickups were so hot they were unusable with any of my presets. They said Gibson on them, but they were really bad. I don't regret getting rid of that guitar, but I do regret eventually selling the guitar I traded it for. I was traded an ESP LTD EC-CZ-II Clockwork Zombie guitar, which was a limited-run Eclipse model (It's kinda like the EC-1000). It had EMGs, which I've never had before or since. It could be tuned down pretty far and still sound pretty good. I used it as my main guitar for a little while, alongside a DBZ Guitar which I only sold recently. I sold it because, at the time, I didn't really want to do much metal stuff. It's a bummer that I got rid of it because nowadays it would be a godsend for recording. Thankfully, I've been much more careful about what guitars I keep and sell recently. It turns out, even if you like a guitar, there's sometimes a point where it's just not going to be of much use anymore. I recently sold my DBZ guitar and my Burny Sustainer guitar, which were both very good and got a lot of use for years. However, I don't regret selling them. I got everything out of them I was going to get. It was time to move on. Now, I only have 2 guitars and one bass (My original Stinger Betacaster, the Jackson, and the bass is a recent Jackson JS2). I wish I had a bit more variety, and I do miss some of those other guitars, but I have all I really need. (thanks for reading if you did. I know it's wordy. I'm not good at cutting out the fluff).
The one I regret selling was a white Washburn Solar V that was Ola's signature before he started his company. It was kinda like that wand scene from Harry Potter cause it just fit me so perfectly and felt immaculate to play. But I had some financial troubles one year and sold a few guitars including that one. I really wish I kept it. I've been looking at the newer Solar ones but I'm kinda afraid I'm going to buy one and it's not going to live up to my memory.
Hey, man sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do even if it might not feel it's the right choice but yeah V's are some of my favorite playing guitars especially the pointy ones.
A friend gave me a guitar that, though not super expensive, was just right for me. But for some reason, when I was trying to reduce my stuff, I thought I had given it to Good Will. For years I regretted my mistake. Then one day, during a move, I opened up a hard guitar case I had lying around and there it was. I was so happy. I learned my lesson and still have it.
This video is really affirming because my experience is a little different. I was set to trade my Charvel TX Custom (tele style, with ivory pick guard) for an Ibanez RG. I found the Ibanez on craigslist and had communicated with the person selling/ trading it. We were set to meet up the next day when I suddenly got cold feet. I texted the guy and told him I was sorry, but I didn’t think I could trade the guitar. He was super gracious replying, “I totally understand… I’ve been there, and I’ve regretted letting some guitars go in the past.” I don’t play that guitar a ton, but it does have a lot of sentimental value. Every time I do play it I’m glad I didn’t let it go. I ended up buying an Ibanez RG that I traded for a different RG. I’m very happy that I made the trade, and so is my friend who traded with me. Win/ win! Great video…really enjoyed it
My first guitar was a Christmas gift when I was about 10. My parents got divorced about 3 years later and my mother sold all my stuff at a yard sale while I was with my dad. I am 47 now and I found an identical match on EBay. 🤘Guitars are art🤘
My first guitar was a Mexican tele that I sold for drugs.. didn't play for years after that but I got back on the wagon and I'm pretty sure I'll be playing for the rest of my life :)
I had a 70s Japanese Greco Strat copy at one point that I ended up selling when I was in a tight financial spot. I sold it to a local musician who still owns and plays it, so on one hand I'm glad that it went to someone who appreciates it, but I'd be lying if I said I didn't hugely regret it. Sometimes tough choices had to be made, even if you later regret them.
i started playing when i was really young, got my first 2 electric guitars around 9 or 10. i stopped playing for more than a decade, and the guitars just sat around collecting dust at my mom’s house, and then at my ex’s. i though about selling them so many times, never thought i’d have a use for them again and just saw them as an emergency fund. well, i picked up playing again a little over a year ago, and i’m so grateful i didn’t get rid of them. whatever forgettable amount of cash i would have gotten for them pales in comparison to the amount of joy they give me now. definitely influenced my approach to buying and selling, i try to be really considerate before picking something up or moving something along. haven’t been hit with a regretful sale yet, but im sure it’ll happen to me eventually haha
oh! the guitars were a Tregan Shaman and a Stadium super strat style guitar (MIK by Saein, model number is WF510 or something) both relatively unknown brands, but the Stadium is my most played guitar now, has a killer neck and super dope tree of life inlay.
I had a 90s charvel in the 90s. It was mettalic fleck green with emgs and a maple fretboard. It basicly played itself it was so nice. And i pawned it to pay rent and then didnt have the money to get it back. I got 1k for it and he put it at 2k in his shop and it sold in like a week! I was heartbroken!! THANKS FOR BRINGIN IT UP MAN! 😆
I still have me first squier strat and I’m so glad I never sold it. I still have the next 15 guitars I bought too unfortunately. Love you Mike, you are such a great guitarist and my favorite UA-cam channel.
The Yamaha guitar you had was probably the RGX 321FP. My model is the RGX 121FP, it has a huge Yamaha logo on the headstock like you said. Great guitar indeed. I've upgraded mine with emg kit zakk wylde. Sounds awesome.
I have a Yamaha RGZ, which also looks pretty similar to the guitar he was playing in the video, except my headstock was natural with the big logo in black. Great guitars!!!
My first guitar was an off-white Kramer Striker I bought from my roommate's HS best friend, and former bandmate, for $100. It had a Kahler tremelo that he bought new that was worth more than the guitar was. The Kramer had taken a few slides off the amps and furniture he'd lean it against so the neck would shift now and then and I'd have to yank it back into tune. Usually, it stayed "fixed" for days if not weeks, no glue or anything. The neck pickup he'd dropped so low that one of the screws had fallen out so it would wobble around in the cavity, not that it ever got used. I had it for probably 10 years and for all its faults it was still a great guitar. Fantastic neck, the frets were great, and the bridge pickup sounded great. I worked at a 2nd-hand store where we got a lot of guitars in, 99% of which were lower-end models. Egad, so many Squier Bullet Strat POS'es... I ended up trading it (and $80) for an almost new Washburn N1 that came in. I still have that N1 and it plays awesome! I just wish I still had that 1st guitar just for sentimentality's sake, and so my daughter could play the same guitar I learned on. The only other guitar I wish I hadn't sold was an immaculate red Fender Tele (with the hard case) that had come into the store. My boss sold it to me for $100. The economy crashed a year later, my wife and I were both out of jobs, and we had a new baby, and we had no idea if one or both of us would have a job anytime soon and the unemployment was going to end not that far off. So I sold it for $600 because that was food on the table for a while. Had I known that my wife would get her job back a few short weeks later I would have kept it. No regrets, though. But damn that was a great guitar!
My biggest regret was selling my Squier Active 5 String Jazz bass. It was the first 5 string bass I owned and even though I’ve moved on from it and I’ve owned and sold quite a few guitars and basses afterwards that are higher end per se, it was the first bass that I first started gigging with in my first bands and I felt it was when I took the biggest step as a musician. I really wish I had kept it in college and had modded it cause it was such a reliable and sentimental instrument to me. I’m thankful that I still have my first guitar even though it’s broken, but I do hope one day to mod it which is an Epiphone Les Paul Junior. (from like 2005 I think?)
Yep , had to sell an ESP(not LTD) custom shop Truckster. That guitar was so good to play, felt perfect in the hands and played beautifully. If i looked at my guitars and wanted a quick noodle, I'd always pick that one up. Looked them up now and they are all going for crazy prices. Such is life
Thanks a lot for this video. I've been fighting myself because of my money today's situation and the possibility of having to sell one of my guitars. And i've thinking a lot "will i have the option of getting it back?" "will I really regret it?" And as I haven't seen other people having that guitar I feel special for owning it. (It's an EVH Striped Star, black and white). So with this video I'll do my best to hold on.
I've cycled through so many guitars, I don't really have any regrets though because what I like has changed so much over the years. Before I ever learned how to play I always wanted a Gibson sg, I learned guitar on a strat copy, years later I got my first job and saved until I could afford an sg, initially I loved it, until I played some other guitars and I realized how much neck dive sg's have. I was a les Paul guy for a few years after that, I went through a telecaster phase, then I was a die hard strat player for over a decade, now I'm trading everything for jazzmasters and don't really play anything else lol.🤷 I do still have my first sg that I bought when I was 15 though, I don't often play it anymore, it's basically an autograph book now that I take with me and have signed whenever I get backstage at a big show.
I had found a Jackson Rhodes in the late 90's and was just starting to really play. I paid 400 bucks and went on my merry way. Eventually I walked into a music store with it and the guy offered to buy it from me for $1000, and I took the bait as I was short on money at that point and he preyed on my desperation. Come to find out it was a USA custom shop, he knew and I didn't, and the music shop fleeced me. I'm still bitter about that one to this day, 25 years later.
I had an Epiphone Les Paul Custom that I worked really hard and saved up for when I was 14-15. Around my mid 20s there were a few years when I wasn't really playing that much but was really into audiophile gear and low on cash so I traded it to someone looking for a first guitar for their daughter. I traded for a set of Beyerdynamic DT 990 headphones and an O2 DAC/amp. I had so many great memories made on that thing and still check the classifieds every day for it.
Still have my original Ibanez V50 acoustic. It's a beater but I still love it. I ended up selling 3-4 of my guitars including a Seagull 12 string because my wife told me I could buy a Martin D45 if I "sold all those guitars you have around." Sold, bought, and that playing that Martin sounds like the Angels are playing it. Great video Mike!
In order of regret from most regret to least regret: 1998 Peavey Wolfgang Special. My first new guitar, after having played for 9 years. That was my main guitar until 2004. It was one of the gold ones where the paint started bubbling, I had it repainted, and it just lost the vibe so I sold it. It's now apparently somewhere in Australia. 1979 Gibson Les Paul Standard. It wasn't a super clean collectible. It had been re-fretted, finish worn off the neck, big chip in the face. Still, it played and sounded great. I used it on a lot of recording. Eventually I needed the money so I sold it back to the previous owner under the condition that if he ever needed money, he offer it to me first. 2002 Gibson Faded V. This one had the ebony fretboard with crescent moon inlays. I had to fix the headstock on this one and after doing so I stripped what finish there was on it so it was just reddish-brown. Played a lot of gigs with that guitar and wound up selling it to the guitar player from the bay area thrash band "Defiance". I bought another one to replace it, but it's not the same. 1987 Kramer NightSwan. That guitar sounded great - it was probably my favorite distorted guitar tone I've gotten from any guitar I've owned. Unfortunately, it had the R1 nut so it was like playing a mandolin. Also, during a band photo shoot in January, some cold air got into the case and cracked the finish (lightning sky). I sold it for $250 to a friend. They're going for thousands now.
My first guitar was a Kent (I think it was a Sears brand) copy of an SG. I hated that guitar but I learned so much with it. I basically destroyed it, taking it apart and putting it back together so many times. I don’t really remember what happened to it…it was 40 years ago. I don’t regret not having it today as I still don’t like SGs. I’ve only ever gotten rid of two other guitars, both of which I sold about the same time as I was hard up for money. One was a Fender Malmsteen and the second was a 12 string Martin, don’t remember the model off the top of my head but it played like a dream, better than many electric guitars I have played. I definitely regret having sold it, so much so that I vowed never to sell another. I have 14 guitars now and while I almost never play anymore I don’t have any plans to sell any of them. I’ll give them to my kids when they’re ready if they want to play. If my kids don’t want them I’ll donate them to a school or something someday but I won’t ever sell them.
When I was about 5 years old my grandpa bought a red mini squire strat to teach my cousins and I. I loved it and wanted my own. I saved Christmas/ birthday money and ended up getting the $100 needed to buy one. When I got into middle school I ended up getting an SG as a gift and later on a parts-caster tele from my grandpa. In high school I decided I had too much stuff and didn't need that mini squire so I sold it + the 15g amp it came with for like $50. (Probably 2015/16-ish). It's now been a little over a year since my grandpa died and while it is nice to have the tele I got from him I do wish I had kept my first guitar. That's what he taught me on and he was the one that drove me to go buy it. It doesn't bug me all that much. The guitar went to a little girl who's dad was teaching her to play and I'm glad it got put to good use. Just wish I still had it.
I still have my first guitar I bought 25 years ago, never bought another one. It's a cheap squire strat. Also I have the same crate amp you showed earlier. Few months later I bought a Korg ax300g multi effect pedal, and I remember how amazing it was at the time, and I still have it and it works flawlessly. You can make your own chains of effects and modify them really easily, plus it has a small expression pedal which can be assigned to different parameters.
My first ever electric guitar was an epiphone les paul sl and I ended up selling it to one of my friends who wanted to start playing guitar and I sold it because I needed the money. The reason I regret selling it is becuase I got it for free from my algebra teacher last year during my Sophmore year of high school, I remember almost crying when I first got it and while that guitar was cheap and wasn't the best, it really made me wanna practice and it had a lot of value to me. Eventually I upgraded to a Jackson js32t king v which I got as a chirstmas gift from my dad and is one of my favorite playing guitars that I've played/owned.
I have never listed out my guitars before, I'll give it a shot. Fender Squier Stratocaster w/gig pack (case, wires, strings, practice amp with fuzz setting)- 1995, $350 Martin Acoustic/Electric (named AUBURN) - 1998, $300 (gave away for free to a student who came from nothing) Gibson SG Standard (named SPITFIRE) - 2002, $700 (sold for $100 to best friend when I switched to drums for a few years) Yamaha Acoustic/Electric - 2004, $400 Gibson Flying V 1981 '67 Reissue (used) - 2005, $1100 (sold for $200 to best friend when I switched to drums... I REGRET THIS ONE, that thing SHREDDED even if it was impossible to play sitting down and hard to move around on stage) Gibson Firebird (named GATOR) - 2014, $900 Gibson ES-335 (named RED VELVET) - 2022, my 40th birthday gift to myself, $3600 (my dream guitar even if Marty McFly plays an ES-345 and the neck is a little thicker than I'd like)
My Schecter C6 Elite. It's such a "low-end" guitar but it played so perfectly after I put some work in. The maple top and color was perfect, the neck felt amazing, everything just felt perfect and that guitar got me through some really rough breakups. I ended up losing it when I lost my storage unit out in North Carolina after I lost my job.
I started watching your bad tablature videos and alot of the old books from the 80's you use are the exact same ones I had been given by my father when I was a kid. The ozzy tribute one looked EXACTLY like the one I learned from. But in regards to this particular vid, my dad owned a Jackson polka-dot randy Rhoads V and a few years back tried to sell it and I had a similar experience to yours where I had to run around trying to get it back from staples before they sold it for him on ebay...long story short its now in my possession 😊. Love the content Mike!
Divorcing my ex wife she threw my fender out back with everything else. Cracked neck and body. To this day I still have it 😂. Burst color made in Mexico. It has some character now. The divorce guitar. No one cheated or anything, no foul play. She had a drinking problem. Crazy
Around 1993, I saved up for a B.C. Rich Gunslinger/Assassin that was awesome. It was black, with like a glittery finish, so it's colour appeared blue, purple, green with bits of orange depending on how light hit it. Was a most lovely guitar. Eventually I wound up trading it toward an Ibanez about a year later.
Taylor 314CE. I learned guitar on an electric (Squier strat) and didn't own an acoustic until I had been playing for years. Finally bought one, saved up for a Taylor 314CE, which is a very good acoustic, but there was something about the one I got, it just sung. Owned it for 15 years, can't even estimate how many hours I played on it. Loved that guitar. Had to sell it in 2020 because I desperately needed the money after Covid messed everything up. Guy I sold it to seemed to really love it, so I'm glad it went to a good place, but man, wish I didn't have to sell that guitar.
My 1st guitar was a Harmony Explorer black with a red pinstripe.. It had a cheap Floyd rose which is probably why I sold it.. I've had some incredible guitars since but I had a 2011 Fender strat pro 1107 in 3 tone sunburst & 70's headstock, what a stunning guitar & played like a dream..wish I had that back.. 🤘💀🤘
Ibanez is my go to brand. I bought two Soundgear 6-string basses and had to sell them to move. One of them I custom ordered with gold hardware (back in the 90's when you could still do that). I then bought a series of unsuitable 4-strings (a GTX, a Warlock, a Squire), a couple of 5-string acoustics (Dean, Michael Kelly), a Rogue 6-string, a Squire MB5, then a Dean Edge 6 that I grudgingly owned for over a decade because nobody would buy it. I then bought a Gio 6-string. My only problem with Gios is the Phat II bass EQ. I want a completely passive bass, not something that's half active half passive. I hate having to waste money on batteries for a feature I'll never use.
Every guitar I ever sold I ended up regretting. I had a ESP LTD EX-100 in GUN METAL BLUE, I got it when I was 17 for Christmas, a year into my guitar lessons back then, and I loved that guitar, the way it played, sounded, everything. My ESP LTD F100, wicked cool looking guitar, Duncan Designed Humbuckers, it had a shiny black finish and white neck and headstock binding, it was my drop-c guitar. I had a killer off-brand 5-String Bass that sounded awesome. My ESP LTD EX400-BD, my favorite guitar I ever owned, I keep trying to find one on reverb that I can afford, but no luck yet. I don't regret selling my Ibanez Acoustic Electric Guitar because Acoustic isn't my thing. I sold all of these guitars in one big wallop to Guitar Center so I could buy the Solid State Randall Kirk Hammett Signature Half-Stack, and a ESP LTD VIPER 400. I actually after a few years just never liked the Thin-U Neck on that guitar, and while that Half-Stack sounded pretty good, I knew I wanted a tube amp. So I sold the Randall Kirk Hammett Signature Half-Stack to my local music store on consignment, and it didn't take long for someone to buy it, and then I bought a Peavey Valveking and I love it, I will never sell it, I've had it for 12 years now, and it's an incredible Metal Amp. I bought a ESP LTD EC-256 back in January 2020, and I've become a ESP Guitarist again 100 percent! The thing I've learned from all of this, is never sell your guitar, even if you don't play a specific guitar much, there's always a place where you can find a use for it musically. No matter what. Take Care Man. Awesome Vid.
My first guitar was a Rocket Special. I don't know if it was any good because I really didn't try practicing properly until I got my second guitar, a blue AXL strat copy. I took it apart and tried to repaint it. Terrible paint job and couldn't put it back together properly so I threw it out. The blue AXL was traded for a Tarantula. I then got an LP copy made by a guy who I think just made them himself and sold them on ebay. Very good guitar. I sold it to my friend for £40. He says it is better than his Gibson LP standard. By that point I had saved up for my first "good" guitar. A B.C Rich ASM STD. Love that guitar. A local pawn shop has a Rocket in, same as my old one for about £60. Tempted to buy it just for nostalgia.
My older sister gave me her Squier strat when it was clear she wasn't interested. I fell in love with guitar and bought a used Ibanez AXS32 (very underrated budget guitar!). She then sold the strat. I was sad at the time, but now kind of relieved I don't still have it.
I gave away my first guitar, the guy didn't even bother learning how to play it, a few years later i found he left it at a friend's place, i got the train and brought my baby back home. It's a cheap, rugged, hard to play piece if fxcking wood but i love it, it was THE DREAM come true starting off.
I havent sold any of mine but hearing your stories was like walking through time. It reminded of where I was and the circumstances behind obtaining my axes. My very first guitar was bought off a street busker by my mom when I was 15. I'd love to know the guitars story or his reason for selling it to her. Itd probably make me sad though. Thanks for sharing Mikey.
My first guitar was a Peavey Predator with HSS pickup configuration. Needless to say I definitely don't regret selling it at all. I did see one used at a Guitar Center many years later, took it down and played on it a bit. For a budget guitar those were really well-made and solid! If there's one guitar I kind of miss, it's a red BC Rich Mockingbird that was from roughly 1983/84. I bought it used in 2000 for about $300, and the previous owner had installed SD Invader pickups!
Tje the one I regret getting rid of was an old Memphis strat copy. It was a neck through, had bill Lawrence blade pups, with coil taps, and it was mahogany with a rosewood board. It played like a dream, and I could get ANY sound I wanted. I miss it.
When I was 17 graduating from high school my dad gave me $200 to buy an Ibanez RG 270 in mystic silver with a UV1000 case. About a year later I bought a RG 7321 7 string as well. After about 3 years I wanted an LTD Alexi 200 and traded the RG270 my dad bought me straight across for the Alexi V and sold my 7 string for rent money. I got the 7 string back about 6 years later as a buddy bought it, sold it to another buddy, who sold back to me. The silver one never came back but I was able to find another of the same year and close serial number and I built a close replica out of parts to replace it. I felt like an ass and still kinda do that I sold the guitar my dad bought. Never got the case back either and those classic 2000s UV1000 cases are ridiculous money on reverb these days. Outside of that I have guitars I don’t mind parting ways with but most will never leave the collection including the Alexi V as a constant reminder that I’m a complete dipshit sometimes.
ESP LTD M-401. I sold it when I moved across country because I was limited what I could take on the plane. I was the original owner of it, and made upgrades to the pickups and got it broke in just the way it was comfortable for me. I miss that guitar.
Dude, In 1996, I bought an ESP MII Deluxe. It was $1,799 at the time and got it at Granny’s Music in OKC for $950 brand new with a case! 3 years later, I traded it for an Epiphone Les Paul Custom. I was looking for a different sound, and that is one of my top 5 regrets in life. My 18 year old self was an idiot.
My first ever "real" guitar was a black Gibson SG Special that my parents bought for me as Christmas gift at that same Guitar Center in Roseville in the mid 90's. I sold it just so I could buy a guitar with a single coil pup that I wanted at the time. I've sold several guitars and thats the one I regret losing the most. So much history with that guitar, and Gibson doesn't make them in that finish anymore.
The one I regret selling was an Epiphone Les Paul Studio. It was my first "serious" electric guitar after some soviet one I got from my uncle. I was 18 then and I bought an Ibanez SZ520 (18th birthday!) which was (and still is) my dream guitar. I thought that I don't need that Les Paul anymore so I sold it to a luthier who kind of fell in love with that guitar. I didn't know that this heavy-ass axe was made in Bohemia Musico-Delicia in Czech Republic and Epiphones made there were considered of higher quality - some people even claim that these were on par with Japanese ones. I learned about this when out of curiosity I checked the serial number on the Internet and it occured to me that I sold a very nice (and kind of rare) guitar.
My first real guitar was a blue 80's Westone Spectrum. I've been trying to find one online since and everytime I do, I don't have the money to buy it. Recently found one and put it in my Reverb cart. The price dropped down quite a bit and it was gone. It was in better shape than mine was. The thing was, I didn't sell mine. It had some nicks and dings in it and I thought I'd repaint it. Not only did I not repaint it very well, I didn't know how to wire it all back up, so I traded it in pieces to a guitar shop for a Washburn...which I ruined as well. I have a list of other guitars I've sold that I regret though.
The guitar @ 4:05 looks like to me a Yamaha RGX 421M if that is helpful. And I would say it was made from 1990 -1995. The one that I would still like to have is a Yamaha RGX 1212s from 1988 it was made in Taiwan purple metallic. After many years I found a Black metallic 1212s to replace it.
I'm never getting rid of my first guitar. A squier strat named Sidney after Sidney Prescott from Scream. She's pretty beat up but I still love her. In the coming months and a lot of money I am however going to give her a well needed make over. New paint job, neck, pickups. The only thing that'll still be the same is the body herself. She'll still be my first guitar and I have 10 others but she has and still serves me well. Along with the new paint job, I'm also gonna paint Ghost face on there with a stencil because I don't want to fuck it up because I know I can do it free hand but it would have to be first try. If you're a Scream fan ya'll know what I'm gonna say when I'm done 🙃
First electric guitar Fender Telecaster butterscotch guitar center edition, the cool part about it was the pickup switch and knobs were actually flipped. Sold it to complete the down payment on a manufactured home and recently purchased a Pacifica. I miss it but definitely enjoying the lightness compared to the tele 😂
I've sold the only two electric guitars I'd ever had. Long story short, I hadn't really played them much for a few years and I was trying to get some money together for a big trip. One was a Washburn strat style with a Floyd Rose. It was a pain in the butt changing strings, but super fun to just make dive bomb noises. The other was a cherry red Epiphone SG style. I miss being able to play AC/DC style riffs on it. I also sold a cheap classical guitar. I don't really miss it, but it was just something different. Now that things have kind of settled down for me with work and family, I keep looking through Facebook marketplace for an electric guitar. I see numerous SG style guitars like the one I had as well as Jackson dinky guitars and they're so tempting.
I brought my partner a Yamaha Pacifica a few years ago. It came with a 10 watt vox. She hardly ever plays it now. Her son has showed interest in guitar recently and now he use’s it.
This is why I don't sell any music gear. No neck dive on 1985 V220 with Kahler. Your videos and instruction/insights are the best. Carvin X100-B to the max (series III)
I can't seem to let go of any of my guitars (they're just four anyway) because of the sentimental connection. My first guitar (an acoustic one) was gifted to me by my father when I was 7. My first electric (a second-hand cheap unwaxed humbucker Les Paul replica from Paul Beuscher ) was gifted by my brother on my birthday and still is my go-to guitar to practice and experiment after like 20/25 years. As a working adult I bought on the used market a "Gretch G5120 125th anniversary edition" and later an "Epiphone Riviera P93". Both the later sound great. The Riviera I play a lot, but I find the Gretch a bit hard and unconffortable to play and a lot of the times my left hand gets numb. I can't get myself to get rid of her because its the first I bought with my own money... and it looks cool.
Oh man... I ALMOST made this mistake when I thought of selling off my first ever bass that my Dad bought me back in the early 90's. I almost sold it cause I bought a new 5-string bass and my mom and I were kinda going through a rough financial patch. She suggested I sell it for any bit of cash cause in her mind, she couldn't understand why I would want or need more than one bass. It's a little starter Fender P-bass knockoff called a Gremlin Slammer bass _(only a few years ago, I discovered this bass model was apparently sold by other companies like Cort and Matsumoko as well, probably in a joint sales venture)._ The bass is black with silver hardware, the body is plywood and EXTREMELY heavy. It felt like strapping on a bag 'o bricks and the nylon Carvin guitar strap I bought for it really dug into my shoulder hard, haha. Still, it has a great P-bass pickup that sounds awesome despite it being a beginner bass. I almost sold it to someone who was beginning to dabble with bass but, eventually lost interest in it. I'm so glad I never sold it to them cause as I said, it was my first ever bass that my Dad bought me. In Nov. of 2011, my father passed away. My Dad and I got along okay but, we never really had a close relationship. Still, there were some cool times when I was a kid in the 80's. Now that I'm a lot older, I have really started to miss my father and I find myself wishing he was still here, just to be able to talk to him and spend time with him. Having no siblings and with my father now gone, I have really begun to realize just how close I really am to truly being alone in this world. I'm just glad my Mom is still here. Case in point, i don't know what I would've done had I sold one of the few things that I still have, given to me by my father. Hell, I still also have the little Quantum B-10 Terminator bass combo amp that my Dad bought along with my bass, haha! That little amp doesn't work anymore. I played that thing to death, unfortunately. I learned so much using/playing that little bass and amp. I cut my teeth on that bass and amp. The bass itself was in pretty bad shape in the hardware dept (rusted screws, rusted bridge, rusted tuners) but, I'm glad to say that in the past couple of years, I have begun to restore that little bass. Bought new black hardware for it and I have to say I love the way it looks now. I wish I had had the money to make those types of upgrades back in the day. I still break out that bass to practice finger exercises or just noodle around unplugged while watching TV and such. I still have my 5-string bass as well as a few more newer basses and even some new guitars as well. Got a new amp rig, upgraded FX pedals, new upgraded recording gear etc. etc. all of which I love but, even amidst all that gear, you can still find my little Quantum amp and Gremlin bass nesteled in there among all my new(er) gear. An unspoken salute to my Dad. Something to keep his memory alive, together with one of the most important things ever in my life which he contributed to - my first steps in becoming a musician...
Three Ibanez's. ICX-220DX Iceman, broken in half by an ex. MIJ RG 470, sold when I was a teenager and I didn't know any better. RG3EXFM1, was a gift from my father, but I was so broke at the time I traded it for an Epiphone LP with a roadcase because I was going on a short tour and needed a guitar with a roadcase.
I had to sell guitars because I was broke/suffering a major money crunch, more than I care to remember. It's no fun. The only "kind of" bright side to it - when the money situation became better, and I went into gear recovery mode (started shopping for gear, to upgrade from the cheapo mediocre guitars and amps I had/could afford, that kept me playing guitar - I was only completely guitarless once during a major money crunch [back in 2007], which was a weird feeling for me, after 28 years of guitar playing at the time), I viewed it as an opportunity to try guitars and amps that were different from what I usually played. As a result I discovered Gretsch guitars (and that they can do so much more that the rockabilly sound they are often pigeonholed into), and rediscovered a love for the Fender Jaguar (after getting rid of my first one in 1990, because it was so horribly microphonic). But still there were those guitars that I got rid of that I never got over, and as a result, ended up buying again. As a matter of fact my 2 current electrics (a Gretsch Country Club, and a Squier Classic Vibe 60s Jaguar), fall into that category, and I'm hoping that I can hold onto these guitars.
It sounds like all the regret is over sentimental reasons. It's not like you traded a '59 Les Paul for a Sony walkman. I have no sentimental connection to instruments. They're just tools. If a tool isn't fulfilling its purpose, or another one does it better, I have no regrets with getting rid of it. I do recall regretting selling an Ibanez guitar because the Ibanez has a certain sound and vibe. But I cured that disappointment easily. I just bought a new Ibanez.
My biggest regret was selling away my first real amp. Got it for free from my high school since they didn’t need it anymore. It was a no name tube amp head with two stacks. Crystal clean sound. But alas, I was never a gig player and I didn’t have space for it when I moved.
I sold my 1987 Charvel Model 6 in Black Cherry after some medical problems. I’ve bought plenty of guitars since, and almost bought another Model 6, but it will never be that same guitar that I had put so many hours into.
My first guitar? It was a Jackson. Similar to the one you have in this vid (not the V) This was well over 20 years ago. It was a gift from my uncle, was an old guitar of his. At the time I had already played for years but never had my own guitar. Any time I went over a friend's house, I always picked up their guitar and played while we drank or played video games or whatever. Anyway, this thing went with me EVERYWHERE. Any second I had, I would play it. One day I forgot it at a "friend's" house. I had a pretty busy week so I didn't go back there again for a few days. When I got there? Totally destroyed. Smashed to bits...I was completely devastated...needless to say, I left with a bloody knuckle...anyway... since then I never got another guitar, plus me and my friends that did play (who weren't total assholes that would just destroy someone else's shit) drifted apart over time. Haven't touched a guitar since mid 20s until like maybe 6 months ago I was feeling the itch watching your vids and other UA-cam guitarists. Was doing some research on what would be a good guitar under 300 to get back into it...but also posted on Facebook @ing those old friends of mine if they have any guitars they wouldn't mind parting with for under 300. One said he wish he could help but all his guitars now are in the 3k and up category now...but my other friend was like "hey sure dude, it needs some work but it's yours" awesome! so I went to his house with some cash and took at look at it. "hey man, this guitar looks great, has all the hardware, nothing looks broken, just a wobbly tune knob...no worries man, how much you want for it?" "dude, it's yours, I don't play anymore. You used to play constantly when you came to my house when we were kids, so I want you to have it" fuck man...that was awesome :-D So I got the guitar home, bought myself some higher tier gear than I was planning being I didn't have to pay for the guitar itself. Fixed her up, then started playing non-stop again. For a while anyway. I dunno man, I don't know why I fell off it again. Life shit I guess...anyway, I haven't even touched it in over a month now. Last couple weeks been feeling that itch again, glancing over at it now and again...more and more often. Then finally maybe half an hour ago picked it up, put it in my lap, and strummed around a bit...for a minute anyway. Not plugged in, gear hiding away behind other crap in the closet...but fuck it...I'm gonna play again damnit.
I own 19 guitars, including my very first classical nylon string ('89) and my first electric a Yamaha RGX121D ('94), and a handful of 90's ESP's including a pre lawsuit LTD explorer. I've only sold 4 instruments during my 3 decades of playing... the only one I kinda 'regret' selling was a dark purple prototype Hamer Standard with hot rod flames graphics.... the silver lining was I sold it to Rick Nielsen after he saw my page on the Hamer roster on their website so it stayed in the Hamer artist fam and definitely ended up in the right hands. I still have my 3 customs they made for me during my endorsement and will never part with those ones. Your Yamaha looks like it may have been from the mid-90's RGX series.....
One guitar I regret selling was my Matt Heafy Epiphone Les Paul Custom. It was the first guitar I bought that was a higher end guitar. Up until that point I had a Squier Stratocaster and Schecter C-6 Elite. But when I saw that guitar in a store,something told me I had to have it. One of the guys at the store took it down and let me play it. I knew then that it would be mine so after months and months of saving,for which was supposed to be a Jason Hook Epiphone explorer lol,I bought the Les Paul and took it home. It honestly made me a better player because I used to not anchor my picking hand when I would play and it would look and sound sloppy. But almost a year later,I got rid of it because I thought it weighed too much. Much to my dismay,I saw it sit in the store looking back at me as if it were a person looking at me with eyes of betrayal. Sad to say it sold 2 weeks after I sold it and I never saw it again. One month later the guitar gets discontinued and becomes nearly impossible to sell. It has been nearly 3 years since and has been my biggest regret selling it. The weight felt like an excuse for me to move on but I honestly miss it. At this point I doubt I'll ever find it again but if I do,it won't leave me ever again
1982 ibanez blazer series…..hard tail …maple neck….played like a dream….I bought it new and traded it for a Les Paul copy of some sort…I think it was a saga….wish I had it back
I sold a guitar earlier this month, but I don’t regret it because I bought it on impulse and the money I got from it, I used to buy a much better guitar. In June, I purchased a Jackson Rhoads with a Floyd Rose, which I didn’t care for much, so I decided to have someone else change the strings and I bought a Jackson Dinky as a spare. It had a Strat style whammy bar, but I just fell out of love with it. Then the guitar store in my town became an official Ibanez dealer, I tried an RGA and instantly fell in love. I sold the Dinky on consignment and while it was a tough decision, I’m a lot happier with the Ibanez.
At a point in my life, I fell into hard times, and pawned my Gibson Zack Wylde Camouflage guitar! I had a coffin case and $200 strap 😢 They sold all three separate, and made a killing on just loaning me $300
I don't think that it was Pacifica, but some kind of Yamaha rgx Modell. They were produced before Pacificas in the late 80s, early 90s. And they were more shred than strat type, and yes, some of them had Floyd rose. Google them, they're not that expensive nowadays.
My buds got one of those first run Yamaha Pacificas. The name was defiantly bigger on the head stock. This friend of mine is a real player. Graduated MIT, and that $200. Pacifica is his #1
@@TheSWCantina I paid $600 AUD and thought it was a bit overpriced. I tried to negotiate but the guy at the music store wasn't interested. "It's got a Floyd" he said
When I was first starting out I had a light purple Ibanez Gio my Dad bought for me from a guitar shop when we were on holiday and when I got home and hooked it up to my Marshall amp my mind was blown just how chunky it sounded with the humbucker compared to my single coil Squier Strat. I gave it to my friend and he left it at his old house when he moved away!!! “I can’t….it’s a GIO!!!!”
I honestly do not regret selling any of my guitars. I used to have an s-type from a company called Marlin but got rid of it years ago as I really didn't like it. Since then I've had an Epiphone SG, Explorer and V, and a Washburn Dimebolt. I sold the SG about 7 years ago, and I traded the Explorer and Washburn towards that cost of a Gibson LP Traditional 4 years ago. I've kept the V. I also have a Slash LP and my very first guitar, a LP copy from a company called Encore. The Gibson LPs are the guitars I like best as I've been a fan of Slash since I really started getting into music. They're also quite inspiring when it comes to learning to play.
Mine is a 1990 Ibanez green dot universe I had in college. I'll take a loan if I have to get my hands back on it. What a guitar, Ibanez knocked it off the park from the start with their 7s.
With all of my Christmas money and a little help from my mom, when I was 8 years old I got a white Dean Flying V copy from my local guitar store, because Zack from School Of Rock had a white Flying V and that was my favorite movie. It was one of the best days of my childhood and I still remember seeing it and picking it out and trying it out in the store. When I was 12 or so I wanted to sell it to buy some airsoft guns but I never did and I am incredibly thankful God did not let that happen lol, I still have it and I’m so glad I do because I’m very attached to it coming from that part of my childhood. I also love my Mom and my Dad for supporting my rockstar dreams when I was that age, and ever since.
My first guitar was an unbelievably crappy Ibanez with the lowest frets I’ve ever seen on an ibby. It came in a starter pack with a tiny little amp that sounded horrible. I ended up taking it all apart, which i don’t regret because it started my love of modifying and building guitars. I sold the little amp at a garage sale for I think $20. My first legit guitar was a peavey Wolfgang special (the ivory one) that I still have. it’s been pretty heavily modified, but I don’t care. I’ll never sell it and I still play it. Honestly it has been used so much at this point it could use a refret. I’ve sold a ton of guitars over the years. Interestingly enough the one I wish i had kept was a little short scale Ibanez bass. I’ve sold guitars that were thousands of $ more, but it was so much fun to play.
I regret selling my first real electric guitar an RG560 which I had a roland gk-2 pickup on. I remember struggling with it having a double locking trem, but it was only because no one explained it to me so it was trial by fire after breaking a string. I tried replacing it with really nice Ibanez prestige models but it's not the same. I'll never forget that guitar and the time spent on it.
I sold my first guitar to a fellow school student , probably almost 20 years ago now. However I happened to bump into him a couple of years ago, and he still had it! I bought it back from him (for less than I sold it), and apparently he had never even changed the strings on it. I gave it a full setup and played it for about an hour, and it's been sat collecting dust ever since. But that's exactly what you want your first guitar to do, right?
I only have one regret: the 1982 Les Paul Custom my parents scraped up to get me for my birthday. I grew to dislike the scale of Gibson guitars, so I'm sure I would've sold it by now anyway, but I regret doing it back then. I traded it for a Hamer flying V that I promptly ruined with "modifications" that I didn't have the skill or tools to do properly.
I am 45 and I still have to sell something in order to be afford to get something else. I have a ton of regrets about gear I have sold. My 2001 USA Fender P Bass, 1996 MIM Fender P bass, and my German Warwick Corvette Standard are definitely 3 instruments I would love to still own. Just thinking about why I had to sell them and what was left to show for them is pretty depressing. Life has not been kind and I have had to sell everything of value (not just musical gear) over and over and over again through the years and rebuild. I can only afford to keep 1 bass at any given time. Life is still being quite cruel, so I expect this cycle to continue sadly. I cannot seem to figure a way out of being used up and tossed in the garbage by terrible employers. I feel like giving up quite often sadly. Hard work and dedication doesn't always pay off, I am a precautionary tale. My friends say I am too nice and too honest and people take advantage and use me. I do not disagree. It is just who I am sadly. Pity party story aside, keep doing what you are doing... I love your videos and stories. Oft times creators like yourself help me take my mind off of all the negative and bring me to a much happier place. Cheers!
Fortunately, I haven't had the need to sell my guitars (I'd sell my PC, but not them). However, my dad had. I remember he bought an Ibanez GRG40 and a Fender amp for about 250$, because that was during Covid and we had to stay at home (he had nothing better to do). At this time, I wasn't interested at learning guitar and after messing around for a year, he realized that he couldn't play as before. So, he ended up selling it to a local friend of his. After his death, I was devastated and started listening to more metal for some reason. Then more guitar videos started popping up on UA-cam, the more hooked I became. So, I ended up buying a Jackson for 200$ (this was a year ago) and a Rocksmith cable. Have been playing ever since (and I also keep my dad's old classical guitar).
I currently own a Pacifica, but I've been through hell, recently. My old boss didn't pay 7 months worth of work, I got scammed, my country's economy is terrible, right now (minimum wage of about $200 a month), etc. Still, I vowed on never selling it, no matter what. I know owning this guitar is a one in a lifetime opportunity and I cannot waste it. The headstock logo is indeed different from the one you showed. In case you want to see if it is the same as mine, I'll glady show you.
Ibanez Jem. One of the first ones. The yellow one with the pyramids. Sold it in the middle of the grunge era. People we’re screwing their faces up at it at gigs. Still crying to this day.
I actually had to sell my first guitar pretty recently, but i'm okay about it, I wasn't super attached to it, it was just a basic Squier strat in candy apple red, I called it Rosie, after AC/DC's Whole Lotta Rosie. I got it as part of a starter kit to start learning on.
The guy that bought it was looking for something basic for his daughter to start learning on, they came to collect it one evening and they were really happy with it, the expression on the girls face was one of complete joy and excitement, and I could tell she was grateful to her dad for getting it for her (I sold them the whole kit guitar, amp, gig bag, cable etc) it made me happy that a dad was supporting his daughters desire to learn, something I was sorta denied as a kid, so ultimately it was a positive experience for me, my only regret is that the money had to be put towards bills etc rather than a bass like I wanted haha.
I'm way more attached to my 2nd guitar, a black Gibson SG that I'd saved up for with left over money from the Download Festival in 2019, so hopefully i'll never have to sell it, I would regret that for sure.
At least u sold yours. I’ve pawned some of mine. 😂
That's exactly what you hope for when selling: that it finds a good home. Nicely done! 😀👍
Please know that I say this respectfully.... I think that you are too young to understand the regret of selling your first guitar. Many years down the road, and after you've had many other guitars, some probably even very expensive, you will think about the guitar that you began your journey with and you might become sad. You might come to realize that your first guitar, even if not well-made, or expensive, was the one that you took your first guitar steps with. You might find that there is more meaning and symbolism in that guitar than you originally thought. Four years ago I purchased a guitar pedal that I had been looking to get for a long time. The pedal was a Danelectro Daddy-O. The person who sold me this pedal contacted me after four years and asked if i would sell the pedal back to him. He explained to me that it was the first distortion pedal that he purchased and he only sold it out of a need for money. He even offered to pay me five times what I paid for it! I told him to keep the extra money and to just give me back what I originally paid for it. As much as I loved this pedal, I knew that my love for it paled when compared to the connection he had for this pedal. I'm not saying this to make you feel badly, but rather, to clarify that sometimes what we feel today, is not what we end up feeling down the road. I say all respectfully.
THAT is the kind of case where I could see myself selling, or even gifting, my first guitar. When you know it would go to someone who's in actual need of one and will play the hell out of it
I felt the same about my first guitar. 30 years later I'm scouring the country to find it again. That candy apple red strat will haunt your dreams one day!
This is why I'm NEVER selling my guitars, great video, man!!
Agree man, I still have my first 4 guitars and 26 others so I’m def with you on never selling even the ones I don’t play much I keep.
It really isn’t worth it. You’re always losing money on it.
Just go to a music store and get a new guitar of the same model. Problem solved
@@slopcrusher3482 no. Ive made profit plenty of times. Especially lately since prices went up
or any gear. man I sold my mpc live thinking I was gonna get a sweet drum kit with the money. money got tight after I sold it and that mpc turned into grocery and bills. and I got it for a used for a steal and ended up making money on the sale. I was so proud. now I just think of all the sick beats I couldve made on that beast, let alone run thinks through it for the endless effects. :C
The only guitar that I kind of regret selling, which I actually pawned, was my first guitar. We were super broke, and I sold the guitar in order to buy groceries. I don't regret it totally because we got to eat and I found a really good job the following week, so we bounced back nicely. The guitar was a Lotus, Les Paul copy, which I do own again today. And, even though the second guitar is almost identical to the first, it's just not my first guitar.
I have tried not to dwell on the loss of that guitar, and I have since come to believe that somehow, maybe losing that guitar was a blessing. Because, in my quest to find this same guitar again, I came across so many other really nice guitars that I ended up buying. So, in my quest to find a copy of my first guitar, I was led to all of these other guitars which I ended up buying. I am pretty sure that the guitars that I ended up buying is something that would not have happened had I not lost my original Lotus LP copy.
Today, I have about 35 guitars in my collection, but at one time it was closer to 80 guitars. I have since donated about 15 guitars and amps to students and music schools because I think it's important to help musicians who can't afford instruments. I also don't think that I would have been prone to donations had I not pawned my first guitar. So yes, I do believe that it's kind of been a blessing.
And, as much as I love the guitars that I own today, I also don't want to get so attached to them that I can not part with them for the betterment of others. I recently gave my son a Gibson ES-355, Johnny Marr replica guitar, which I really loved. I bought this guitar because I am a huge fan of Johnny Marr, but I gave it to my son because I am an even bigger fan of his! Even though I loved that guitar, I want to be able to do things like that without any kind of regret. I've tried to turn regret into something positive, and I am hoping that I will still feel this way in the future.
I've had a few guitars that I missed greatly after selling.
The first and most important was my 3rd ever guitar, my 1993 Jackson Dinky in the stone finish (which was only available for a couple years).
I had seen it in a local music store and immediately fell in love with it. It played great and really fit the music I liked to play. My dad bought it for me at like 500 bucks or something.
I eventually sold it to a music store on the way home from a Guitar Center because I wasn't sure I was going to make it home (I had no gas money).
I took only 150 dollars for it, with the case, and then the guy handed me a check. It was an all-around bad deal for me, and I have no idea why I didn't at least ask for cash.
At the very least, I didn't run out of gas on the way home.
That story has a happy ending though. Once the regret set in, I started tracking stone finish Jacksons on eBay and Reverb for a couple years until I finally found the same model again in 2020.
It's been my main guitar since, and I've recently had Dimarzios put in.
Another guitar I regret selling is my Epiphone Les Paul Standard Pro. It was in a blue burst finish that was gorgeous. Most of the ones I had seen had flamed maple, but that one was quilt.
I think that guitar had the best sound and playability of any guitar I've owned for a variety of styles. The Jackson is clearly best for shreddy distorted stuff, and the same goes for any other really quality instruments I've had. This Epiphone had a lot more variety, and I haven't been able to fill the void it left.
I traded it at a guitar show for a Gibson SG Special, which I later realized had been repainted and had a neck repair.
That SG played horribly, and the pickups were so hot they were unusable with any of my presets. They said Gibson on them, but they were really bad.
I don't regret getting rid of that guitar, but I do regret eventually selling the guitar I traded it for.
I was traded an ESP LTD EC-CZ-II Clockwork Zombie guitar, which was a limited-run Eclipse model (It's kinda like the EC-1000).
It had EMGs, which I've never had before or since. It could be tuned down pretty far and still sound pretty good.
I used it as my main guitar for a little while, alongside a DBZ Guitar which I only sold recently.
I sold it because, at the time, I didn't really want to do much metal stuff.
It's a bummer that I got rid of it because nowadays it would be a godsend for recording.
Thankfully, I've been much more careful about what guitars I keep and sell recently.
It turns out, even if you like a guitar, there's sometimes a point where it's just not going to be of much use anymore.
I recently sold my DBZ guitar and my Burny Sustainer guitar, which were both very good and got a lot of use for years.
However, I don't regret selling them. I got everything out of them I was going to get. It was time to move on.
Now, I only have 2 guitars and one bass (My original Stinger Betacaster, the Jackson, and the bass is a recent Jackson JS2).
I wish I had a bit more variety, and I do miss some of those other guitars, but I have all I really need.
(thanks for reading if you did. I know it's wordy. I'm not good at cutting out the fluff).
The one I regret selling was a white Washburn Solar V that was Ola's signature before he started his company. It was kinda like that wand scene from Harry Potter cause it just fit me so perfectly and felt immaculate to play. But I had some financial troubles one year and sold a few guitars including that one. I really wish I kept it. I've been looking at the newer Solar ones but I'm kinda afraid I'm going to buy one and it's not going to live up to my memory.
Hey, man sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do even if it might not feel it's the right choice but yeah V's are some of my favorite playing guitars especially the pointy ones.
@@totallynotjohn8083 I have my first v, a jackson king v and it so amazing. Pro series but wish I could find me a Japanese or American made one
That Yamaha you had was almost certainly an RGX of some sort rather than a Pacifica.
A friend gave me a guitar that, though not super expensive, was just right for me. But for some reason, when I was trying to reduce my stuff, I thought I had given it to Good Will. For years I regretted my mistake. Then one day, during a move, I opened up a hard guitar case I had lying around and there it was. I was so happy. I learned my lesson and still have it.
This video is really affirming because my experience is a little different.
I was set to trade my Charvel TX Custom (tele style, with ivory pick guard) for an Ibanez RG. I found the Ibanez on craigslist and had communicated with the person selling/ trading it. We were set to meet up the next day when I suddenly got cold feet. I texted the guy and told him I was sorry, but I didn’t think I could trade the guitar. He was super gracious replying, “I totally understand… I’ve been there, and I’ve regretted letting some guitars go in the past.”
I don’t play that guitar a ton, but it does have a lot of sentimental value. Every time I do play it I’m glad I didn’t let it go. I ended up buying an Ibanez RG that I traded for a different RG. I’m very happy that I made the trade, and so is my friend who traded with me. Win/ win!
Great video…really enjoyed it
My first guitar was a Christmas gift when I was about 10. My parents got divorced about 3 years later and my mother sold all my stuff at a yard sale while I was with my dad. I am 47 now and I found an identical match on EBay. 🤘Guitars are art🤘
Man, what's with moms doing that.
My first guitar was a Mexican tele that I sold for drugs.. didn't play for years after that but I got back on the wagon and I'm pretty sure I'll be playing for the rest of my life :)
I had a 70s Japanese Greco Strat copy at one point that I ended up selling when I was in a tight financial spot. I sold it to a local musician who still owns and plays it, so on one hand I'm glad that it went to someone who appreciates it, but I'd be lying if I said I didn't hugely regret it. Sometimes tough choices had to be made, even if you later regret them.
i started playing when i was really young, got my first 2 electric guitars around 9 or 10. i stopped playing for more than a decade, and the guitars just sat around collecting dust at my mom’s house, and then at my ex’s. i though about selling them so many times, never thought i’d have a use for them again and just saw them as an emergency fund. well, i picked up playing again a little over a year ago, and i’m so grateful i didn’t get rid of them. whatever forgettable amount of cash i would have gotten for them pales in comparison to the amount of joy they give me now. definitely influenced my approach to buying and selling, i try to be really considerate before picking something up or moving something along. haven’t been hit with a regretful sale yet, but im sure it’ll happen to me eventually haha
oh! the guitars were a Tregan Shaman and a Stadium super strat style guitar (MIK by Saein, model number is WF510 or something) both relatively unknown brands, but the Stadium is my most played guitar now, has a killer neck and super dope tree of life inlay.
I had a 90s charvel in the 90s. It was mettalic fleck green with emgs and a maple fretboard. It basicly played itself it was so nice. And i pawned it to pay rent and then didnt have the money to get it back. I got 1k for it and he put it at 2k in his shop and it sold in like a week! I was heartbroken!! THANKS FOR BRINGIN IT UP MAN! 😆
Yeah rough stuff! I never had really expensive guitars but I always miss them when they're gone
I have three: A Rickenbacker 4001 bass, a Washburn Nuno Bettencourt model, and a Gibson custom shop Flying V with a Kahler trem.
For me, it was a beautiful, purple Ibanez RG I bought in Japan. It had great action and an amazing sound even with the stock pick-ups.
I still have me first squier strat and I’m so glad I never sold it. I still have the next 15 guitars I bought too unfortunately. Love you Mike, you are such a great guitarist and my favorite UA-cam channel.
the right kind of hoarder in my opinion XD
The Yamaha guitar you had was probably the RGX 321FP. My model is the RGX 121FP, it has a huge Yamaha logo on the headstock like you said. Great guitar indeed. I've upgraded mine with emg kit zakk wylde. Sounds awesome.
I have a Yamaha RGZ, which also looks pretty similar to the guitar he was playing in the video, except my headstock was natural with the big logo in black. Great guitars!!!
Custom 1982 Gibson Flying V. Hurts even admitting this.
My first guitar was an off-white Kramer Striker I bought from my roommate's HS best friend, and former bandmate, for $100. It had a Kahler tremelo that he bought new that was worth more than the guitar was. The Kramer had taken a few slides off the amps and furniture he'd lean it against so the neck would shift now and then and I'd have to yank it back into tune. Usually, it stayed "fixed" for days if not weeks, no glue or anything. The neck pickup he'd dropped so low that one of the screws had fallen out so it would wobble around in the cavity, not that it ever got used. I had it for probably 10 years and for all its faults it was still a great guitar. Fantastic neck, the frets were great, and the bridge pickup sounded great.
I worked at a 2nd-hand store where we got a lot of guitars in, 99% of which were lower-end models. Egad, so many Squier Bullet Strat POS'es... I ended up trading it (and $80) for an almost new Washburn N1 that came in. I still have that N1 and it plays awesome! I just wish I still had that 1st guitar just for sentimentality's sake, and so my daughter could play the same guitar I learned on.
The only other guitar I wish I hadn't sold was an immaculate red Fender Tele (with the hard case) that had come into the store. My boss sold it to me for $100. The economy crashed a year later, my wife and I were both out of jobs, and we had a new baby, and we had no idea if one or both of us would have a job anytime soon and the unemployment was going to end not that far off. So I sold it for $600 because that was food on the table for a while. Had I known that my wife would get her job back a few short weeks later I would have kept it. No regrets, though. But damn that was a great guitar!
My biggest regret was selling my Squier Active 5 String Jazz bass. It was the first 5 string bass I owned and even though I’ve moved on from it and I’ve owned and sold quite a few guitars and basses afterwards that are higher end per se, it was the first bass that I first started gigging with in my first bands and I felt it was when I took the biggest step as a musician. I really wish I had kept it in college and had modded it cause it was such a reliable and sentimental instrument to me. I’m thankful that I still have my first guitar even though it’s broken, but I do hope one day to mod it which is an Epiphone Les Paul Junior. (from like 2005 I think?)
Yep , had to sell an ESP(not LTD) custom shop Truckster. That guitar was so good to play, felt perfect in the hands and played beautifully. If i looked at my guitars and wanted a quick noodle, I'd always pick that one up. Looked them up now and they are all going for crazy prices. Such is life
Thanks a lot for this video. I've been fighting myself because of my money today's situation and the possibility of having to sell one of my guitars. And i've thinking a lot "will i have the option of getting it back?" "will I really regret it?" And as I haven't seen other people having that guitar I feel special for owning it. (It's an EVH Striped Star, black and white). So with this video I'll do my best to hold on.
I've cycled through so many guitars, I don't really have any regrets though because what I like has changed so much over the years.
Before I ever learned how to play I always wanted a Gibson sg, I learned guitar on a strat copy, years later I got my first job and saved until I could afford an sg, initially I loved it, until I played some other guitars and I realized how much neck dive sg's have. I was a les Paul guy for a few years after that, I went through a telecaster phase, then I was a die hard strat player for over a decade, now I'm trading everything for jazzmasters and don't really play anything else lol.🤷
I do still have my first sg that I bought when I was 15 though, I don't often play it anymore, it's basically an autograph book now that I take with me and have signed whenever I get backstage at a big show.
I had found a Jackson Rhodes in the late 90's and was just starting to really play. I paid 400 bucks and went on my merry way. Eventually I walked into a music store with it and the guy offered to buy it from me for $1000, and I took the bait as I was short on money at that point and he preyed on my desperation. Come to find out it was a USA custom shop, he knew and I didn't, and the music shop fleeced me. I'm still bitter about that one to this day, 25 years later.
I had an Epiphone Les Paul Custom that I worked really hard and saved up for when I was 14-15. Around my mid 20s there were a few years when I wasn't really playing that much but was really into audiophile gear and low on cash so I traded it to someone looking for a first guitar for their daughter. I traded for a set of Beyerdynamic DT 990 headphones and an O2 DAC/amp. I had so many great memories made on that thing and still check the classifieds every day for it.
Still have my original Ibanez V50 acoustic. It's a beater but I still love it. I ended up selling 3-4 of my guitars including a Seagull 12 string because my wife told me I could buy a Martin D45 if I "sold all those guitars you have around." Sold, bought, and that playing that Martin sounds like the Angels are playing it. Great video Mike!
In order of regret from most regret to least regret:
1998 Peavey Wolfgang Special. My first new guitar, after having played for 9 years. That was my main guitar until 2004. It was one of the gold ones where the paint started bubbling, I had it repainted, and it just lost the vibe so I sold it. It's now apparently somewhere in Australia.
1979 Gibson Les Paul Standard. It wasn't a super clean collectible. It had been re-fretted, finish worn off the neck, big chip in the face. Still, it played and sounded great. I used it on a lot of recording. Eventually I needed the money so I sold it back to the previous owner under the condition that if he ever needed money, he offer it to me first.
2002 Gibson Faded V. This one had the ebony fretboard with crescent moon inlays. I had to fix the headstock on this one and after doing so I stripped what finish there was on it so it was just reddish-brown. Played a lot of gigs with that guitar and wound up selling it to the guitar player from the bay area thrash band "Defiance". I bought another one to replace it, but it's not the same.
1987 Kramer NightSwan. That guitar sounded great - it was probably my favorite distorted guitar tone I've gotten from any guitar I've owned. Unfortunately, it had the R1 nut so it was like playing a mandolin. Also, during a band photo shoot in January, some cold air got into the case and cracked the finish (lightning sky). I sold it for $250 to a friend. They're going for thousands now.
My first guitar was a Kent (I think it was a Sears brand) copy of an SG. I hated that guitar but I learned so much with it. I basically destroyed it, taking it apart and putting it back together so many times. I don’t really remember what happened to it…it was 40 years ago. I don’t regret not having it today as I still don’t like SGs.
I’ve only ever gotten rid of two other guitars, both of which I sold about the same time as I was hard up for money. One was a Fender Malmsteen and the second was a 12 string Martin, don’t remember the model off the top of my head but it played like a dream, better than many electric guitars I have played. I definitely regret having sold it, so much so that I vowed never to sell another.
I have 14 guitars now and while I almost never play anymore I don’t have any plans to sell any of them. I’ll give them to my kids when they’re ready if they want to play. If my kids don’t want them I’ll donate them to a school or something someday but I won’t ever sell them.
When I was about 5 years old my grandpa bought a red mini squire strat to teach my cousins and I. I loved it and wanted my own. I saved Christmas/ birthday money and ended up getting the $100 needed to buy one. When I got into middle school I ended up getting an SG as a gift and later on a parts-caster tele from my grandpa. In high school I decided I had too much stuff and didn't need that mini squire so I sold it + the 15g amp it came with for like $50. (Probably 2015/16-ish).
It's now been a little over a year since my grandpa died and while it is nice to have the tele I got from him I do wish I had kept my first guitar. That's what he taught me on and he was the one that drove me to go buy it.
It doesn't bug me all that much. The guitar went to a little girl who's dad was teaching her to play and I'm glad it got put to good use. Just wish I still had it.
I own the Alpine White Kramer Jersey Star because of a livin on a prayer live performance in 1987 and it got me hooked on Bon Jovi ever since then.
Ah yes!
The MusicYo Kramers!
I had a Js too
I still have an '86 Baretta
I still have my first guitar I bought 25 years ago, never bought another one. It's a cheap squire strat. Also I have the same crate amp you showed earlier. Few months later I bought a Korg ax300g multi effect pedal, and I remember how amazing it was at the time, and I still have it and it works flawlessly. You can make your own chains of effects and modify them really easily, plus it has a small expression pedal which can be assigned to different parameters.
My first ever electric guitar was an epiphone les paul sl and I ended up selling it to one of my friends who wanted to start playing guitar and I sold it because I needed the money. The reason I regret selling it is becuase I got it for free from my algebra teacher last year during my Sophmore year of high school, I remember almost crying when I first got it and while that guitar was cheap and wasn't the best, it really made me wanna practice and it had a lot of value to me. Eventually I upgraded to a Jackson js32t king v which I got as a chirstmas gift from my dad and is one of my favorite playing guitars that I've played/owned.
Love your vids man!
Great video, I love your content! I love your John Mayer techniques video.
I have never listed out my guitars before, I'll give it a shot.
Fender Squier Stratocaster w/gig pack (case, wires, strings, practice amp with fuzz setting)- 1995, $350
Martin Acoustic/Electric (named AUBURN) - 1998, $300 (gave away for free to a student who came from nothing)
Gibson SG Standard (named SPITFIRE) - 2002, $700 (sold for $100 to best friend when I switched to drums for a few years)
Yamaha Acoustic/Electric - 2004, $400
Gibson Flying V 1981 '67 Reissue (used) - 2005, $1100 (sold for $200 to best friend when I switched to drums... I REGRET THIS ONE, that thing SHREDDED even if it was impossible to play sitting down and hard to move around on stage)
Gibson Firebird (named GATOR) - 2014, $900
Gibson ES-335 (named RED VELVET) - 2022, my 40th birthday gift to myself, $3600 (my dream guitar even if Marty McFly plays an ES-345 and the neck is a little thicker than I'd like)
My Schecter C6 Elite. It's such a "low-end" guitar but it played so perfectly after I put some work in. The maple top and color was perfect, the neck felt amazing, everything just felt perfect and that guitar got me through some really rough breakups. I ended up losing it when I lost my storage unit out in North Carolina after I lost my job.
I've been playing guitar for 20 ish years and man this video had some relatable and wholesome stories
I started watching your bad tablature videos and alot of the old books from the 80's you use are the exact same ones I had been given by my father when I was a kid. The ozzy tribute one looked EXACTLY like the one I learned from. But in regards to this particular vid, my dad owned a Jackson polka-dot randy Rhoads V and a few years back tried to sell it and I had a similar experience to yours where I had to run around trying to get it back from staples before they sold it for him on ebay...long story short its now in my possession 😊. Love the content Mike!
My first guitar was a Harmony late 80's strat Fingerhut catalog guitar. Tobacco sun burst. Still have it to this day!
That yamaha pacifica is actually some sort of Yamaha RGX
Divorcing my ex wife she threw my fender out back with everything else. Cracked neck and body. To this day I still have it 😂. Burst color made in Mexico. It has some character now. The divorce guitar. No one cheated or anything, no foul play. She had a drinking problem. Crazy
Around 1993, I saved up for a B.C. Rich Gunslinger/Assassin that was awesome. It was black, with like a glittery finish, so it's colour appeared blue, purple, green with bits of orange depending on how light hit it. Was a most lovely guitar. Eventually I wound up trading it toward an Ibanez about a year later.
Taylor 314CE. I learned guitar on an electric (Squier strat) and didn't own an acoustic until I had been playing for years. Finally bought one, saved up for a Taylor 314CE, which is a very good acoustic, but there was something about the one I got, it just sung. Owned it for 15 years, can't even estimate how many hours I played on it. Loved that guitar. Had to sell it in 2020 because I desperately needed the money after Covid messed everything up. Guy I sold it to seemed to really love it, so I'm glad it went to a good place, but man, wish I didn't have to sell that guitar.
My 1st guitar was a Harmony Explorer black with a red pinstripe.. It had a cheap Floyd rose which is probably why I sold it.. I've had some incredible guitars since but I had a 2011 Fender strat pro 1107 in 3 tone sunburst & 70's headstock, what a stunning guitar & played like a dream..wish I had that back.. 🤘💀🤘
Ibanez is my go to brand. I bought two Soundgear 6-string basses and had to sell them to move. One of them I custom ordered with gold hardware (back in the 90's when you could still do that). I then bought a series of unsuitable 4-strings (a GTX, a Warlock, a Squire), a couple of 5-string acoustics (Dean, Michael Kelly), a Rogue 6-string, a Squire MB5, then a Dean Edge 6 that I grudgingly owned for over a decade because nobody would buy it. I then bought a Gio 6-string.
My only problem with Gios is the Phat II bass EQ. I want a completely passive bass, not something that's half active half passive. I hate having to waste money on batteries for a feature I'll never use.
Every guitar I ever sold I ended up regretting. I had a ESP LTD EX-100 in GUN METAL BLUE, I got it when I was 17 for Christmas, a year into my guitar lessons back then, and I loved that guitar, the way it played, sounded, everything. My ESP LTD F100, wicked cool looking guitar, Duncan Designed Humbuckers, it had a shiny black finish and white neck and headstock binding, it was my drop-c guitar. I had a killer off-brand 5-String Bass that sounded awesome. My ESP LTD EX400-BD, my favorite guitar I ever owned, I keep trying to find one on reverb that I can afford, but no luck yet. I don't regret selling my Ibanez Acoustic Electric Guitar because Acoustic isn't my thing. I sold all of these guitars in one big wallop to Guitar Center so I could buy the Solid State Randall Kirk Hammett Signature Half-Stack, and a ESP LTD VIPER 400. I actually after a few years just never liked the Thin-U Neck on that guitar, and while that Half-Stack sounded pretty good, I knew I wanted a tube amp. So I sold the Randall Kirk Hammett Signature Half-Stack to my local music store on consignment, and it didn't take long for someone to buy it, and then I bought a Peavey Valveking and I love it, I will never sell it, I've had it for 12 years now, and it's an incredible Metal Amp. I bought a ESP LTD EC-256 back in January 2020, and I've become a ESP Guitarist again 100 percent! The thing I've learned from all of this, is never sell your guitar, even if you don't play a specific guitar much, there's always a place where you can find a use for it musically. No matter what. Take Care Man. Awesome Vid.
My first guitar was a Rocket Special. I don't know if it was any good because I really didn't try practicing properly until I got my second guitar, a blue AXL strat copy. I took it apart and tried to repaint it. Terrible paint job and couldn't put it back together properly so I threw it out. The blue AXL was traded for a Tarantula. I then got an LP copy made by a guy who I think just made them himself and sold them on ebay. Very good guitar. I sold it to my friend for £40. He says it is better than his Gibson LP standard.
By that point I had saved up for my first "good" guitar. A B.C Rich ASM STD. Love that guitar.
A local pawn shop has a Rocket in, same as my old one for about £60. Tempted to buy it just for nostalgia.
My older sister gave me her Squier strat when it was clear she wasn't interested. I fell in love with guitar and bought a used Ibanez AXS32 (very underrated budget guitar!). She then sold the strat. I was sad at the time, but now kind of relieved I don't still have it.
I gave away my first guitar, the guy didn't even bother learning how to play it, a few years later i found he left it at a friend's place, i got the train and brought my baby back home. It's a cheap, rugged, hard to play piece if fxcking wood but i love it, it was THE DREAM come true starting off.
I havent sold any of mine but hearing your stories was like walking through time. It reminded of where I was and the circumstances behind obtaining my axes.
My very first guitar was bought off a street busker by my mom when I was 15. I'd love to know the guitars story or his reason for selling it to her. Itd probably make me sad though.
Thanks for sharing Mikey.
My first guitar was a Peavey Predator with HSS pickup configuration. Needless to say I definitely don't regret selling it at all. I did see one used at a Guitar Center many years later, took it down and played on it a bit. For a budget guitar those were really well-made and solid!
If there's one guitar I kind of miss, it's a red BC Rich Mockingbird that was from roughly 1983/84. I bought it used in 2000 for about $300, and the previous owner had installed SD Invader pickups!
Tje the one I regret getting rid of was an old Memphis strat copy. It was a neck through, had bill Lawrence blade pups, with coil taps, and it was mahogany with a rosewood board. It played like a dream, and I could get ANY sound I wanted. I miss it.
When I was 17 graduating from high school my dad gave me $200 to buy an Ibanez RG 270 in mystic silver with a UV1000 case. About a year later I bought a RG 7321 7 string as well. After about 3 years I wanted an LTD Alexi 200 and traded the RG270 my dad bought me straight across for the Alexi V and sold my 7 string for rent money. I got the 7 string back about 6 years later as a buddy bought it, sold it to another buddy, who sold back to me. The silver one never came back but I was able to find another of the same year and close serial number and I built a close replica out of parts to replace it. I felt like an ass and still kinda do that I sold the guitar my dad bought. Never got the case back either and those classic 2000s UV1000 cases are ridiculous money on reverb these days. Outside of that I have guitars I don’t mind parting ways with but most will never leave the collection including the Alexi V as a constant reminder that I’m a complete dipshit sometimes.
ESP LTD M-401. I sold it when I moved across country because I was limited what I could take on the plane. I was the original owner of it, and made upgrades to the pickups and got it broke in just the way it was comfortable for me. I miss that guitar.
Dude, In 1996, I bought an ESP MII Deluxe. It was $1,799 at the time and got it at Granny’s Music in OKC for $950 brand new with a case! 3 years later, I traded it for an Epiphone Les Paul Custom. I was looking for a different sound, and that is one of my top 5 regrets in life. My 18 year old self was an idiot.
My first ever "real" guitar was a black Gibson SG Special that my parents bought for me as Christmas gift at that same Guitar Center in Roseville in the mid 90's. I sold it just so I could buy a guitar with a single coil pup that I wanted at the time. I've sold several guitars and thats the one I regret losing the most. So much history with that guitar, and Gibson doesn't make them in that finish anymore.
The one I regret selling was an Epiphone Les Paul Studio. It was my first "serious" electric guitar after some soviet one I got from my uncle. I was 18 then and I bought an Ibanez SZ520 (18th birthday!) which was (and still is) my dream guitar. I thought that I don't need that Les Paul anymore so I sold it to a luthier who kind of fell in love with that guitar. I didn't know that this heavy-ass axe was made in Bohemia Musico-Delicia in Czech Republic and Epiphones made there were considered of higher quality - some people even claim that these were on par with Japanese ones.
I learned about this when out of curiosity I checked the serial number on the Internet and it occured to me that I sold a very nice (and kind of rare) guitar.
My first real guitar was a blue 80's Westone Spectrum. I've been trying to find one online since and everytime I do, I don't have the money to buy it. Recently found one and put it in my Reverb cart. The price dropped down quite a bit and it was gone. It was in better shape than mine was. The thing was, I didn't sell mine. It had some nicks and dings in it and I thought I'd repaint it. Not only did I not repaint it very well, I didn't know how to wire it all back up, so I traded it in pieces to a guitar shop for a Washburn...which I ruined as well. I have a list of other guitars I've sold that I regret though.
I’m gonna write a book called guitars I should have never sold . Vol. 1-2 lol… my 69 les Paul , 73 Strat 59 dot es 335 😢
The guitar @ 4:05 looks like to me a Yamaha RGX 421M if that is helpful. And I would say it was made from 1990 -1995.
The one that I would still like to have is a Yamaha RGX 1212s from 1988 it was made in Taiwan purple metallic.
After many years I found a Black metallic 1212s to replace it.
My first electric was a 1997 Ibanez RX series. I put EMG 81’s in it. Still have it❤️🙏
I'm never getting rid of my first guitar. A squier strat named Sidney after Sidney Prescott from Scream. She's pretty beat up but I still love her. In the coming months and a lot of money I am however going to give her a well needed make over. New paint job, neck, pickups. The only thing that'll still be the same is the body herself. She'll still be my first guitar and I have 10 others but she has and still serves me well. Along with the new paint job, I'm also gonna paint Ghost face on there with a stencil because I don't want to fuck it up because I know I can do it free hand but it would have to be first try. If you're a Scream fan ya'll know what I'm gonna say when I'm done 🙃
First electric guitar Fender Telecaster butterscotch guitar center edition, the cool part about it was the pickup switch and knobs were actually flipped. Sold it to complete the down payment on a manufactured home and recently purchased a Pacifica. I miss it but definitely enjoying the lightness compared to the tele 😂
I've sold the only two electric guitars I'd ever had. Long story short, I hadn't really played them much for a few years and I was trying to get some money together for a big trip.
One was a Washburn strat style with a Floyd Rose. It was a pain in the butt changing strings, but super fun to just make dive bomb noises.
The other was a cherry red Epiphone SG style. I miss being able to play AC/DC style riffs on it.
I also sold a cheap classical guitar. I don't really miss it, but it was just something different.
Now that things have kind of settled down for me with work and family, I keep looking through Facebook marketplace for an electric guitar. I see numerous SG style guitars like the one I had as well as Jackson dinky guitars and they're so tempting.
I brought my partner a Yamaha Pacifica a few years ago. It came with a 10 watt vox. She hardly ever plays it now. Her son has showed interest in guitar recently and now he use’s it.
This is why I don't sell any music gear. No neck dive on 1985 V220 with Kahler. Your videos and instruction/insights are the best. Carvin X100-B to the max (series III)
I can't seem to let go of any of my guitars (they're just four anyway) because of the sentimental connection. My first guitar (an acoustic one) was gifted to me by my father when I was 7. My first electric (a second-hand cheap unwaxed humbucker Les Paul replica from Paul Beuscher ) was gifted by my brother on my birthday and still is my go-to guitar to practice and experiment after like 20/25 years. As a working adult I bought on the used market a "Gretch G5120 125th anniversary edition" and later an "Epiphone Riviera P93". Both the later sound great. The Riviera I play a lot, but I find the Gretch a bit hard and unconffortable to play and a lot of the times my left hand gets numb. I can't get myself to get rid of her because its the first I bought with my own money... and it looks cool.
Oh man... I ALMOST made this mistake when I thought of selling off my first ever bass that my Dad bought me back in the early 90's. I almost sold it cause I bought a new 5-string bass and my mom and I were kinda going through a rough financial patch. She suggested I sell it for any bit of cash cause in her mind, she couldn't understand why I would want or need more than one bass.
It's a little starter Fender P-bass knockoff called a Gremlin Slammer bass _(only a few years ago, I discovered this bass model was apparently sold by other companies like Cort and Matsumoko as well, probably in a joint sales venture)._ The bass is black with silver hardware, the body is plywood and EXTREMELY heavy. It felt like strapping on a bag 'o bricks and the nylon Carvin guitar strap I bought for it really dug into my shoulder hard, haha. Still, it has a great P-bass pickup that sounds awesome despite it being a beginner bass.
I almost sold it to someone who was beginning to dabble with bass but, eventually lost interest in it. I'm so glad I never sold it to them cause as I said, it was my first ever bass that my Dad bought me. In Nov. of 2011, my father passed away. My Dad and I got along okay but, we never really had a close relationship. Still, there were some cool times when I was a kid in the 80's.
Now that I'm a lot older, I have really started to miss my father and I find myself wishing he was still here, just to be able to talk to him and spend time with him. Having no siblings and with my father now gone, I have really begun to realize just how close I really am to truly being alone in this world. I'm just glad my Mom is still here.
Case in point, i don't know what I would've done had I sold one of the few things that I still have, given to me by my father. Hell, I still also have the little Quantum B-10 Terminator bass combo amp that my Dad bought along with my bass, haha! That little amp doesn't work anymore. I played that thing to death, unfortunately.
I learned so much using/playing that little bass and amp. I cut my teeth on that bass and amp. The bass itself was in pretty bad shape in the hardware dept (rusted screws, rusted bridge, rusted tuners) but, I'm glad to say that in the past couple of years, I have begun to restore that little bass. Bought new black hardware for it and I have to say I love the way it looks now. I wish I had had the money to make those types of upgrades back in the day. I still break out that bass to practice finger exercises or just noodle around unplugged while watching TV and such.
I still have my 5-string bass as well as a few more newer basses and even some new guitars as well. Got a new amp rig, upgraded FX pedals, new upgraded recording gear etc. etc. all of which I love but, even amidst all that gear, you can still find my little Quantum amp and Gremlin bass nesteled in there among all my new(er) gear. An unspoken salute to my Dad. Something to keep his memory alive, together with one of the most important things ever in my life which he contributed to - my first steps in becoming a musician...
Your Yamaha was most likely an RGX/RGZ model. They were played at the time by Blues Saraceno, who may have had a signature version finished in plaid.
Three Ibanez's. ICX-220DX Iceman, broken in half by an ex. MIJ RG 470, sold when I was a teenager and I didn't know any better. RG3EXFM1, was a gift from my father, but I was so broke at the time I traded it for an Epiphone LP with a roadcase because I was going on a short tour and needed a guitar with a roadcase.
I had to sell guitars because I was broke/suffering a major money crunch, more than I care to remember. It's no fun. The only "kind of" bright side to it - when the money situation became better, and I went into gear recovery mode (started shopping for gear, to upgrade from the cheapo mediocre guitars and amps I had/could afford, that kept me playing guitar - I was only completely guitarless once during a major money crunch [back in 2007], which was a weird feeling for me, after 28 years of guitar playing at the time), I viewed it as an opportunity to try guitars and amps that were different from what I usually played. As a result I discovered Gretsch guitars (and that they can do so much more that the rockabilly sound they are often pigeonholed into), and rediscovered a love for the Fender Jaguar (after getting rid of my first one in 1990, because it was so horribly microphonic).
But still there were those guitars that I got rid of that I never got over, and as a result, ended up buying again. As a matter of fact my 2 current electrics (a Gretsch Country Club, and a Squier Classic Vibe 60s Jaguar), fall into that category, and I'm hoping that I can hold onto these guitars.
Great video. I am grateful to still have my first acoustic and electric guitars. (Kay G101/Peavey Raptor Exp)
It sounds like all the regret is over sentimental reasons. It's not like you traded a '59 Les Paul for a Sony walkman. I have no sentimental connection to instruments. They're just tools. If a tool isn't fulfilling its purpose, or another one does it better, I have no regrets with getting rid of it. I do recall regretting selling an Ibanez guitar because the Ibanez has a certain sound and vibe. But I cured that disappointment easily. I just bought a new Ibanez.
My biggest regret was selling away my first real amp. Got it for free from my high school since they didn’t need it anymore. It was a no name tube amp head with two stacks. Crystal clean sound. But alas, I was never a gig player and I didn’t have space for it when I moved.
Your Yamaha looks like it maybe a Yamaha RGX. I think I may have seen one similar with a pickguard but in another colour a long time ago
I sold my 1987 Charvel Model 6 in Black Cherry after some medical problems. I’ve bought plenty of guitars since, and almost bought another Model 6, but it will never be that same guitar that I had put so many hours into.
My first guitar? It was a Jackson. Similar to the one you have in this vid (not the V) This was well over 20 years ago. It was a gift from my uncle, was an old guitar of his. At the time I had already played for years but never had my own guitar. Any time I went over a friend's house, I always picked up their guitar and played while we drank or played video games or whatever. Anyway, this thing went with me EVERYWHERE. Any second I had, I would play it. One day I forgot it at a "friend's" house. I had a pretty busy week so I didn't go back there again for a few days. When I got there? Totally destroyed. Smashed to bits...I was completely devastated...needless to say, I left with a bloody knuckle...anyway...
since then I never got another guitar, plus me and my friends that did play (who weren't total assholes that would just destroy someone else's shit) drifted apart over time. Haven't touched a guitar since mid 20s until like maybe 6 months ago I was feeling the itch watching your vids and other UA-cam guitarists. Was doing some research on what would be a good guitar under 300 to get back into it...but also posted on Facebook @ing those old friends of mine if they have any guitars they wouldn't mind parting with for under 300. One said he wish he could help but all his guitars now are in the 3k and up category now...but my other friend was like "hey sure dude, it needs some work but it's yours" awesome! so I went to his house with some cash and took at look at it. "hey man, this guitar looks great, has all the hardware, nothing looks broken, just a wobbly tune knob...no worries man, how much you want for it?" "dude, it's yours, I don't play anymore. You used to play constantly when you came to my house when we were kids, so I want you to have it" fuck man...that was awesome :-D
So I got the guitar home, bought myself some higher tier gear than I was planning being I didn't have to pay for the guitar itself. Fixed her up, then started playing non-stop again. For a while anyway. I dunno man, I don't know why I fell off it again. Life shit I guess...anyway, I haven't even touched it in over a month now. Last couple weeks been feeling that itch again, glancing over at it now and again...more and more often. Then finally maybe half an hour ago picked it up, put it in my lap, and strummed around a bit...for a minute anyway. Not plugged in, gear hiding away behind other crap in the closet...but fuck it...I'm gonna play again damnit.
OMFG, I would wanna kill that "friend"...
I own 19 guitars, including my very first classical nylon string ('89) and my first electric a Yamaha RGX121D ('94), and a handful of 90's ESP's including a pre lawsuit LTD explorer. I've only sold 4 instruments during my 3 decades of playing... the only one I kinda 'regret' selling was a dark purple prototype Hamer Standard with hot rod flames graphics.... the silver lining was I sold it to Rick Nielsen after he saw my page on the Hamer roster on their website so it stayed in the Hamer artist fam and definitely ended up in the right hands. I still have my 3 customs they made for me during my endorsement and will never part with those ones.
Your Yamaha looks like it may have been from the mid-90's RGX series.....
One guitar I regret selling was my Matt Heafy Epiphone Les Paul Custom. It was the first guitar I bought that was a higher end guitar. Up until that point I had a Squier Stratocaster and Schecter C-6 Elite. But when I saw that guitar in a store,something told me I had to have it. One of the guys at the store took it down and let me play it. I knew then that it would be mine so after months and months of saving,for which was supposed to be a Jason Hook Epiphone explorer lol,I bought the Les Paul and took it home. It honestly made me a better player because I used to not anchor my picking hand when I would play and it would look and sound sloppy. But almost a year later,I got rid of it because I thought it weighed too much. Much to my dismay,I saw it sit in the store looking back at me as if it were a person looking at me with eyes of betrayal. Sad to say it sold 2 weeks after I sold it and I never saw it again.
One month later the guitar gets discontinued and becomes nearly impossible to sell. It has been nearly 3 years since and has been my biggest regret selling it. The weight felt like an excuse for me to move on but I honestly miss it. At this point I doubt I'll ever find it again but if I do,it won't leave me ever again
1982 ibanez blazer series…..hard tail …maple neck….played like a dream….I bought it new and traded it for a Les Paul copy of some sort…I think it was a saga….wish I had it back
I sold a guitar earlier this month, but I don’t regret it because I bought it on impulse and the money I got from it, I used to buy a much better guitar. In June, I purchased a Jackson Rhoads with a Floyd Rose, which I didn’t care for much, so I decided to have someone else change the strings and I bought a Jackson Dinky as a spare. It had a Strat style whammy bar, but I just fell out of love with it. Then the guitar store in my town became an official Ibanez dealer, I tried an RGA and instantly fell in love. I sold the Dinky on consignment and while it was a tough decision, I’m a lot happier with the Ibanez.
At a point in my life, I fell into hard times, and pawned my Gibson Zack Wylde Camouflage guitar! I had a coffin case and $200 strap 😢
They sold all three separate, and made a killing on just loaning me $300
I don't think that it was Pacifica, but some kind of Yamaha rgx Modell. They were produced before Pacificas in the late 80s, early 90s. And they were more shred than strat type, and yes, some of them had Floyd rose. Google them, they're not that expensive nowadays.
My buds got one of those first run Yamaha Pacificas. The name was defiantly bigger on the head stock. This friend of mine is a real player. Graduated MIT, and that $200. Pacifica is his #1
I'm thankful for my younger self for never letting go of my 1st guitar
I knew back then that I would be grateful today
86 Ibanez roadstar II with a Floyd. I sold it because I didn't like the headstock shape. It had the best neck I have ever played...
😐 I'd love one. They're roughly €2k on reverb.
@@TheSWCantina I paid $600 AUD and thought it was a bit overpriced. I tried to negotiate but the guy at the music store wasn't interested. "It's got a Floyd" he said
It's hard to know what will become sought after vintage gear. I'd love to play one just to see what it feels like.
When I was first starting out I had a light purple Ibanez Gio my Dad bought for me from a guitar shop when we were on holiday and when I got home and hooked it up to my Marshall amp my mind was blown just how chunky it sounded with the humbucker compared to my single coil Squier Strat. I gave it to my friend and he left it at his old house when he moved away!!! “I can’t….it’s a GIO!!!!”
I honestly do not regret selling any of my guitars.
I used to have an s-type from a company called Marlin but got rid of it years ago as I really didn't like it.
Since then I've had an Epiphone SG, Explorer and V, and a Washburn Dimebolt.
I sold the SG about 7 years ago, and I traded the Explorer and Washburn towards that cost of a Gibson LP Traditional 4 years ago.
I've kept the V.
I also have a Slash LP and my very first guitar, a LP copy from a company called Encore.
The Gibson LPs are the guitars I like best as I've been a fan of Slash since I really started getting into music.
They're also quite inspiring when it comes to learning to play.
Mine is a 1990 Ibanez green dot universe I had in college. I'll take a loan if I have to get my hands back on it. What a guitar, Ibanez knocked it off the park from the start with their 7s.
With all of my Christmas money and a little help from my mom, when I was 8 years old I got a white Dean Flying V copy from my local guitar store, because Zack from School Of Rock had a white Flying V and that was my favorite movie. It was one of the best days of my childhood and I still remember seeing it and picking it out and trying it out in the store. When I was 12 or so I wanted to sell it to buy some airsoft guns but I never did and I am incredibly thankful God did not let that happen lol, I still have it and I’m so glad I do because I’m very attached to it coming from that part of my childhood. I also love my Mom and my Dad for supporting my rockstar dreams when I was that age, and ever since.
My first guitar was an unbelievably crappy Ibanez with the lowest frets I’ve ever seen on an ibby. It came in a starter pack with a tiny little amp that sounded horrible. I ended up taking it all apart, which i don’t regret because it started my love of modifying and building guitars. I sold the little amp at a garage sale for I think $20. My first legit guitar was a peavey Wolfgang special (the ivory one) that I still have. it’s been pretty heavily modified, but I don’t care. I’ll never sell it and I still play it. Honestly it has been used so much at this point it could use a refret. I’ve sold a ton of guitars over the years. Interestingly enough the one I wish i had kept was a little short scale Ibanez bass. I’ve sold guitars that were thousands of $ more, but it was so much fun to play.
I regret selling my first real electric guitar an RG560 which I had a roland gk-2 pickup on. I remember struggling with it having a double locking trem, but it was only because no one explained it to me so it was trial by fire after breaking a string. I tried replacing it with really nice Ibanez prestige models but it's not the same. I'll never forget that guitar and the time spent on it.
I sold my first guitar to a fellow school student , probably almost 20 years ago now. However I happened to bump into him a couple of years ago, and he still had it! I bought it back from him (for less than I sold it), and apparently he had never even changed the strings on it. I gave it a full setup and played it for about an hour, and it's been sat collecting dust ever since. But that's exactly what you want your first guitar to do, right?
I only have one regret: the 1982 Les Paul Custom my parents scraped up to get me for my birthday. I grew to dislike the scale of Gibson guitars, so I'm sure I would've sold it by now anyway, but I regret doing it back then. I traded it for a Hamer flying V that I promptly ruined with "modifications" that I didn't have the skill or tools to do properly.
I had a PRS CE 22…it was made in the old Annapolis factory (ca. 1996)…thats the one I regret the most…I still look for it on the web to this day!!!!
I am 45 and I still have to sell something in order to be afford to get something else. I have a ton of regrets about gear I have sold. My 2001 USA Fender P Bass, 1996 MIM Fender P bass, and my German Warwick Corvette Standard are definitely 3 instruments I would love to still own. Just thinking about why I had to sell them and what was left to show for them is pretty depressing. Life has not been kind and I have had to sell everything of value (not just musical gear) over and over and over again through the years and rebuild. I can only afford to keep 1 bass at any given time. Life is still being quite cruel, so I expect this cycle to continue sadly. I cannot seem to figure a way out of being used up and tossed in the garbage by terrible employers. I feel like giving up quite often sadly. Hard work and dedication doesn't always pay off, I am a precautionary tale. My friends say I am too nice and too honest and people take advantage and use me. I do not disagree. It is just who I am sadly. Pity party story aside, keep doing what you are doing... I love your videos and stories. Oft times creators like yourself help me take my mind off of all the negative and bring me to a much happier place. Cheers!
Fortunately, I haven't had the need to sell my guitars (I'd sell my PC, but not them). However, my dad had. I remember he bought an Ibanez GRG40 and a Fender amp for about 250$, because that was during Covid and we had to stay at home (he had nothing better to do). At this time, I wasn't interested at learning guitar and after messing around for a year, he realized that he couldn't play as before. So, he ended up selling it to a local friend of his. After his death, I was devastated and started listening to more metal for some reason. Then more guitar videos started popping up on UA-cam, the more hooked I became. So, I ended up buying a Jackson for 200$ (this was a year ago) and a Rocksmith cable. Have been playing ever since (and I also keep my dad's old classical guitar).
I currently own a Pacifica, but I've been through hell, recently. My old boss didn't pay 7 months worth of work, I got scammed, my country's economy is terrible, right now (minimum wage of about $200 a month), etc. Still, I vowed on never selling it, no matter what. I know owning this guitar is a one in a lifetime opportunity and I cannot waste it.
The headstock logo is indeed different from the one you showed. In case you want to see if it is the same as mine, I'll glady show you.
I sold an early 2000’s Jackson SL3 in orange sunburst. The one that got away for sure. I can still picture what the neck felt like in my hands.
Ibanez Jem. One of the first ones. The yellow one with the pyramids. Sold it in the middle of the grunge era. People we’re screwing their faces up at it at gigs. Still crying to this day.