After being bored stiff by a hundred gear geek videos i found this video very refreshing. A guy who's more into the music and finding the best result without sacrificing to the god of consumerism. A true artist.
"when it comes down to it, its an amplifier so it amplifies sound." Outstanding sir! Funny how we get the straight dope from a guy who isn't trying to sell us a product. GodSpeed Aaron!
Put the guitar into the return socket of the effects loop and you bypass the preamp which is for electric guitars. This is a quick fix at a gig. You already have EQ on the guitars preamp.
chris Turbo I will try that. I have used the lower input jack which also sounds ok too on my fender deluxe 112 which is a very bright but neutral sounding amp
This was super helpful! A LOT of UA-camr's assume you know everything there is to know (and more) about AMPs, etc. Therefore, their explanations are rambling and you'd need an amp and half a dozen pedals to change your tone a few cents! This one just simply hits the mark! Thanks...
Thank you! I only have a Fender "practice" amp sold with a Squier guitar beginner's kit I bought at a garage sale. It only has 10 watts, but it is enough for me to accompany our church choir, in which I sing, and spread the sound around a community room at our senior's home where I lead hymns in my small town. I play a Yamaha APX700II through it. I have found the same results you have.The only caveat I have found is small tweaking to compensate for the addition of people in the room. Usually, that means just a little louder. Its what I can afford, and I have had no complaints. Playing, and often, is the most important thing!
+Sandra McIntyre Thank you for your comment! I agree playing, and often is so important. Most of my life I have used "what I have". I now have been blessed to own some top shelf gear. Great gear does make a huge difference, I have found from experience, but, when it's all you have, you learn and grow with it! Cheers and happy picking!
Aaron offers excellent inspiration here. Some people viewing this may not have any amplifier at all yet and are looking to get an "electric" one for dual purpose playing. Although if someone is utilizing this idea and is still looking to get an acoustic amp but wants to spend as little as possible, Behringer makes something that just might work out nicely for you at $99- www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/AT108--behringer-ultracoustic-at108-15-watt-8-inch-acoustic-instrument-amp
I just discovered if you bypass the preamp in the amp and plug into the FX loop return, the guitar is not colored by the amp preamp. The EQ can then be controlled by the EQ on the guitar preamp.
Right on, brother. No sales pitch here. I’ve got a Marshall Silver Jubilee and I play my classical guitar through it. It sounds incredible. I used to sing in clubs through a Fender Vibroverb reissue. It made my voice punchy and warm. And I played my guitar through the other channel. Sometimes you gotta do with what you’ve got. I totally agree.
I have a reason for responding to your comment. I wonder if you are the famous Jack Jones singer of the late 50s to the present day. I'm prompted by your mention of knowing Patsy Clines and Jim Reeves guitarist.
and if you play an electric giutar using the acoustic settings it sounds lovely and even the number 6 e string can sound like a bass giutar string , if you dont have an acoustic giutar setting on your amp then use an acoustic giutar simiulator pedal and some other bits and ya ok then
Just as an additional idea, someone might wish to add an EQ pedal to fine-tune or lower certain frequencies. A 7 band EQ (Behringer makes a very affordable one) or 10 band one could allow lowering some boomy frequency or one that feeds back where just bass/mid/treble might not be fine enough. I think if an electric amp has a good clean setting, it could sound ok with acoustic (my Fender Champion 40 sounds great on the Princeton amp model with my nylon-string with stick-on piezo ).
Thank you. I have several nice electric amps that I like and paid good money for. The guy at the local music store told me I had to buy a new acoustic amp for a new electric acoustic guitar I just bought. Lol I'm guessing because I'm a female he thought I was stupid enough to believe him when he told me that I would wreck my electric amp if I plugged in the acoustic-electric. I experimented with different amps and settings. After I watched your video I tried a Fender GT-100 modeling amp on the clean channel and turned up the bass and the treble. I added a little bit of reverb and it sounds amazing. Thank you for saving me another 200.00 dollars for a amp I don't need.
I punched in so many variations on the same question about trying to get my acoustic to sound like my guitar unplugged and you hit the nail on the head. Thanks Aaron.
Great video and attitude... 'No-nonsense, get to it, use what you have, save a little coin, have fun.' Thanks, and thanks to the other commentators for their tips.
As the man says - it’s an amplifier - get over it and use it! I’ve played my strats and electro-acoustics through a lot of different amp and modellers over the decades and the only time I ever had an issue was when I caught the volume control and blew out a Warfdale speaker on my 700W hi-fi. Otherwise - they all sound good and you just adjust the guitar and amp settings to get what you want. At the moment I’m playing my new strat through the GE Labs amp simulator on my iPad and feeding that directly into a small JVC bluetooth speaker, with an aux input - and it works well; it also works just fine with my Crafter electro-acoustic - and if I need more oomph - I’ll use a bigger bluetooth speaker or plug into something else like a large soundbar! Anyway - who cares - it all comes down to what you’re making happen between your fingers and those strings!
Good advice, Many thanks. Its true, sometimes we cannot afford something we really like, so what we do have, we have to work with it. Be content and be resourceful. And just being like that, this tutorial exist. Its possible. Many thanks...
Thanks for for video, all this while I thought it's not wise to use an electric guitar amp for an acoustic guitar..now I know that it's possible n sounds just like an acoustic amp itself..Thanks Bro👍
Thanks Aaron, I'm a beginner and had questions about that very subject myself. Thanks for taking the time to share that info. And Aaron, you play very well for a non pro. Very well indeed sir. ✌🏻🇺🇸
i have the zoom fire 15 modeling electric guitar amp and it has a setting for acoustic guitar so i can set it and play my electric guitar like an acoustic and its a nice clean easy to hear sound and even the base string sounds come out well to
Thanks a lot-keep it simple an go with the solid basics-cool. Sonetimes thats a lot more than you get with costy and nice top equipment but less knowledge. Have fun
Awesome tips. I remember going to a local music store here in the Philippines and I asked the sales guy whether I can use my standard electric guitar amp for acoustic, and he said "no... there's a specific amp for acoustics", which is true, but what he told me next was ridiculous, "...the speaker might break because it's not made for that". Obviously, he didn't know what he was talking about.
+Moving Picks Thank you for commenting. I understand the difference between an acoustic amp and an electric amp. There is a notice, especially on the low end. That said, I also think, depending on the electric amp you are using, it is possible to get satisfactory results. Thank you again for your comment. Also please subscribe if you would like.
It's usual that those guys know nothing lol. Guitar and bass amplifiers uses special speakers ("for instrument") which have reinforces in the cone to resist overloads (30% more of power is typical in amps over saturated with volume at max), and so their treble is so low.. Amplifiers for acoustic guitars and voice uses hi-fi speakers which can't be overloaded at all and so there is danger to break if you use a bass or electric guitar on them. The "problem" with electric guitar amplifier is the equalization because it is not plane at all, even with the controls at middle it have a big notch in the middle frecuencies, which is not the same frec nor the same cut for every brand. You can use it anyway but the sound will never be as clear as an acoustic guitar amp.
I’ve Fender super reverb, will try my Spanish. Flamenco and my Yamaha A3R tonight with it. I’ve also the Boss AD-10 acoustic pedal that I’ll plug the guitars too first, then to the Gender Super Reverb and see. Hopefully the tone will be good.
The reason you can't get great acoustic sound from an electric amp is not all the "bells and whistles", but what it DOESN'T give you that is essential for acoustic, specifically the high frequencies and overtones. Now, your guitar sounds pretty good here, but I suspect that's mostly because the camera mic picked up quite a bit of its natural sound, beside what's coming out of your speakers. Someone suggested adding a tweeter. That's a good idea for giving you those airy frequencies that are so crucial for acoustic guitar sound. Pushing all the EQ controls, including the mids, doesn't sound like a great idea to me. But hey, if you like it, good for you.
Artists of previous generations and before made do with what they had or could afford. Amplifiers were far less sophisticated and expensive than what we have today, bu they did more with what they had. People have become pretentious. I have a dedicated acoustic amp, but I use my digital modelling electiric amps regularly when practising and playing my acoustic at home for my own pleasure. It's just human nature. Unplug one, plug in the other. Adjust settings, dial in reverb/chorus as desired. Go!. Sounds great.
I have electric and acoustic amps and I use both.right now my acoustic amp is broke so I have no choice but to use my electric guitar amps.just work with the tone and experiment with it a little bit and you will be fine.
Thank You so much.I have the same thing.I have a Fender Front man amp.212 R.It is not a Acoustic amp.But I will try what have shown .I play a Takamine G series Guitar.I will try what You have shown.Again thank you.
Nice video man. I have the opposite thing, I'm getting a new electric guitar but currently only have an acoustic amp, we should swap! I jest of course, anyhow, having watched this I think I'll make what I have work while I look for a more appropriate model :) You have a great day
Thanks Aaron Pix for your advice, I normally run my Martin D35 or Epiphone J200 ce through the mixing board with good results. I just tested these guitars through my electric solid state a Marshall 8080, thought it would be hurting my ears treble at 10,but much to my surprise everything on 10,no reverb and volume at 2 in my home, it sounds very good, natural to my ears. I will test it out at full volume while rehearsing. Of course an acoustic amp is better, but I won't buy one, if it still sounds good on higer volumes I can live with it. I found some other advice on line bass at 3 o clock, treble at 3 0 clock and mids at 9 0 clock. Tried it, sounded muddy. I liked your advice so much better!
Exactly the same amp I was wanting to know if it was ok with acoustic! I'm looking at an 8080 myself and was hoping it is good enough for acoustic and electric. How did you go turning the volume up?
I have seen an electric guitar amps blow up the pre-amp on a cheap acoustic (think $100-250 acoustic with low end preamp). I also have a taylor with the same pickup system as Aaron's, and I have run it through a solid state fender amp without issue. I am not sure of the universality of his claims, but I haven't tested the taylor through a tube amp yet. That Peavey mace is a sweet piece of kit by the way.
Sir would that work with the fender twin reverb amp and what is your master volume set on your amp please let me know thank you if that works on my fender twin that would really help me a lot with my 12-string guitar
Watching this video, it was a great tips. Can you please share, what's model of the Amp that you have? Or you can help to recommend which model Amp would be good for both type of guitar? Thanks for sharing!
After being bored stiff by a hundred gear geek videos i found this video very refreshing. A guy who's more into the music and finding the best result without sacrificing to the god of consumerism. A true artist.
I am humbled. Thank you for watching!
"when it comes down to it, its an amplifier so it amplifies sound." Outstanding sir! Funny how we get the straight dope from a guy who isn't trying to sell us a product. GodSpeed Aaron!
Great common sense video. Make the most with whatever you have. Good advice that we can apply to just about everything
Yep I tell my wife the same...lol....no she's Japanese so I am more than up to it!! lol
Of course you can plug amp into acoustic guitar. What's common sense? With a bit if thinking you can do it
Hi from 🇬🇧 brilliant video this has helped me to get my accoustic to another level without costing a penny thank you
Great to hear!
Put the guitar into the return socket of the effects loop and you bypass the preamp which is for electric guitars.
This is a quick fix at a gig.
You already have EQ on the guitars preamp.
this sounds like a good trick i'm going to try. i wouldn't have thought of. thanks
chris Turbo intresting
Just done that on a Peavey Studio Pro with a Martin, sounds very good. Great advice.
chris Turbo
I will try that. I have used the lower input jack which also sounds ok too on my fender deluxe 112 which is a very bright but neutral sounding amp
That's fu***n genius.....it works great......
Good message: make the best of whatever gear you have.
This was super helpful! A LOT of UA-camr's assume you know everything there is to know (and more) about AMPs, etc. Therefore, their explanations are rambling and you'd need an amp and half a dozen pedals to change your tone a few cents! This one just simply hits the mark! Thanks...
Thank you! I only have a Fender "practice" amp sold with a Squier guitar beginner's kit I bought at a garage sale. It only has 10 watts, but it is enough for me to accompany our church choir, in which I sing, and spread the sound around a community room at our senior's home where I lead hymns in my small town. I play a Yamaha APX700II through it. I have found the same results you have.The only caveat I have found is small tweaking to compensate for the addition of people in the room. Usually, that means just a little louder. Its what I can afford, and I have had no complaints. Playing, and often, is the most important thing!
+Sandra McIntyre Thank you for your comment! I agree playing, and often is so important. Most of my life I have used "what I have". I now have been blessed to own some top shelf gear. Great gear does make a huge difference, I have found from experience, but, when it's all you have, you learn and grow with it! Cheers and happy picking!
Aaron offers excellent inspiration here. Some people viewing this may not have any amplifier at all yet and are looking to get an "electric" one for dual purpose playing.
Although if someone is utilizing this idea and is still looking to get an acoustic amp but wants to spend as little as possible, Behringer makes something that just might work out nicely for you at $99-
www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/AT108--behringer-ultracoustic-at108-15-watt-8-inch-acoustic-instrument-amp
Check out converting combo amp to a head, guy used a 15w fender and rand a cab with it sounded amazing
Attitudes.. Positive ones can change The World. Thank you for the time and effort you took to make this video!
I always use my electric guitar amp with my accoustic/electric but on the clean channel with the ego mini compressor pedal
Totally agree on the amp usage! I'm running my Taylor guitar through a Peavey Classis Chorus 130 and it seems to sound just fine. Thanks!
I just discovered if you bypass the preamp in the amp and plug into the FX loop return, the guitar is not colored by the amp preamp. The EQ can then be controlled by the EQ on the guitar preamp.
Wow! Only you gave me the simple straight answer I was looking for. Thanks!
This is such a wholesome video
Right on, brother. No sales pitch here. I’ve got a Marshall Silver Jubilee and I play my classical guitar through it. It sounds incredible. I used to sing in clubs through a Fender Vibroverb reissue. It made my voice punchy and warm. And I played my guitar through the other channel. Sometimes you gotta do with what you’ve got. I totally agree.
One of the best players I know played behind pasty cline , Jim reeves, and a host of old big names played his acoustic though a 64 fender twin
I have a reason for responding to your comment.
I wonder if you are the famous Jack Jones singer of the late 50s to the present day.
I'm prompted by your mention of knowing Patsy Clines and Jim Reeves guitarist.
That's what we did in the old days before acoustic amps were invented👍
Thanks, man, I needed this video. Really loved your play, clean, precise and smooth, kudos!
Thank you very much for your tips, its easy to forget its all about having a good time and doing the best you can with what you have. Cheers
Thank you for taking the time to comment. Have a wonderful day!
I used to own a Deuce back in the 70s. It was louder than loud. The mace is even more of a monster. You tamed that monster. Good man.
I have a fender hot rod deluxe III and my old martin sounds just fine thru it. You make the best with what you have. Great video.
That is the same amp I have and I was here looking for info about hooking up my Fender Hellcat to it. Thank you. Now I know it’s good to go.
David Shelton bet that sounds sweet! 👍🏻🎸
and if you play an electric giutar using the acoustic settings it sounds lovely and even the number 6 e string can sound like a bass giutar string , if you dont have an acoustic giutar setting on your amp then use an acoustic giutar simiulator pedal and some other bits and ya ok then
Sounds great to me. I will give these settings a try. Nice demo.
Just as an additional idea, someone might wish to add an EQ pedal to fine-tune or lower certain frequencies. A 7 band EQ (Behringer makes a very affordable one) or 10 band one could allow lowering some boomy frequency or one that feeds back where just bass/mid/treble might not be fine enough. I think if an electric amp has a good clean setting, it could sound ok with acoustic (my Fender Champion 40 sounds great on the Princeton amp model with my nylon-string with stick-on piezo ).
Incredible!!!!!... Thank you very much for your expertise!!!!
Ten excelente día amigo!!!
Thank you kindly! Have a great day!
Thank you. I have several nice electric amps that I like and paid good money for. The guy at the local music store told me I had to buy a new acoustic amp for a new electric acoustic guitar I just bought. Lol I'm guessing because I'm a female he thought I was stupid enough to believe him when he told me that I would wreck my electric amp if I plugged in the acoustic-electric. I experimented with different amps and settings. After I watched your video I tried a Fender GT-100 modeling amp on the clean channel and turned up the bass and the treble. I added a little bit of reverb and it sounds amazing. Thank you for saving me another 200.00 dollars for a amp I don't need.
I am glad it works for you!
still totally relevant in 2020, thank you, and you presented it in plain English
Sounds awesome!
Oh wow it sounds fine, good to know I dont need to buy an acoustic amp with a taylor t5
I punched in so many variations on the same question about trying to get my acoustic to sound like my guitar unplugged and you hit the nail on the head. Thanks Aaron.
thank you so much, just purchased an electric acoustic and appreciate your video. Can't believe there are people out there that didn't like this!
thanks for this dude, first video i've seen on this topic that uses common sense!
Kurdy Wilcock our guitar player at church played his ovation acoustic guitar on a fender prinction for years sounded great
Just what i was looking for,thank you man you're the best.
Thank you for great video tutorial Aaron!
Great video and attitude... 'No-nonsense, get to it, use what you have, save a little coin, have fun.'
Thanks, and thanks to the other commentators for their tips.
As the man says - it’s an amplifier - get over it and use it! I’ve played my strats and electro-acoustics through a lot of different amp and modellers over the decades and the only time I ever had an issue was when I caught the volume control and blew out a Warfdale speaker on my 700W hi-fi. Otherwise - they all sound good and you just adjust the guitar and amp settings to get what you want. At the moment I’m playing my new strat through the GE Labs amp simulator on my iPad and feeding that directly into a small JVC bluetooth speaker, with an aux input - and it works well; it also works just fine with my Crafter electro-acoustic - and if I need more oomph - I’ll use a bigger bluetooth speaker or plug into something else like a large soundbar! Anyway - who cares - it all comes down to what you’re making happen between your fingers and those strings!
Good advice, Many thanks. Its true, sometimes we cannot afford something we really like, so what we do have, we have to work with it. Be content and be resourceful. And just being like that, this tutorial exist. Its possible. Many thanks...
Thanks for for video, all this while I thought it's not wise to use an electric guitar amp for an acoustic guitar..now I know that it's possible n sounds just like an acoustic amp itself..Thanks Bro👍
Great video. I play acoustic through my electric guitar amp and it sounds good. The only issue I have is with feedback. Nice playing by the way.
Great job !
Keep On Pickin
I could never afford the best gear..and I will use any guitar or amp I can buy thats local and reasonable!!
Thank you very much!
Wow, nice workaround!
I use a peavey bandit 65 for small to mid size gigs and my fender twin for larger gigs great sound
I want to thank you for this video. Awesome, simple advice.
Thanks for demo on a normal electric guitar amp. Just goes to show you d
can get a very decent sound through a normal amp.
Thank you. Your the first one that makes good sense.
Thank you kindly!
Thanks Aaron, I'm a beginner and had questions about that very subject myself. Thanks for taking the time to share that info. And Aaron, you play very well for a non pro. Very well indeed sir. ✌🏻🇺🇸
Very much appreciate you input! Thank you!
@@nncnewsnow 👍
Thank you for this video! What a great man.
Have a wonderful day.
i have the zoom fire 15 modeling electric guitar amp and it has a setting for acoustic guitar so i can set it and play my electric guitar like an acoustic and its a nice clean easy to hear sound and even the base string sounds come out well to
fun! also works with amp vsts too
Glad this is helpful! Thank you for watching!
Thanks for the video mate.
Thanks a lot-keep it simple an go with the solid basics-cool. Sonetimes thats a lot more than you get with costy and nice top equipment but less knowledge. Have fun
For some reason the video lifted my mood. I think partially because you reminded me of John Candy :) Thank you anyway!
Good stuff. Straight up and straight away
ty so much for a very realistic, good audio, good video, bless you.
Thanks dude, going to plug my LAG acoustic into my new Marshall
Let me know how it works for you!
Personally, my allegiance is to unplugged instruments. But hey you sure nail it.
Good advice.. you can still play acoustic on electric guitar amp.. Just enjoy what you have..
Awesome...your advice is helpful
Glad to be of service! Thank you for watching!
Awesome tips. I remember going to a local music store here in the Philippines and I asked the sales guy whether I can use my standard electric guitar amp for acoustic, and he said "no... there's a specific amp for acoustics", which is true, but what he told me next was ridiculous, "...the speaker might break because it's not made for that". Obviously, he didn't know what he was talking about.
+Moving Picks Thank you for commenting. I understand the difference between an acoustic amp and an electric amp. There is a notice, especially on the low end. That said, I also think, depending on the electric amp you are using, it is possible to get satisfactory results. Thank you again for your comment. Also please subscribe if you would like.
It's usual that those guys know nothing lol. Guitar and bass amplifiers uses special speakers ("for instrument") which have reinforces in the cone to resist overloads (30% more of power is typical in amps over saturated with volume at max), and so their treble is so low.. Amplifiers for acoustic guitars and voice uses hi-fi speakers which can't be overloaded at all and so there is danger to break if you use a bass or electric guitar on them.
The "problem" with electric guitar amplifier is the equalization because it is not plane at all, even with the controls at middle it have a big notch in the middle frecuencies, which is not the same frec nor the same cut for every brand. You can use it anyway but the sound will never be as clear as an acoustic guitar amp.
Moving Picks thats as bad as an american salesman who told me all guitars are nitro cellulose coated now days.
I’ve Fender super reverb, will try my Spanish. Flamenco and my Yamaha A3R tonight with it. I’ve also the Boss AD-10 acoustic pedal that I’ll plug the guitars too first, then to the Gender Super Reverb and see. Hopefully the tone will be good.
THANK U THANK U
SOUNDED AMAZING AS WELL AS YOUR PLAYIN
keep on keepin on ol hoss 🤘🏽🙏🏼
Thank you kindly!
The reason you can't get great acoustic sound from an electric amp is not all the "bells and whistles", but what it DOESN'T give you that is essential for acoustic, specifically the high frequencies and overtones. Now, your guitar sounds pretty good here, but I suspect that's mostly because the camera mic picked up quite a bit of its natural sound, beside what's coming out of your speakers. Someone suggested adding a tweeter. That's a good idea for giving you those airy frequencies that are so crucial for acoustic guitar sound. Pushing all the EQ controls, including the mids, doesn't sound like a great idea to me. But hey, if you like it, good for you.
Thanks for some great tips 👍👍👍
Thanks mate !
Welcome mate!
Artists of previous generations and before made do with what they had or could afford. Amplifiers were far less sophisticated and expensive than what we have today, bu they did more with what they had. People have become pretentious. I have a dedicated acoustic amp, but I use my digital modelling electiric amps regularly when practising and playing my acoustic at home for my own pleasure. It's just human nature. Unplug one, plug in the other. Adjust settings, dial in reverb/chorus as desired. Go!. Sounds great.
I love the way you play man
I have electric and acoustic amps and I use both.right now my acoustic amp is broke so I have no choice but to use my electric guitar amps.just work with the tone and experiment with it a little bit and you will be fine.
Thank You so much.I have the same thing.I have a Fender Front man amp.212 R.It is not a Acoustic amp.But I will try what have shown .I play a Takamine G series Guitar.I will try what You have shown.Again thank you.
Excellent! Very helpful & ty👍🎼
Cool the Peavey "Lynyrd Skynyrd" Mace amp.
Great video. Sound is superb!
Thank you for your comment!
Nice video man. I have the opposite thing, I'm getting a new electric guitar but currently only have an acoustic amp, we should swap! I jest of course, anyhow, having watched this I think I'll make what I have work while I look for a more appropriate model :) You have a great day
Sounds better than most acoustic amps...
Many thanks!
Thanks Aaron Pix for your advice, I normally run my Martin D35 or Epiphone J200 ce through the mixing board with good results. I just tested these guitars through my electric solid state a Marshall 8080, thought it would be hurting my ears treble at 10,but much to my surprise everything on 10,no reverb and volume at 2 in my home, it sounds very good, natural to my ears. I will test it out at full volume while rehearsing. Of course an acoustic amp is better, but I won't buy one, if it still sounds good on higer volumes I can live with it. I found some other advice on line bass at 3 o clock, treble at 3 0 clock and mids at 9 0 clock. Tried it, sounded muddy. I liked your advice so much better!
Thank you very much for your comment. How is this working out for you in live events? Thank you
Exactly the same amp I was wanting to know if it was ok with acoustic! I'm looking at an 8080 myself and was hoping it is good enough for acoustic and electric. How did you go turning the volume up?
Great video. Just what I was looking for. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you, great channel
Dude that sounds awesome.
Thank you so much!
Right on! Sounds good to me.
I have seen an electric guitar amps blow up the pre-amp on a cheap acoustic (think $100-250 acoustic with low end preamp). I also have a taylor with the same pickup system as Aaron's, and I have run it through a solid state fender amp without issue. I am not sure of the universality of his claims, but I haven't tested the taylor through a tube amp yet. That Peavey mace is a sweet piece of kit by the way.
good advice, I will continue to use my Vox amp on my acoustic instead instead of buying a special acoustic amp
Thank you for your feedback! Best regards!
Thanks for this. You shoot straight!
I try. Thank you for watching!
"Hey, just enjoy playing" that is the truth.
Sounds great...!!!
Great advice, thank you!
Sir would that work with the fender twin reverb amp and what is your master volume set on your amp please let me know thank you if that works on my fender twin that would really help me a lot with my 12-string guitar
Great video my Man!
Thank you!
You are welcome! Thank you!
you're awesome man, thanks for the video
Thank you. that was what I was looking for in a crazy market out there to sell more. Thanks and you play great.
Thank you for your comment!
Thank you for Your vídeo!
You can use any amp with a clean channel if you EQ it correctly.
Yes indeed. Thank you for your comment!
Very nice taylor
Watching this video, it was a great tips. Can you please share, what's model of the Amp that you have? Or you can help to recommend which model Amp would be good for both type of guitar? Thanks for sharing!
Awesome! Keep it up!
Thanks buddy.
Thank you.
Just at a switchable Tweeter with an L-pad (volume control) to your guitar amp and add an EQ pedal that's dedicated for the acoustic
Great advice! Thank you for watching!
it sounds good
Sounds great. Im doing this today on the rehersals. :)
How did it work for you? Success? Fail? I'm interested in you input! Thanks!!!