Call it nostalgia, but if you're old enough to remember the 80s and 90s, you remember Carvin catalogs! I own a couple Carvins (including a DC600), that I will not part with, if for no other reason than the beloved name on the headstock.
Carvin gear, in general, is some of the most underrated around. Their very short lived foray into making moderate to high-ish end microphones, for example, is not very well known, but the condenser and tube condenser mics they put out in that short time are fantastic. However, they didn't sell well due to brand identity: "Wait, Carvin makes mics? Weird." Picture Fender selling somewhat unique looking $400-1000 condenser and tube condenser mics (including custom power supplies, cables & hard cases), with the familiar Fender headstock logo all over the place... and imagine what the reaction would likely be to that to get an idea of why Carvin didn't stay in the mic market. Haha. They were maybe a bit of a curiosity to some people, but for $400-1000, Carvin was in an uphill battle from the start with so many already well established mic brands (Neumann, RØDE, AKG, Audio Technica, etc) offering nice mics in that middle price range. So, there aren't a ton of those Carvin mics out there, but they do sound good for the price (if you can find them for sale).
Another brand from the 80s that is worth checking out is Fernandes. They were made in Japan in the same factory that made the Jacksons are Charvels. Indeed, the ST-75 is effectively the same guitar as the Charvel Model 4, but with "Fernandes" on the headstock. I have an STJ-75 that plays as well as any USA Jackson.
My Carvin DC600 is one of my favorites that I own. Bought it used. Swamp ash body wings, 5 pieces walnut and maple neck thru, birdseye maple fretboard, original FR, pull knob coil split, Carvin M22SD / H22 humbuckers, satin finish... Love it
It's sooooo bad that it even goes way past the "so ugly it's kind of cute" territory that some dogs live in. If I were teaching a general design class I would keep one of those right next to the lectern as the ultimate bad example.
In 96 I bought a rogue RG6B. More or less it was a next to exact copy of a Jackson. Complete with locking headstock, sharkfin inlays, humbuckers at the neck, a single coil mid body, humbuckers at the tail bridge and a licensed floyd rose. All equipment in black body in a vibrant cobalt blue
Guild S100 reissue is one of the best feeling guitars I’ve played in a long time. It can also take hits I’ve waked this thing so many times and it has zero scratches or dings it’s really wild
Now that I'm older I've been on a quest for light easy to play guitars. Was shopping for a Parker and found them used only and expensive. Wound up going with Strandberg. Kind of pricey but was so pleased I bought 2.
+1 for Yamaha Pacifica. I have a 521 and it plays and sounds great. The Pacifica tremolo system was better than my American Special Strat tremolo. After putting in roller bridge pieces, a TUSQ nut, and TUSQ string guides the Strat is about as good as the Pacifica regarding intonation and tremolo. If you come across a 521 you might like it. I had an African band in the studio for 2 CDs and their guitarists used the Pacifica for all their guitar tracks.
I bought a Vester Telecaster when I was in Korea over 20 years ago...It's my travel-around guitar and I still play it nearly every day...I really like it. It came with a hard case, cord, strap, guitar stand, pack of strings, and some picks....for less than $100 new! I changed out ALL the electronics - that cost twice as much as the guitar, but it cleaned up to sound like a Tele should. The tuning pegs are junk...when I change the strings, a couple fall out of the head! But they work. The guitar has literally been all around the world with me and it's held up well.
Yeah, I'm not crazy about the aesthetics of the body on the Parker you show, nor the headstock shape, but I've played two and they were both great to play. What surprised me was when I built a guitar with that body shape, and a similar neck, it was extremely comfortable and extremely well balanced.
Hey brother ! I love your channel. Your reviews have saved me money AND cost me money. Between you and the guitologist I've actually become educated in the world of equipment . Your a trip and if there is anyway I can help support your channel let me know! Thanks for all you do Robert!
Thank you so much, glad you’re enjoying my channel! Various different ways to support the channel are down in the Description if you’re interested in doing so. Thanks again!
The only time I've ever gotten to play a Parker Nightfly was in, wait for it . . . . . GUITAR CENTER in Columbus. I loved it straight away and always wanted one. The price tag kinda thwarted that though.
A buddy of mine had a Parker Fly. I thought it was stupidly gimmicky, but he sounded great on it, and when I tried it out, I thought it played very nicely.
@@malcolmhardwick4258 Is that the JA-90 model? I couldn't find the TC-90, but yeah almost the same model minus the double cut and the TC-90 is made in Korea. Excellent guitars. I wish Fender still made the double cut version as I love dc guitars. I upgraded the pick ups of mine with some mini humbuckers from the Creamery and it's easily one of the best guitars I've had the pleasure of owning.
@@imd1b4u never heard of these before. They look cool! I especially love the finish options they had. If there's a squier I would buy, this could be one of them
The expression on your face and the long, silent pause as you showed the reversed Flying V Gibson guitar of the week was priceless! That, alone, made the video for me--a true LOL moment! The rest of the (actually) cool guitars you showed made for a great video as well. Thanks!
Yamaha Acoustic line are made well too. $229 for the 800 Dreadnoughts are great sounding guitars. I love mine ! Rarely tune it even during season changes in Michigan.
I just picked up a pacifica tele copy. Had half a dozen mods in mind before it was even in my hands. $140 CAD. Thanks for boosting my confidence in my purchase.
Had a Parker Fly Deluxe. As much as I loved it, I couldn't stop that upper horn from impaling my chest, no matter how I held it. I'd come home with bruises on my chest. At the same time, I still miss it.
Back in the 80s there was a company in Japan called Westbury and they were a kind les Paul type guitar, but much higher quality. Can't tell you how much nicer, unless you have a les Paul and one together to compare. But worth a look. Keep up the good work.
@The Rebound Guy they are great, it's a shame they were only in production for such a short time, I'm not sure if the company changed their name, or went on to other things, but I haven't found a guitar that I feel so comfortable playing, however I haven't tried a Paul Reed Smith. I hope I'll like one of them, because I've just had the last fret job done on my Westbury, next time it's new frets!!! And I dont only play that, I also play an Ibaneze , a Squire ,an Epiphone and two basses. But I go back to the Westbury, it's like a really comfortable pair of shoes, just fits me, and makes all the right noises!!!
If memory serves, Westbury was one of the high end marques manufactured by Matsumoku, the only guitar company to make necks even better than Peavey. Sweet guitars, although the electronics aren’t that great. But no one did better wood working than Matsumoku and with the higher end brands like Greco and Westbury they could really shine.
For me its the Charvel San Dimas. I own the hardtail version in the chlorine burst colour. its not really that unknown a model but its an incredible guitar. This is coming from a mostly blues guy, i bought it so i had something a little different and with a bit more punch and i adore this guitar. I was amazed how good it sounds played clean or slightly pushed as well as driven for which im assuming it was mostly designed for even though they added a coil split into the model too so gives you a massive variety of cool sounds, which is very useful for a guy like me who plays mostly clean or with just a bit of punch. You can pick these up for less than $600 USD used and is amazing value for money.
I owned a mid 80s Washburn flying V that had the Wonderbar trem on it. I absolutely loved that trem and regret to this day selling it. I want to say the model was an RR-11v...
I had a '82 Dean ML back in the day...i could play that thing thru any amp and come real close to the "brown sound"...dont know what those stock pick-ups were (maybe dimarzios) but that guitar was a beast!!!!
Cool! Own a Pacifica 604w from 2003, tricked out 80's style. Flawless instrument in materials as well as fit/finish. Don't know if they're really underappreciated or that unknown, but they punch above their weight.
This is an interesting list, excellent compilation. On the bass guitar side, the Peavey Foundation, is one I had never heard of, but picked up recently from the 80's that's awesome and not to sleep on.
I have a Godin Freeway SA, which is hands down the best guitar I’ve ever played. The rosewood neck - which I had refretted with stainless steel frets - is sheer perfection. I also have a Charvel Pro Mod and a USA Strat, both great guitars, but not in the same league as the Godin. It’s a shame that Godin stopped making this model, as I think it’s an absolute classic. John McLaughlin played one for a couple of years, which is endorsement enough for me.
Hey thanks again for some good ole guitar info!! I really like seeing the different guitars that make the list of ones might not know about..always interesting..i just found n subscribed to u the other day..now find something good to watch on ur channel all the time so keep up the good work, Chris Ferrell guitarist for Diamond Cutt, Pitch Black Sun and FURL
I think you might have missed one. Electra Guitars made a LP copy that was fantastic back in the late 70's early 80's. Also Burns makes a few guitars that are player guitars.
I 100% agree with the Carvin. Not that model specifically. Just Carvin, period. I recently ran into a used DC127 at my local Guitar Center and was excited to try it out as I hadn't seen one in forever. Koa top, maple neck-through body, with rounded sides and an ebony fretboard. It was one of the best playing (and sounding) guitars I have ever played. Build quality is phenomenal. You can tell the people who made it really cared about making a quality instrument. It now lives with me. I had to have it. Now, I wanna find more. 😂
Certainly not a guitar that nobody knows about but one that I would strongly recommend to anybody is a Peavey Wolfgang. They usually go used from $500-1200 which is in a similar price range to the new EVH models. I find the neck on the Peavey version far more comfortable to play than the new ones. Peavey the guitar brand has really taken a nosedive in recent years. It's been years since I've a new Peavey guitar in a store.
I've had two Yamaha Pacifica and loved bot!! I have a Vester stage pro strat that just modded to a super strat. Love it its a older guitar and very heavy but I love it. Good video
TOTALLY agree about Yamaha and Parker. My first guitar was a Yamaha Pacifica and I recently got a Yamaha Revstar and was amazed and how great it is, and the cost is a STEAL. My Number 1 is a Parker Fly Mojo, and you're right, Parkers are absolutely perfect. It's a joy every time I play it and always sounds perfect no matter what I'm playing.
Not the Nitefly Deluxe that I mentioned in the video. That one’s neck-thru. At least according to their website. ;) The Vigier guitars are supposed to be fantastic, but they’re hard to come by here in the U.S., so I’ve never gotten to play one before. I’m not familiar with the other one you mentioned at all, unfortunately.
I worked in a mom and pop guitar shop 2010-2015 . We actually had a couple of the USA-1 Gibsons and a Reverse V pass through the doors . The USA-1s played great , sounded great and weighed as much as a typical Les Paul . The reverse V was probably better left on the designing table (thanks Henry , for answering the question no body ever asked). We sold every Pacifica we had within days of its acquisition . I've read the Pacifica is the number 1 selling guitar in the world .
I’m pretty sure the best selling guitar in the world is still the Fender Strat when you include ALL of its different models, followed by the Ibanez RG. But it’s been a long time since I saw that statistic.
@@RobertWJackson could be , Rabbit ... But think of all the countries were Yamaha is traded, places where Fenders are unavailable , or too pricey for most local folks . I believe I read the Yamaha statistic in an English guitar mag ... It was in print , so it must be so .....
@@RobertWJackson when I was looking in 2016 - I looked at the Fender 🇺🇸 Stratocaster and Gibson Les Paul , which had auto tuners on it ❗ I called Gibson , got nobody answered the phone. I call Fender , I get someone. I bought my Fender 🇺🇸 Stratocaster and haven't looked back.
Westone built some great guitars(from the Matsumoku plant in Japan,sold thru St. Louis Music)i have 14 different models in my collection so far,the early Japanese are great ,and the Korean models built after the closing of Matsumoku in '87 are very close,,St.Louis Music maintained quality control
!!!! Electra I bought it in St Louis Missouri Les Paul copy 5 way toggle it took a 9-volt battery in the back I paid $125 I see them on eBay now for 2500
@@user-mt9tn1ni4g electra was another Matsumoku product,,,,they and Fujigen were the top Japanese guitar makers,,,i have a mid 70s Westone Les Paul,,a rare one with a set neck,,my Aria LP sadly got broken,,,but both are great guitar i nwould put up against any 'real' LP
Westone Spectrum is the best one they have ever made and it is very fuckin pretty to look at as well... The red ones are rad as fuck
5 років тому+1
Great Video! Thank you, man! I' ve got a Pacifica in my small guitar collection and use it as a backup on gigs for my PRS! - I can confirm: excellent sound, good playability- though it has not that ravishing beauty/finish you will find on a PRS - but nevertheless - a real good guitar! And not expensive! To all guitar-beginners: Catch one if you can!! Greetings, Andy from Germany! PS; To Robert (again): I m looking out for your next Video! Part two perhaps?? - Carry on - everything you have to say is so substantial!! You're great! One can see, you really know what You're being talking about! Big Information!
Like you, I never would have considered the Parker Fly until I played one. Mine (an original series hardtail model) remains at the top of my list for tone and playability since the day I bought it, back in the early '90s. I still hate how it looks though.😂
On the Parker guitars. I played a p30 (that’s the strat style budget ones) it was red. It was soo comfortable, I would have bought it right there if I had the money.
I had a 1970 Gibson SG Standard that was awesome. Had a 1976 Gibson Les Paul Custom that was a POS I did not like the way it played or sounded. It also had a Bad neck as well. I had a Carvin DC160 that was awesome and a Carvin TL60 that the Pickups blew the Fender Telecaster away. The problem with the TL-60 was the neck was too wide for my hand. Had a 1962 Japanese Tele Reissue that Played better and stayed in tune better that the American Made Teles. Really like the Rickenbacker 330, 360 and V69-381 Guitars.
The brand of guitars that for me flies under the radar and are just CRAZY amazing to play, well at least if you LOVE low action, are Vigier guitars. I personally prefer the older models from the 80’s, but that’s just personal preference based on looks because the new ones are also amazing. Parker is also under appreciated
Back in 1980 I bought a Fresher electric guitar that had active lectronics pickups to 9 volt battery's in back also the neck was made on the guitar one piece no bolt on. It had great fret board I thought maybe you could check it out and give your opinion. Thanks.
I got my hands on a set of Rockfield Jazz bass single coils with the very wide pole pieces years ago and mounted them in a Fender Squier Vintage modified that I had. Sounded awesome. But like you said,....I could never find another set of them, nor any info about them, where they were made, and if Rockfield was even in business.
I believe they were American made pickups, but I could be wrong about that. Unfortunately, when B.C. Rich went under new management with Praxis, they ended their relationship with Rockfield and Rockfield didn’t survive much longer after that.
@@RobertWJackson Remember the 'Signature' guitars brand that Alex Lifeson started back in the late '80's? They were high-end quality strat guitars,..seen in the 'Time Stands Still' video and the 'A Show Of Hands' Live concert video from 1989....however, the company folded. Kind of like the Pensa-Luhr brand that Mark Knopfler and Peter Frampton played....not sure if Pensa-Luhr is still in business.
Love your dry humour, that reverse V looks horrendous...! Your facial expression says it all.... Made me chuckle at least..... ✌👦👍 Use to have a Dean ML dixie rebel, found it impossible to play, cannot play a guitar like this in a small room.... Great video Robert....
Robert is quite the gifted specialist on many pieces of gear through the years, that's why I immediately subscribed to his channel, his worst guitars & worst amps videos are priceless due to his facial expressions & in reality, the blunt truth based on his vast knowledge!
Steinberger Spirit with the small body. stays in tune better than any other guitar I've ever played. chose it over my Les Paul for an outdoor Memorial Day gig just for that reason, didn't have to re-tune it for the whole show.
Just bought a Yamaha PAC611H everything was perfect right out of the box. Just lowered the string action and I was ready to gig. Seymour Duncan pickups, Grover locking tuners, hard tail bridge. Everything I wanted in a hot Rod guitar and 6.9 LBS.
Out of all the guitars you talked about. Lucky for me a few have been made left handed. Like BC Rich , Carvin , Parker , Gibson. I wouldn't change being left handed for anything. Because , most people I know play right handed. And they can't play mine... lol one great advantage to being a lefty 👍
Hey Robert, maybe you help me out. I’m trying to figure out the Les paul I have. I bought a Les Paul standard LPSTD+HBCH1 premium plus back in 2012. The guitar has groover crown shaped locking tuners, Plek label on the pickups, Switchcraft locking jack, and transparent cavity cover. The guitar does not have coil tap. Have you ever seen an LP with these features? Thanks!
I believe that guitar should have 4 push-pull or push-push (I cant recall which) potentiometers, with the two volume controls operating as the coil-splits on the pickups. I believe the 4 potentiometers are also mounted to a PCB board inside the control cavity. If you bought it used, it sounds like the previous owner modified it to the way the older Les Paul Standards would have been wired and ditched the push-pulls and the coil-splitting capabilities.
Thanks for the reply! No, I bought it new from an authorized Gibson dealer I use to work for repairing all their equipment. It’s definitely a mystery to me.
@@RobertWJackson I've owned many bad, good and great guitars over decades of playing, and my Hagstrom Ultra Swede blows me away every time I pick it up. It has jazz tones to die for (WTF?) and can roar like Godzilla. About the only thing it won't do precisely is a Tele sound, but it gets close. And for the money, insane value. Love your channel, thanks for all your hard work.
WoW! Great ideas and guitars on this list. I have a little problem; it is me, not the guitars. Some injuries force me to play left-handed guitars, not by choice, but it is a necessity. That limits my options to none of these, and there are more left-handed players than most would think. Usually, left-handed electric guitars come in two forms: the base model or the custom shop. Could you do a list of mid-priced left handed guitars ($600.00 - $1500.00)?
Looking for a Burny LP with Floyd & Sustainer pickup still installed myself! I think you can order the LP w/Floyd & sus for about $1k but it ships from Japan or China & I'm not familiar with all the "extra" fees involved. I'd LOVE a Fernandes Brad Gillis model!! Reverb has one but the seller is asking around $2k for it. I want one bad - but not THAT bad! Excellent video!! Fernandes guitars were really nice! Tom Scholz played a Fernandes Les Paul copy & a lot of 80's shredders played Fernandes but they had a Jackson copy pointy hockey stick headstock & a lot of people assumed they're playing a Jackson unaware of the headstock copy. They are really phenomenal guitars! 🤘😁🤘
I got a Parker Fly Deluxe which was the name of the guitar pictured in you video, carbon fibre exoskeleton and straight-through neck (super skinny easily access the 24th fret)...I think the Nitefly was a later bolt on neck model with more of a routed body and scratch plate - 3 pickup design.
The picture that I had in the video came right off of Parker’s website. What you’re describing sounds like it might be the Mojo Fly or whatever that one is called. Regardless of what it is, it’s a killer guitar.
Agreed it is a dynamite guitar...the one in your pic is definitely a post 2003 Parker Fly deluxe...I have the ‘97 version, pre the take over by Music corporation...good add in the video as they are pretty rare...the radical thinking in that guitar design in the 90s should have revolutionised the industry but alas Ken Parker couldn’t make them cheap enough to be viable...pity! Cheers.
Here are three great Gibsons worthy of part 2, Robert: the Nighthawk (3 different pickups with a plethora of tones) the Blueshawk (similar to the Nighthawk, only with two P-90s and vari-tone knob) and the M-III (another Gibson Superstrat with more tonal options than any Ibanez of its day.) Edit: And for bonus points, here are three great Fenders as well: the Starcaster (both the original from the '70s or the current Modern Player reissue are killer sounding semi-hollows) the HM Strat (one of Fender's many Superstrats with the versatile TBX circuit and a stock DiMarzio Super 3 pickup) and the Performer (another Fender Superstrat that looks spectacular and a plethora of tones like the Nighthawk.)
Shoutout to EBMM Silhouettes. You can pick them up used in good condition for like 800-900 bucks all day long, and youre getting some insane quality at that price
How about the Fender 'Heartfield' brand?.......They were great playing instruments. I remember that they were made in the same plant as the Ibanez JEM guitars in Japan. Vinnie Moore of Alice Cooper used them and I think he even had a signature model as well. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heartfield
I have had a lot of Guitars but my favorite is a Peavey wolfgang special plays and sounds just as good in a amp or without a amp neck is perfect body is resonate looks beautiful i would highly recommend trying one .
I have a Mockingbird ST from around 2010. Best guitar I've ever owned, and even though it looks kinda goofy and doesn't really resonate with who I am anymore, I can't bring myself to part with it until I find something better, which I still haven't managed to do (in the same price range).
Vester was distributed by Midco distributing out of Effingham, IL. Same company sold 4-track recorders under the Vestax name. And yeah, Midco is gone. They were sold by their parent company, Samuel Music, to Musicorp (which was based out of Charleston, SC, which was sold after a couple years to KMC/Kaman music, which was then sold a couple years ago to JAM distributing out of Canada).
You don't see many pointy guitars on lists like this. Sad really, because you can't beat upper fret access and shred ability on Vs, especially if you can get one with a shred worthy neck
washburn in the 90s were top notch..The Db and the N4 davies among a few.Peavey in the 80s Vandenbergs a few other rare basss and guitars.The cheaper yamaha rgx before the paciffica were also pretty fast high output guitars. Who cared about gibson or fender back then right? The Japanese were building better Squires than Fender and they were making better Les pauls than we were..
I agree, I have a Samick JTR Linda LN 10, LP Jr style guitar that is one of my best playing and sounding guitars. I also own an acoustic Samick solid wood A/E guitar that rivals any acoustic made in my opinion.
The quality, mid to late 90's Epiphone electrics are actually Samick guitars, the only difference is the top of the headstock. Other than that, it's the same thing. The Valley Arts Super Strat guitars are also Samick's.
I use Yamaha Pacifica 112 almost 20 years. A pretty good alternative for Fender Stratocaster. I am very satisfied. Great video!
Call it nostalgia, but if you're old enough to remember the 80s and 90s, you remember Carvin catalogs! I own a couple Carvins (including a DC600), that I will not part with, if for no other reason than the beloved name on the headstock.
Carvin gear, in general, is some of the most underrated around.
Their very short lived foray into making moderate to high-ish end microphones, for example, is not very well known, but the condenser and tube condenser mics they put out in that short time are fantastic.
However, they didn't sell well due to brand identity: "Wait, Carvin makes mics? Weird."
Picture Fender selling somewhat unique looking $400-1000 condenser and tube condenser mics (including custom power supplies, cables & hard cases), with the familiar Fender headstock logo all over the place... and imagine what the reaction would likely be to that to get an idea of why Carvin didn't stay in the mic market. Haha.
They were maybe a bit of a curiosity to some people, but for $400-1000, Carvin was in an uphill battle from the start with so many already well established mic brands (Neumann, RØDE, AKG, Audio Technica, etc) offering nice mics in that middle price range.
So, there aren't a ton of those Carvin mics out there, but they do sound good for the price (if you can find them for sale).
I had a black v220t. I saved money for almost a year to get it fully kited out, $680 in 1986.
Another brand from the 80s that is worth checking out is Fernandes. They were made in Japan in the same factory that made the Jacksons are Charvels. Indeed, the ST-75 is effectively the same guitar as the Charvel Model 4, but with "Fernandes" on the headstock. I have an STJ-75 that plays as well as any USA Jackson.
Burny, Fernandes same👍👍
Kirk Hammett played a Fernandes early in his career.
My Carvin DC600 is one of my favorites that I own. Bought it used. Swamp ash body wings, 5 pieces walnut and maple neck thru, birdseye maple fretboard, original FR, pull knob coil split, Carvin M22SD / H22 humbuckers, satin finish... Love it
I liked every Carvin I ever played.
The stupidest guitar shape is the reversed flying V.
Reverse flying V and you get "the face"lol
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@snakebitemcghee4959 Lol You're right about that.
Amen!
It's sooooo bad that it even goes way past the "so ugly it's kind of cute" territory that some dogs live in. If I were teaching a general design class I would keep one of those right next to the lectern as the ultimate bad example.
In 96 I bought a rogue RG6B. More or less it was a next to exact copy of a Jackson. Complete with locking headstock, sharkfin inlays, humbuckers at the neck, a single coil mid body, humbuckers at the tail bridge and a licensed floyd rose. All equipment in black body in a vibrant cobalt blue
Plays awesomely and is a basswood body
Guild S100 reissue is one of the best feeling guitars I’ve played in a long time. It can also take hits I’ve waked this thing so many times and it has zero scratches or dings it’s really wild
Now that I'm older I've been on a quest for light easy to play guitars. Was shopping for a Parker and found them used only and expensive. Wound up going with Strandberg. Kind of pricey but was so pleased I bought 2.
Check out the Music Man Majestys. You won’t be disappointed. 😉
+1 for Yamaha Pacifica. I have a 521 and it plays and sounds great. The Pacifica tremolo system was better than my American Special Strat tremolo. After putting in roller bridge pieces, a TUSQ nut, and TUSQ string guides the Strat is about as good as the Pacifica regarding intonation and tremolo. If you come across a 521 you might like it. I had an African band in the studio for 2 CDs and their guitarists used the Pacifica for all their guitar tracks.
I bought a Vester Telecaster when I was in Korea over 20 years ago...It's my travel-around guitar and I still play it nearly every day...I really like it. It came with a hard case, cord, strap, guitar stand, pack of strings, and some picks....for less than $100 new! I changed out ALL the electronics - that cost twice as much as the guitar, but it cleaned up to sound like a Tele should. The tuning pegs are junk...when I change the strings, a couple fall out of the head! But they work. The guitar has literally been all around the world with me and it's held up well.
Such a relief to hear some positive guitar stuff! Lol - great video - right in your wheelhouse!
Thanks buddy!
Yeah, I'm not crazy about the aesthetics of the body on the Parker you show, nor the headstock shape, but I've played two and they were both great to play. What surprised me was when I built a guitar with that body shape, and a similar neck, it was extremely comfortable and extremely well balanced.
Hey brother ! I love your channel. Your reviews have saved me money AND cost me money. Between you and the guitologist I've actually become educated in the world of equipment . Your a trip and if there is anyway I can help support your channel let me know! Thanks for all you do Robert!
Thank you so much, glad you’re enjoying my channel! Various different ways to support the channel are down in the Description if you’re interested in doing so. Thanks again!
I remember Prince playing a VOX with the band 3RD EYEGIRL . This was a few years before his passing. The model was a black hollow bodied guitar.
The only time I've ever gotten to play a Parker Nightfly was in, wait for it . . . . . GUITAR CENTER in Columbus. I loved it straight away and always wanted one. The price tag kinda thwarted that though.
A buddy of mine had a Parker Fly. I thought it was stupidly gimmicky, but he sounded great on it, and when I tried it out, I thought it played very nicely.
Fender TC90 . Bought one for cheap 2nd hand. Wonderful double cut semi hollow guitar. Perfect if you like the Les Paul DC body with a Fender neck.
noobynooberson just watched Darrell braun Guitar upgrade his one ☺
@@malcolmhardwick4258 Is that the JA-90 model? I couldn't find the TC-90, but yeah almost the same model minus the double cut and the TC-90 is made in Korea. Excellent guitars. I wish Fender still made the double cut version as I love dc guitars. I upgraded the pick ups of mine with some mini humbuckers from the Creamery and it's easily one of the best guitars I've had the pleasure of owning.
@@imd1b4u never heard of these before. They look cool! I especially love the finish options they had. If there's a squier I would buy, this could be one of them
noobynooberson can't remember exactly the model designation. But a short scale tele with glued neck and p90s. Looks well cool ☺
The expression on your face and the long, silent pause as you showed the reversed Flying V Gibson guitar of the week was priceless! That, alone, made the video for me--a true LOL moment! The rest of the (actually) cool guitars you showed made for a great video as well. Thanks!
Thanks man, glad you enjoyed it! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thanks for finally endorsing the reverse V. I knew you would come around. Gibson Norlin era single coils sound amazing.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
You sat dead pan until I broke up laughing .
Interesting list! Knew about some but certainly not all!
Thanks for sharing!
What about Robin?
Yamaha Acoustic line are made well too. $229 for the 800 Dreadnoughts are great sounding guitars. I love mine ! Rarely tune it even during season changes in Michigan.
1985 Ibanez Flying V pro series. Picked one up about a year ago and love it
I just picked up a pacifica tele copy. Had half a dozen mods in mind before it was even in my hands. $140 CAD.
Thanks for boosting my confidence in my purchase.
Had a Parker Fly Deluxe. As much as I loved it, I couldn't stop that upper horn from impaling my chest, no matter how I held it. I'd come home with bruises on my chest. At the same time, I still miss it.
The shape doesn’t do it for everybody, but they sure do play nice.
Had one too. Loved it until it was time to hang it on the wall.
How much do you expect a used Gibson US-1 to be on sale for? There is one available in my area.
Condition is everything with those. Last I checked, one in good condition was worth around $1400-1800ish, I believe.
Thanks for your quick reply. The one in my area is selling for $2,000 and it appears to be in mint condition from what I see in the pictures.
Back in the 80s there was a company in Japan called Westbury and they were a kind les Paul type guitar, but much higher quality. Can't tell you how much nicer, unless you have a les Paul and one together to compare. But worth a look.
Keep up the good work.
@The Rebound Guy they are great, it's a shame they were only in production for such a short time, I'm not sure if the company changed their name, or went on to other things, but I haven't found a guitar that I feel so comfortable playing, however I haven't tried a Paul Reed Smith. I hope I'll like one of them, because I've just had the last fret job done on my Westbury, next time it's new frets!!! And I dont only play that, I also play an Ibaneze , a Squire ,an Epiphone and two basses. But I go back to the Westbury, it's like a really comfortable pair of shoes, just fits me, and makes all the right noises!!!
If memory serves, Westbury was one of the high end marques manufactured by Matsumoku, the only guitar company to make necks even better than Peavey. Sweet guitars, although the electronics aren’t that great. But no one did better wood working than Matsumoku and with the higher end brands like Greco and Westbury they could really shine.
For me its the Charvel San Dimas. I own the hardtail version in the chlorine burst colour. its not really that unknown a model but its an incredible guitar. This is coming from a mostly blues guy, i bought it so i had something a little different and with a bit more punch and i adore this guitar. I was amazed how good it sounds played clean or slightly pushed as well as driven for which im assuming it was mostly designed for even though they added a coil split into the model too so gives you a massive variety of cool sounds, which is very useful for a guy like me who plays mostly clean or with just a bit of punch. You can pick these up for less than $600 USD used and is amazing value for money.
I owned a mid 80s Washburn flying V that had the Wonderbar trem on it. I absolutely loved that trem and regret to this day selling it. I want to say the model was an RR-11v...
@@dougcook7507 RR-12V ! ❤️
Parkerfly frets are notorious for coming loose they are glued on top fret board not imbedded it's got carbon fiber neck if I remember correctly
I had a '82 Dean ML back in the day...i could play that thing thru any amp and come real close to the "brown sound"...dont know what those stock pick-ups were (maybe dimarzios) but that guitar was a beast!!!!
Cool! Own a Pacifica 604w from 2003, tricked out 80's style. Flawless instrument in materials as well as fit/finish. Don't know if they're really underappreciated or that unknown, but they punch above their weight.
I got the chance to buy a Parker Fly original (1st run) years back, it's been my main since.
The Vox you have spoken about is yhe Sdc 55. The Sdc 33 has only the single coil and humbucker mode. I have onebof these. Great guitar.
I had a white Vester "Rhoads" imitation for many years. It was made of plywood.
Cheers from Portugal 🍺🤘
This is an interesting list, excellent compilation. On the bass guitar side, the Peavey Foundation, is one I had never heard of, but picked up recently from the 80's that's awesome and not to sleep on.
I have a Godin Freeway SA, which is hands down the best guitar I’ve ever played. The rosewood neck - which I had refretted with stainless steel frets - is sheer perfection. I also have a Charvel Pro Mod and a USA Strat, both great guitars, but not in the same league as the Godin. It’s a shame that Godin stopped making this model, as I think it’s an absolute classic. John McLaughlin played one for a couple of years, which is endorsement enough for me.
Great suggestions I'll definitely keep my eye out for 1 of them, maybe a Yamaha
Absolutely 100% right about the Parker Fly Series. Best playing guitar I have...
I have a P44 that I think is beautiful, and plays as good as any high-end guitar I've ever played...
Love being told I'm right, being a married man it's not something I hear very often...
Hey thanks again for some good ole guitar info!! I really like seeing the different guitars that make the list of ones might not know about..always interesting..i just found n subscribed to u the other day..now find something good to watch on ur channel all the time so keep up the good work, Chris Ferrell guitarist for Diamond Cutt, Pitch Black Sun and FURL
Thanks man, welcome to the family! Glad you’re enjoying the content! 🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼
A part 2 would definitely be awesome.
If this video does well, I may do it!
I best sub , just in case .
at 13:39 oh look Ma the Gibson Lawn Dart ! the look on your face was priceless.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Wasn't dean bankrupt when dime got big enough to roll with washburn? Got back in business Around 05?
I’ve heard that before, but I’m honestly not sure.
I have a all flame-maple (front and back) First Act custom shop Delia that is incredible. Three humbuckers, custom wiring, Stetsbar tremolo, unreal.
I am lucky to have a Gibson Xr 1.... played by Steve Clark... the dirty fingers pick ups alone are amazing
Fisrt time I played a Yamaha sg1000 I was amazed. Now I'm always looking for them used.
They're awesome!
I think you might have missed one. Electra Guitars made a LP copy that was fantastic back in the late 70's early 80's. Also Burns makes a few guitars that are player guitars.
Love your channel. I’ve had so many but really believe if they sound great to my high standards then I’ll use them. Thank you.. agreed on Pacifica .
Fernandez Retrorocket - the ultimate set neck super strat, including a sustainiac system.
Couldn't agree more with Fernandez. I own a Montery Pro Elite with sustainer pickup and it's a sweet guitar.
I 100% agree with the Carvin. Not that model specifically. Just Carvin, period. I recently ran into a used DC127 at my local Guitar Center and was excited to try it out as I hadn't seen one in forever. Koa top, maple neck-through body, with rounded sides and an ebony fretboard. It was one of the best playing (and sounding) guitars I have ever played. Build quality is phenomenal. You can tell the people who made it really cared about making a quality instrument. It now lives with me. I had to have it. Now, I wanna find more. 😂
Certainly not a guitar that nobody knows about but one that I would strongly recommend to anybody is a Peavey Wolfgang. They usually go used from $500-1200 which is in a similar price range to the new EVH models. I find the neck on the Peavey version far more comfortable to play than the new ones. Peavey the guitar brand has really taken a nosedive in recent years. It's been years since I've a new Peavey guitar in a store.
I've had two Yamaha Pacifica and loved bot!! I have a Vester stage pro strat that just modded to a super strat. Love it its a older guitar and very heavy but I love it. Good video
TOTALLY agree about Yamaha and Parker. My first guitar was a Yamaha Pacifica and I recently got a Yamaha Revstar and was amazed and how great it is, and the cost is a STEAL. My Number 1 is a Parker Fly Mojo, and you're right, Parkers are absolutely perfect. It's a joy every time I play it and always sounds perfect no matter what I'm playing.
I admire the fact that you make these videos in association with Share the Music!! And you are eloquent and funny!! Subscribed :)
I have a friend who plays a mean Parker Nitefly - I've always liked the symmetry between the top horn and the headstock, but I'm a weirdo.
Thanks man! Welcome to the family!
Godin guitars are under appreciated!
I love cats and guitars too George
Godins are one of those guitars that you are married to after you buy one,.......horrible resale value.
Solo en acusticas casi nadie conoce las electricas godin
Probably because they don't really get endorsed
John McLaughlin played Godin Freeways for a couple of years.
4:20 I was expecting the reverse Flying V Gibson to pop up on the screen hahah
Parker Nitefly is the bolt-on version, not neck-thru. But, it's also a beautifully-made guitar.
How about the Vigier Marilyn and the Killer KG Prime?
Not the Nitefly Deluxe that I mentioned in the video. That one’s neck-thru. At least according to their website. ;) The Vigier guitars are supposed to be fantastic, but they’re hard to come by here in the U.S., so I’ve never gotten to play one before. I’m not familiar with the other one you mentioned at all, unfortunately.
I worked in a mom and pop guitar shop 2010-2015 . We actually had a couple of the USA-1 Gibsons and a Reverse V pass through the doors . The USA-1s played great , sounded great and weighed as much as a typical Les Paul . The reverse V was probably better left on the designing table (thanks Henry , for answering the question no body ever asked). We sold every Pacifica we had within days of its acquisition . I've read the Pacifica is the number 1 selling guitar in the world .
I’m pretty sure the best selling guitar in the world is still the Fender Strat when you include ALL of its different models, followed by the Ibanez RG. But it’s been a long time since I saw that statistic.
@@RobertWJackson
could be , Rabbit ... But think of all the countries were Yamaha is traded, places where Fenders are unavailable , or too pricey for most local folks . I believe I read the Yamaha statistic in an English guitar mag ... It was in print , so it must be so .....
@@RobertWJackson when I was looking in 2016 - I looked at the Fender 🇺🇸 Stratocaster and Gibson Les Paul , which had auto tuners on it ❗ I called Gibson , got nobody answered the phone. I call Fender , I get someone. I bought my Fender 🇺🇸 Stratocaster and haven't looked back.
Westone built some great guitars(from the Matsumoku plant in Japan,sold thru St. Louis Music)i have 14 different models in my collection so far,the early Japanese are great ,and the Korean models built after the closing of Matsumoku in '87 are very close,,St.Louis Music maintained quality control
!!!! Electra I bought it in St Louis Missouri Les Paul copy 5 way toggle it took a 9-volt battery in the back I paid $125 I see them on eBay now for 2500
@@user-mt9tn1ni4g electra was another Matsumoku product,,,,they and Fujigen were the top Japanese guitar makers,,,i have a mid 70s Westone Les Paul,,a rare one with a set neck,,my Aria LP sadly got broken,,,but both are great guitar i nwould put up against any 'real' LP
Trevor Rabin of Yes put those Westone guitars on the map as he was endorsed by them.
Westone Spectrum is the best one they have ever made and it is very fuckin pretty to look at as well... The red ones are rad as fuck
Great Video! Thank you, man!
I' ve got a Pacifica in my small guitar collection and use it as a backup on gigs for my PRS! - I can confirm: excellent sound, good playability- though it has not that ravishing beauty/finish you will find on a PRS - but nevertheless - a real good guitar! And not expensive! To all guitar-beginners: Catch one if you can!!
Greetings,
Andy from Germany!
PS; To Robert (again): I m looking out for your next Video! Part two perhaps?? - Carry on - everything you have to say is so substantial!! You're great! One can see, you really know what You're being talking about! Big Information!
Here’s Part 2 if you didn’t already find it.
13 MORE Great Guitars You Might Not Know About ua-cam.com/video/t4jiglOU_9U/v-deo.html
@@RobertWJackson thanks a lot! I take a look!!
Got now an abo on your Channel!
Have a great evening!!
Like you, I never would have considered the Parker Fly until I played one. Mine (an original series hardtail model) remains at the top of my list for tone and playability since the day I bought it, back in the early '90s. I still hate how it looks though.😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
On the Parker guitars. I played a p30 (that’s the strat style budget ones) it was red. It was soo comfortable, I would have bought it right there if I had the money.
I had a 1970 Gibson SG Standard that was awesome. Had a 1976 Gibson Les Paul Custom that was a POS I did not like the way it played or sounded. It also had a Bad neck as well. I had a Carvin DC160 that was awesome and a Carvin TL60 that the Pickups blew the Fender Telecaster away. The problem with the TL-60 was the neck was too wide for my hand. Had a 1962 Japanese Tele Reissue that Played better and stayed in tune better that the American Made Teles. Really like the Rickenbacker 330, 360 and V69-381 Guitars.
FGN MIJ...SO GOOD
Marvelous! Thanks to the author for sharing.😘Have a wonderful day!😉
The brand of guitars that for me flies under the radar and are just CRAZY amazing to play, well at least if you LOVE low action, are Vigier guitars. I personally prefer the older models from the 80’s, but that’s just personal preference based on looks because the new ones are also amazing. Parker is also under appreciated
Ty Tabor had a signature Vigier guitar and he kicks major ass !!!
Right on.
Back in 1980 I bought a Fresher electric guitar that had active lectronics pickups to 9 volt battery's in back also the neck was made on the guitar one piece no bolt on. It had great fret board I thought maybe you could check it out and give your opinion. Thanks.
I’ve never seen one, actually. Hopefully I come across one some day.
I love the “ Reverse V Face” 🤣 🤣🤣🤣 Keep spreading the good word !
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Lame
Moist.
Spot on re: mockingbird imo. The alt Les Paul! I own a pro x goldtop with duncans in it. Surprisingly I still play my other guitars.
The Les Paul access is probably the closest to the 1980s Gibson Les Paul standard with the kahler.
I got my hands on a set of Rockfield Jazz bass single coils with the very wide pole pieces years ago and mounted them in a Fender Squier Vintage modified that I had. Sounded awesome. But like you said,....I could never find another set of them, nor any info about them, where they were made, and if Rockfield was even in business.
I believe they were American made pickups, but I could be wrong about that. Unfortunately, when B.C. Rich went under new management with Praxis, they ended their relationship with Rockfield and Rockfield didn’t survive much longer after that.
@@RobertWJackson Remember the 'Signature' guitars brand that Alex Lifeson started back in the late '80's? They were high-end quality strat guitars,..seen in the 'Time Stands Still' video and the 'A Show Of Hands' Live concert video from 1989....however, the company folded. Kind of like the Pensa-Luhr brand that Mark Knopfler and Peter Frampton played....not sure if Pensa-Luhr is still in business.
Love your dry humour, that reverse V looks horrendous...! Your facial expression says it all.... Made me chuckle at least..... ✌👦👍 Use to have a Dean ML dixie rebel, found it impossible to play, cannot play a guitar like this in a small room.... Great video Robert....
Robert is quite the gifted specialist on many pieces of gear through the years, that's why I immediately subscribed to his channel, his worst guitars & worst amps videos are priceless due to his facial expressions & in reality, the blunt truth based on his vast knowledge!
The Reverse V was actually quite comfortable to play sitting down ~~~
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Steinberger Spirit with the small body. stays in tune better than any other guitar I've ever played. chose it over my Les Paul for an outdoor Memorial Day gig just for that reason, didn't have to re-tune it for the whole show.
If you get a chance to try a carvin ebony fretboard or any of their guitars, you'll know, they're like BUTTER.
Yeah but too bad Jeff kiesel is a wiesel now
Great video today. I enjoyed hearing about those guitars. Although I do not go out for the different shapes , I am a traditionalist, some were unique.
Sick of traditional, modern is what I want
May I add a 14th guitar? Jackson Dk2m
Yeah, but there are PLENTY of people who know about those. DK2M’s aren’t as obscure as the rest of this list. Great guitars though!
Just bought a Yamaha PAC611H everything was perfect right out of the box. Just lowered the string action and I was ready to gig. Seymour Duncan pickups, Grover locking tuners, hard tail bridge. Everything I wanted in a hot Rod guitar and 6.9 LBS.
Those are awesome guitars. I’ve been eyeballing those lately myself.
Out of all the guitars you talked about. Lucky for me a few have been made left handed. Like
BC Rich , Carvin , Parker , Gibson.
I wouldn't change being left handed for anything.
Because , most people I know play right handed. And they can't play mine... lol one great advantage to being a lefty 👍
I agree brother
I record on minidiscs, similar situation ... people don't want to borrow or steal them.
Hey Robert, maybe you help me out. I’m trying to figure out the Les paul I have. I bought a Les Paul standard LPSTD+HBCH1 premium plus back in 2012. The guitar has groover crown shaped locking tuners, Plek label on the pickups, Switchcraft locking jack, and transparent cavity cover. The guitar does not have coil tap. Have you ever seen an LP with these features? Thanks!
I believe that guitar should have 4 push-pull or push-push (I cant recall which) potentiometers, with the two volume controls operating as the coil-splits on the pickups. I believe the 4 potentiometers are also mounted to a PCB board inside the control cavity. If you bought it used, it sounds like the previous owner modified it to the way the older Les Paul Standards would have been wired and ditched the push-pulls and the coil-splitting capabilities.
Thanks for the reply!
No, I bought it new from an authorized Gibson dealer I use to work for repairing all their equipment. It’s definitely a mystery to me.
The absolute best value electric guitar anywhere is Hagstrom. Stunning build quality, the best neck ever and the pickups are awesome.
Yep, Hagstrom’s are great. I love the Super Swedes and the Ghost Signature Fantomens are awesome. I’d love to have one of those.
@@RobertWJackson I've owned many bad, good and great guitars over decades of playing, and my Hagstrom Ultra Swede blows me away every time I pick it up. It has jazz tones to die for (WTF?) and can roar like Godzilla. About the only thing it won't do precisely is a Tele sound, but it gets close. And for the money, insane value. Love your channel, thanks for all your hard work.
WoW! Great ideas and guitars on this list.
I have a little problem; it is me, not the guitars. Some injuries force me to play left-handed guitars, not by choice, but it is a necessity. That limits my options to none of these, and there are more left-handed players than most would think. Usually, left-handed electric guitars come in two forms: the base model or the custom shop. Could you do a list of mid-priced left handed guitars ($600.00 - $1500.00)?
Looking for a Burny LP with Floyd & Sustainer pickup still installed myself! I think you can order the LP w/Floyd & sus for about $1k but it ships from Japan or China & I'm not familiar with all the "extra" fees involved.
I'd LOVE a Fernandes Brad Gillis model!! Reverb has one but the seller is asking around $2k for it. I want one bad - but not THAT bad! Excellent video!! Fernandes guitars were really nice! Tom Scholz played a Fernandes Les Paul copy & a lot of 80's shredders played Fernandes but they had a Jackson copy pointy hockey stick headstock & a lot of people assumed they're playing a Jackson unaware of the headstock copy. They are really phenomenal guitars! 🤘😁🤘
Great video. Very good choices.....2 thumbs up
Peavey Predator Strat copy. Traded it in on my US Strat....love my Strat but miss my Peavy
I had the 7 string, locking trem. it was pretty good. Wish i still had it.
I got a Parker Fly Deluxe which was the name of the guitar pictured in you video, carbon fibre exoskeleton and straight-through neck (super skinny easily access the 24th fret)...I think the Nitefly was a later bolt on neck model with more of a routed body and scratch plate - 3 pickup design.
The picture that I had in the video came right off of Parker’s website. What you’re describing sounds like it might be the Mojo Fly or whatever that one is called. Regardless of what it is, it’s a killer guitar.
Agreed it is a dynamite guitar...the one in your pic is definitely a post 2003 Parker Fly deluxe...I have the ‘97 version, pre the take over by Music corporation...good add in the video as they are pretty rare...the radical thinking in that guitar design in the 90s should have revolutionised the industry but alas Ken Parker couldn’t make them cheap enough to be viable...pity! Cheers.
The mojo was made from Mahogany I think...mine is Basswood and Polar...so definitely not a Mojo.
Here are three great Gibsons worthy of part 2, Robert:
the Nighthawk (3 different pickups with a plethora of tones)
the Blueshawk (similar to the Nighthawk, only with two P-90s and vari-tone knob)
and the M-III (another Gibson Superstrat with more tonal options than any Ibanez of its day.)
Edit: And for bonus points, here are three great Fenders as well:
the Starcaster (both the original from the '70s or the current Modern Player reissue are killer sounding semi-hollows)
the HM Strat (one of Fender's many Superstrats with the versatile TBX circuit and a stock DiMarzio Super 3 pickup)
and the Performer (another Fender Superstrat that looks spectacular and a plethora of tones like the Nighthawk.)
The nighthawk is awesome
@@davidellefson1017 Yup, I love mine. Was only $800 at GC Used; if I passed it up, the collector Gods would’ve cursed my life 😂
I loved my Gibson Futura/Corvus, stolen at a show, never found another. I'm still looking but they tend to get shitty Kahlers and such added.
@@juanlauda2300 Damn, I'll keep an eye out on eBay & Reverb fir a hardtail one.
@@MichaelD8393 good plan.
Shoutout to EBMM Silhouettes. You can pick them up used in good condition for like 800-900 bucks all day long, and youre getting some insane quality at that price
How about the Fender 'Heartfield' brand?.......They were great playing instruments. I remember that they were made in the same plant as the Ibanez JEM guitars in Japan. Vinnie Moore of Alice Cooper used them and I think he even had a signature model as well. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heartfield
I have had a lot of Guitars but my favorite is a Peavey wolfgang special plays and sounds just as good in a amp or without a amp neck is perfect body is resonate looks beautiful i would highly recommend trying one .
I have a Mockingbird ST from around 2010. Best guitar I've ever owned, and even though it looks kinda goofy and doesn't really resonate with who I am anymore, I can't bring myself to part with it until I find something better, which I still haven't managed to do (in the same price range).
I never heard of Vester before, maybe I will get one if the price is right.
Vester was distributed by Midco distributing out of Effingham, IL. Same company sold 4-track recorders under the Vestax name. And yeah, Midco is gone. They were sold by their parent company, Samuel Music, to Musicorp (which was based out of Charleston, SC, which was sold after a couple years to KMC/Kaman music, which was then sold a couple years ago to JAM distributing out of Canada).
If you ever saw a Hysteria-era Def Leppard video in the 80's you saw a Hamer Scarab bass.
Fernando Von Arb from Krokus played one as well.
Good show and great comic deadpan delivery, dude.
Thanks! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Great job Robert
Thanks man! Glad you enjoyed it!
Great stuff. Hamer guitars are brilliant. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience.
Thanks man, my pleasure!
You don't see many pointy guitars on lists like this. Sad really, because you can't beat upper fret access and shred ability on Vs, especially if you can get one with a shred worthy neck
Pl which electric guitad you suggest to play indian classical music. Pl reply sir
I have no idea, to be honest. When in doubt, default to a Strat.
washburn in the 90s were top notch..The Db and the N4 davies among a few.Peavey in the 80s Vandenbergs a few other rare basss and guitars.The cheaper yamaha rgx before the paciffica were also pretty fast high output guitars. Who cared about gibson or fender back then right? The Japanese were building better Squires than Fender and they were making better Les pauls than we were..
Great info ...the yamaha Pacifica is very common here in Australia ....and very easy to obtain second hand for around ..$250
i have a guitar that is exellently made ....and just rings out for days.....it is a Samick.
.....reminds me of the Carvin you spoke about
Samick is one of the oldest brands out there,...established back in 1958. Great quality guitars,.....Silvertone is made by them.
I agree, I have a Samick JTR Linda LN 10, LP Jr style guitar that is one of my best playing and sounding guitars. I also own an acoustic Samick solid wood A/E guitar that rivals any acoustic made in my opinion.
The quality, mid to late 90's Epiphone electrics are actually Samick guitars, the only difference is the top of the headstock. Other than that, it's the same thing.
The Valley Arts Super Strat guitars are also Samick's.