Alan D
Group: Members
Posts: 3670
Joined: Aug. 2004 |
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Posted: Feb. 16 2007, 05:33 |
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I made the mistake, many years ago, of buying a very cheap acoustic guitar (understandably, since I had virtually no money at the time). Well, I did learn to play on that instrument, and I stuck with it for years (because I still had no money).
But when I eventually did buy a good guitar (a Martin acoustic, after trying many, many alternatives), I realised how badly my progress had been limited by the poor guitar I'd had. I also realised that when you find the guitar that is right for you (and you won't know what it is until you experience it), it seems to feel like part of you. Instead of hindering what you're trying to do, it seems to help. There's a feeling of rightness.
So my suggestion would be this: Learn to play using the guitar your aunt gave you, so that you can at least play a few chords reasonably fluently (which may only take a few weeks). Then play as many guitars in the shops as you can, until you find 'the one' that feels and sounds right. You need to be able to play a bit, in order to recognise it, you see. And don't suppose that the one that feels right will be the most expensive. In my case that was most certainly not true.
[I've just realised that I may have misunderstood about your aunt's guitar - that she hasn't given it to you, but you just happened to pick it up and play it. Is that right? If so, maybe you could borrow it for a couple of weeks?]
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