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Article: A Musical and Audiophile Journey


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9 minutes ago, ShawnC said:

So your first guitar is a Taylor 814ce, where did I go wrong 😉.  Congratulations.  I have to admit that this past year with the pandemic and work, I have not listened to a lot of music.  But I have bought and sold at least 20 guitars (all electric) 5 amps and various pedals.  It's been a sellers dream if you know what people are looking for.  It's starting to slow down as guitar shops are now filling up to pre-pandemic inventory levels. 

 

Good luck with the practicing.  If we ever do that Minnesota meet up some day, I can bring some song books for you to learn.  I think it's too soon for the Pearl Jam, Ten song book, but I have it.  I've had a Stevie Ray Vaughan book for over 30 years and I still can't play a note in it.  I should just stick to buying and selling.  This time of the year is great for learning something new and listening to music as winter rolls in.

 

Rock on, 

Shawn

Thanks Shawn!

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2 minutes ago, agladstone said:

Nice job on the guitar selection! 
I have been playing guitar for 40 years now and I recently purchased a Limited Builders Edition Taylor 814 myself (June 2021) and it’s become the pride and joy of my guitar collection (an equal to my Fender Custom Shop Aztec Gold reproduction of a 1959 Stratocaster). 
It is actually the first high end Acoustic Guitar that I’ve ever purchased. 
I have historically been focused on Electric Guitars, only having a 30+ year old Acoustic that my parents bought me when I was 10 years old. 
Ever since I purchased the Taylor 814 this summer, I play it about 75% of the time, and rarely break out my Electric Guitars, pedals, and Amps these days. 
It literally plays like a dream (after a really good setup, it did need attention to the neck angle and the bridge and saddle height and string height also needed minor adjustments - you should definitely bring it to a local Taylor certified Guitar shop or Luthier for a custom setup! In my experience, literally all guitars require one after purchasing new from the factory). 
Enjoy !!! 
 

Fantastic!

 

I will take it in when I setup lessons at Twin Town Guitar here in Minneapolis. 
 

Thanks!

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6 hours ago, mitchco said:

Chris, congrats again! I echo @agladstone's advice on getting the guitar properly setup. Aside from sounding better, staying in tune longer, it will be easier to play.

I see Twin Town Guitar has a PLEK machine: https://www.twintown.com/pages/plek You might want to consider that...

Oh cool, PLEK! Didn’t know such a thing existed!

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1 hour ago, Johnseye said:

Hey there Chris, great to hear you've started on a new and incredibly rewarding hobby. Especially when you can share it with your daughter. Hopefully she enjoys it as well. My son plays and has become better than me. Now I learn from him! 

 

After reading Bob Taylor's book Guitar Lessons I've always wanted to get one. You've inspired me to look into them again. I've played a Martin for many years. What were your key decision factors in choosing the model and wood types you did? Also, what were the best online resources you used in education and helping to make your decision? 

Hi @Johnseye, great to hear you and your son play! I hope it turns out this way for my daughter and I. 
 

The decision to get a Taylor and specifically the 814ce was agonizing, in the way that only first world problems can be. 
 

Brand history, reputation, service, etc… all mattered quite a bit to me. This guitar is more than just something I strum to produce a sound. It’s an experience and I want to feel good every time I play. Getting a Taylor fit that bill nicely. Bob Taylor’s outlook on so much, really jibes with me. 
 

I also like Andy Powers’ ideology that the best guitars are ahead of us. This is different from many views of Martin guitars in that everyone wants the old ones. 
 

Taylor’s V-Class bracing is revolutionary in my view. I’m not against X bracing in Martins as I think they are fantastic, but I really think V bracing is more my style. 
 

I also installed the TaylorSense module that monitors temp, humidity, and impact, and reports it to the app. Really nice. 

 

I also wanted a guitar made in the USA. Some Taylors are made in the Mexico factory, while the higher end models are made in California (as I’m sure you know).

 

I researched the woods endlessly and even did my best to listen to them at guitar shops. I decided that a spruce top was the best route for me. It’s what “all” the best guitars seem to use. Side and back rosewoods also seem that way and I love the look. 
 

The price differences between many of the Taylors get fairly small once you get to made in the USA, spruce top, rosewood sides and back, etc… The 800 series is the flagship, although far from most expensive. I like to get great products that last and can be passed down, while still holding both monetary value and meaning. An 814ce just fit the bill in so many ways for me. 
 

I endlessly read guitar forums to get opinions and articles in guitar magazines. I tried some YouTube videos and they drove me insane for the most part. 30 seconds of good information hidden in 30 minutes of people blathering on about nothing. Not my thing. 
 

https://www.acousticguitarforum.com/forums/index.php

 

http://www.unofficialtaylorguitarforum.com
 

https://www.ultimate-guitar.com/forum/

 

I could go on forever, but I will say this whole process has been great to help me better write for AS. I haven’t researched for a HiFi product in over a decade. I see what I want, talk to a manufacturer, and wait for it to arrive. Getting a guitar was very different and I learned much I can use for writing here. 

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58 minutes ago, pga said:

Just recently started playing this old guitar that I learned to play on in 1970.  This is a classical guitar made in the traditional Spanish style by Miguel Company.  Miguel was born in Spain, moved to Cuba and became the premier luthier on the island. He fled Cuba on a raft when Castro took over, bringing Cuban wood with him.  He set up shop in Miami, where he worked until his 80s. Miguel is best known for the 12 string guitars he made for CSN & Young.  
 

I recently had my 51 year old guitar refurbished by a younger Cuban luthier that studied the craft in Spain, Bill Glez. I learned a lot from Bill on just how delicate the process is to build a classical guitar. Bill is a big Miguel Company fan, and even bought from Miguel’s widow wood that Miguel had in his shop that came on the raft with him from Cuba. 

 

 

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Wow, so cool!

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2 minutes ago, Jud said:

Wonderful to read about the start of your journey into something you've always wanted to do, Chris - and the prospect of doing it together with your daughter.  🙂  (But have you thought about what happens if she gets a lot better than you? 😉)

Thanks Jud!

 

You wouldn't believe what's already happening. I brought my guitar downstairs and she told me, "you didn't think you could bring it down here and NOT let me play too, did you?"

 

Then she was playing the notes to White Stripes' Seven Nation Army on a flute type thing she picked up in Kauai a couple years ago. So, I looked it up on acoustic guitar and tried to play it. Next thing I know, she's telling me from across the room, "no dad, it's 3, 3, 5, 7, 5, 3, 2." Telling me I had the wrong frets, then saying the frets out loud as I tried to get it right. Then, she Brough out her viola and tried to show me how it is done on that. 

 

I have no problems with her telling me what to do on this. It means she is learning too!

 

This is so fun! I can't wait until she opens up her guitar and we "play" together on Christmas!

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8 hours ago, TubeLover said:

Congrats on the new journey you've undertaken Chris. 

 

I also planned to learn to play guitar early on. But, I was seventeen and also playing a ton of sports, and I had friends who were in bands. They talked me into managing their bands, and I also wrote lyrics for them, but ended up with no time to play guitar. that was nearly fifty years ago. So you have a big head start on me. 

 

About eighteen months, or so, ago, I also decided (assuming that retirement would finally allow me the time) that I must undertake learning to play this daunting instrument. I tried learning from what appeared to be the best books available, and found that a very limited way to go. I then decided that I needed someone to at least help me learn the fundamentals, so I at least started doing things correctly, and had a sound foundation to build on. 

 

After a lot of searching, I identified and tracked down a great guitar instructor. He seemed to have tremendous background and expertise, but I realized after we had spent some time together and talked that he was far more than I realized. He had played rhythm guitar for BB. King for a number of years. His roommate, and best friend, who also played with BB, was, an at the time  unknown named Stevie ray Vaughn. When Stevie first went out on his own, he took my instructor along to play rhythm guitar for him. My teacher later also played a stint with the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and even played at a live, charity concert with Eric Clapton, after his rhythm guitar player was hit by food poisoning. Eric had seen him play an earlier set with BB King and asked if he could fill in. He has pictures documenting all of this, and the stories he can tell are simply incredible. 

 

I went to him for about four months for lessons, and then he was severely hit by COVID. And, at his age, it really took it's toll. He no longer teaches, and it was a massive loss to my attempt to learn to play, as I have not been able to replace him. Virtually all of the instructors I have looked into are only doing video/zoom lessons and I tried a couple, and they just don't work for me. Especially, at the point I am at in my learning process, I need someone there, and hands on. It hasn't helped that Michigan was, early on, one of the worst states for COVID cases, and has returned to that level in recent months. I understand people's concerns, but it has made moving forward in learning guitar very difficult. 

 

So, for the past year I have been doing my best, playing through his lesson book (the first stages that I have) for an hour daily, backwards, forwards, and am in hope of finding some worthwhile guitar teacher who still works in person.

 

I've also had a couple setbacks with a severe trigger finger condition on the ring finger of my left hand. Shots initially helped, but I recently had to have surgery. I have been rehabbing my fonger/hand for the past six weeks, and have slowly started back practicing, but some chords I simply cannot extend the finger to play yet, but it is improving, if slowly. Unfortunately, the two periods where the affected finger became extremely painful, and now, the surgery, have cost me probably four months of inactivity in the last year. However, nothing is going to stop me from learning to at least play acceptably. Assuming I live that long! :) 

 

There is, as you've noted, something very special about learning to play a guitar. Granted, if I allow myself to think of the degree of expertise of countless incredibly gifted rock guitarists, it feels as though I would have to live to be a thousand to even reach the level of "decent'. But I'm not giving up. I'm in this for the long run. 

 

Kudo's again, for taking up this challenge. Enjoy the ride. 

 

JC

 

 

Hi JC, wow, where to start. I'm so happy you also decided it was finally time to learn. Watching Hendrix, SRV, and Clapton, it looks so easy even a cave man could do it :~)

 

I had my first in person lesson last week, and it was fantastic. As you said, in person is really the best. There are so many little mistakes, shortcuts, or bad habits one can make, that a teacher quickly catches and lets you know how to resolve. 

 

It's a real bummer about your initial teacher being out of commission. It takes a special person to be that gifted in something and be able to teach it. I really hope you can connect with someone equally as good soon. 

 

I feel the same way as you, reading your sentence, "However, nothing is going to stop me from learning to at least play acceptably." It's really difficult because my fingers don't even reach the right strings and I feel like my wrist is going to fall off, but it's so rewarding and feels incredibly enjoyable to learn. The side benefit of how it has impacted my listening is also wonderful. 

 

Happy playing and listening JC!

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6 minutes ago, agladstone said:

On YouTube, the channel “Justin Guitar” has a couple of really good daily finger stretching and strengthening exercises, I’ve been doing them almost everyday and they’re definitely helpful. 
He is a good teacher for beginner’s too. 

 

Nice! 
 

I signed up for his app for one year. He is a great teacher. 
 

I hadn’t seen these exercises yet. Thanks!

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