Selecting the Best Acoustic Guitar for You






by Eldon Cornelio


Just about any party on earth is incomplete without the sweet strumming of an acoustic guitar to accompany the self-styled crooners. While electric guitars offer a more comfortable playing experience, acoustic guitars still rule the roost when classic music has to be belted out.

In fact, no matter how popular electric guitars are today, nothing beats the good old acoustic guitar. So when it comes to choosing the best acoustic guitar out there, it is important that you take the following factors into consideration:

1. Body Style The overall shape of the guitar body does not aim to cater only to the buyer's aesthetic sensibilities. The acoustic guitar's body style dictates the sound projection and emphasizes the varying tones. The size and shape of acoustic guitars range from small travel size to jumbo and dreadnought guitars.

You may usually see 12 frets in small acoustic guitars. Additionally, you could distinguish 14 frets in jumbo guitars for stronger quality of sounds. The dreadnought type, on the other hand, are opted by players who wish for an improved bass pitch. Moreover, one particular change that happened in the body style of acoustic guitars is the substitution of the nylon and gut string to the steel ones.

2. Neck You should also take into account the instrument's neck if you really want to get the best acoustic guitar for you. The neck's size is identified by the body of the guitar, including the number of frets on it. The acoustic guitar's neck generally comes with 12 to 14 frets. However, this merely denotes the frets found on the neck instead of the overall number of frets.

3. Tonewood You also have to take the tonewood into consideration so that you would get the best acoustic guitar there may be. The particular part you should be taking a good look at is the top part of the instrument since it is in here that the sound is produced. A mahogany tonewood, for example, creates a more vibrant tone at dynamic range's higher end. Such instrument is typically played in country blues genres.

When koa is used for producing the guitar, the sound can best be described as mid-range which is most appropriate for Hawaiian music. Brazilian rosewood is associated with a higher sound velocity that produces a strong reverberant quality of sound. The rarity of the tonewood is factored in to a great extent while determining the price of the guitar.  




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