Listen to Eddy123. You can do well by yourself by practicing on cheap equipment.
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For years and years I played on crap guitars. High action cheap stuff . . .
There was a lotta stuff I couldn't do with them.
Some parts of a song didn't sound good on a cheap guitar - so I had to find another way to play that part of the song on that guitar.
But I practiced, and I eventually was able to get the crappy guitars to play some decent music. And so they sounded like 'regular' guitars in my hands.
It just took 3 times as much work, is all. And - that is a good thing . . .
It was a great thing . . .
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Crappy equipment forced me to develope my playing ability beyond my contemporaries - just to sound even as good as them.
They could only sound decent with good equipment, I could sound decent on crap.
When I play a good guitar - life is just easier. But a good guitar lets me take all kinds of musical shortcuts.
Best thing I ever did was to practice on cheap guitars. . . . forced me to learn more.
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I sometimes bring along a guitar which I bought
brand new from a store for $75. Yep, I bought a $75 guitar.
Best thing I ever did. It FORCED me to learn new stuff . . . just to play it.
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Sometimes when there's a crowd around, I'll play some of my jazzy-rock 'Bradley-esque' stuff on this bottom-of-the barrel piece of hardened pond scum w/ strings on it.
And then sit back and listen to the comments. I hear stuff like "Wow, that's a really good guitar!" or "Wow! what kind of guitar is that?" or "Geezz, that guitar sounds great! You must've paid a lot of money for it!"
Hehehe . . .
I love it.
'course, most any guitarists can see that it's a cheap piece of crap. Then they ask if they can try it out.
It's kind of funny watching their eyes cross as they try to play it, and then see them wincing in pain after about 2 minutes . . .
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My friends, never put a man down for playing inferior equipment . . .
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Buy what you can afford, and don't worry about it . . .
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By the way, half of my practices are still with that guitar . . .
Because I haven't finished learning my lesson . . .