Showing posts with label taylor guitar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taylor guitar. Show all posts

Taylor Guitars GC5-E Grand Concert Acoustic Guitar Review

Taylor Guitars GC5-E Grand Concert Acoustic Guitar
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Simply put, one of Taylor's best higher quality products for the finger picking style of play. The cedar top gives it a mellow tone. The short-scale and smaller body makes it perfect for the smaller bodied man or woman. The sound is loud and bass is plentiful considering its size. I have the Expression system electrics but seldom use this guitar with an amp. The slotted headstock looks great and works without issue. I've bought, sold and traded a lot of Taylors and this one is a keeper.

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Taylor Guitars K24ce Grand Auditorium Acoustic Electric Guitar Review

Taylor Guitars K24ce Grand Auditorium Acoustic Electric Guitar
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When it comes to pristine works of art such as this Taylor K24ce guitar, the price tag is rather meaningless. Guitar construction, sound quality, tone, depth, resonance, playability, setup, electronics interface, and any other aspect you can possibly imagine are all impossibly perfect. One of my favorite things to do with this guitar is to simply take it out of the case and become intoxicated by the smell of the Hawaiian koa wood for a while!!
This guitar is to musical instruments, what Bianca Beauchamp is to feminine beauty. Try your local Guitar Center. If you lay down cash $$$, they will knock a few hundred dollars off the price. I got mine for about $3,700 in a triumphant Wayne's World moment!!


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Taylor Guitars 210e, Dreadnought, Solid Sitka Spruce Top, Rosewood Back/Sides, ES-T Review

Taylor Guitars 210e, Dreadnought, Solid Sitka Spruce Top, Rosewood Back/Sides, ES-T
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It is TAYLOR. So nearly nothing left to say. I am a beginner with experience of no more than 5 guitars. At first I am afraid of the rumor that Taylor has high action. After try it myself in a store, what they say is a little exaggerated. the only catch is that 210e is a dreadnought type, so the treble is not as bright as you think. need some work on electric part if you want the brightness of treble. Better to choose a cutaway guitar at this point, however 1-2 hundred more bucks need to place. gorgeous for both un-plugged and plugged-in. i feel like i could even be down on my knees for this baby when it goes in my arms.

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With Taylor's new ES-T under-saddle transducer, this affordably-priced, solid-top Dreadnought can be plugged-in to add a new dimension to your Taylor tone.



The Taylor 200 Series The 200 Series redefines what a mid-priced guitar can be. A satin, solid Sitka spruce top meets gorgeous Indian rosewood laminate back and sides, delivering an experience of sight, sound and touch that's unmistakably Taylor. Plug in with the optional Taylor electronics and take your performance to the stage with confidence.
Sitka Spruce Top Sitka Spruce (Picea sitchensis) grows in a coastal "pocket" from Northern California to Alaska. This dense, straight-grained wood has the highest strength and elasticity-to-weight ratio among available tonewoods, an attribute that makes it an ideal material not only for our soundboards, but for our internal bracing, as well. Sitka produces a slightly brighter tone than does Engelmann.
Indian Rosewood Laminate Back/Sides Indian Rosewood (Dalbergia latifolia) is coveted by players and guitar builders alike for its dark, luxurious coloration, which ranges from brown to purple to rose to black, and for tonal characteristics that include a strong bass response and long sustain. It remains the most popular tonewood used in the making of high-quality acoustic guitars.
Dreadnought Body ShapeThe original Dreadnought acoustic guitar appeared early in the 20th Century, and its no-frills, no-nonsense shape made it a logical namesake of the huge battleships of that day. Most subsequent Dreadnoughts, including Taylor's, have been derivative of that early design. In 1997, however, Bob Taylor re-designed the Taylor Dreadnought by softening the curves at the top and bottom and generally refining its overall shape. In 2003, gloss-finish Dreadnoughts also underwent bracing refinements that substantially increased their overall volume and bass response, without sacrificing Taylor's signature balance and clarity. Dreadnought six-strings shine as "plectrum" or "rhythm" guitars because they respond well to flatpicking or light-to-heavy strumming.
ES-T Pickup Inspired by Taylor's Expression System technology, the Expression System Transducer, or ES-T, is a single-source, under-saddle transducer with individual elements for each string. (The ES-T was originally called the ES Element, but the name was changed to avoid confusion with another product.) The ES-T has an onboard preamp and the same active controls found on the full Expression System. Featuring a custom-voiced EQ and dynamic response, the system is powered by a 9-volt battery, with a battery life LED power indicator (which is lit when the battery is being used). The pickup also has a Phase switch for feedback control, which is located on the preamp board inside the soundhole.
Chrome-Plate Tuners Taylor Tuners continue the industry-leading 18:1 gear ratio that they've been using, yet yield even greater precision with the help of a manufacturing process that employs the same gear-cutting machines used by Swiss watchmakers. The more precisely-machined gears virtually eliminate the slight "slop", or slack, typical among tuners, which makes it even easier for Taylor owners to get--and stay--in tune. Taylor Tuners also feature an elegant aesthetic touch, with the Taylor logo cleanly etched on the back.

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Taylor Guitars 615ce Jumbo Acoustic Electric Guitar Review

Taylor Guitars 615ce Jumbo Acoustic Electric Guitar
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2011 purchase. I absolutely love my new 615ce. It's perfect, has a great balanced sound, strong even blend. It's amazing with finger picking and I'm finding its sweet spot for strumming. The ES electronics is bizzar. I wish I could have found more reviews that weren't promotional materials to understand the problems with this pick-up system. Maybe in time I'll find a solution... or just put a better system in the guitar. Currently the high B and E strings are louder than the rest of the strum. They stick out and make the sound unbalanced... totally unlike the amazing natural sound of the guitar. I even sent it back to Taylor for them to work on it... but it came back to me sounding pretty much the same. I would give the guitar a 5 star... but I mainly play live and plugged in... which is not enhancing the bands overall sound. OUCH. YUCK. I've put other guitars in our system and can make them beautiful sounding. I worked on the Taylor in our system for 1/2 hour and never came up with a satisfactory sound... until I put a mic on it, which then instantly made it sound the way it's supposed to. After spending so much money on a guitar, I wish it would sound on stage like it does in the privacy of the show-room or my living room... especially since that's exactly what Taylor is promoting their ES to do. I feel like I've been lied to... hood-winked. The emperor has no clothes... "It's a great system, the best." All of Taylor's promotion says in videos and written. UMMM... are you hearing the same thing I am? Please listen to the guitar in the store and check the system out first before buying... and try two or three kinds of amps just to be sure you know what your dealing with. I hope and pray my attitude about this pick-up will change over time. Maybe there is just something I'm missing that I've never missed in my 25 years of playing and sound mixing.

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Silver Creek T-170 Acoustic Guitar Natural Review

Silver Creek T-170 Acoustic Guitar Natural
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I had just finished reading the book "Clapton's Guitar" so you may understand why I was blown away by an all-solid wood 000/OM acoustic guitar for next to nothing.
Thinking I would tell my wife it was for "market survey" all the while I was secretly drooling over what might arrive. (I'm in the building end).
Back and sides were a beautiful straight-grained Indian Rosewood.
The top is maybe an "A" grade Engelmann top and is punchy like Adirondac Spruce.
The inside bracing and kerfing are clean and sans glue squeeze out.
The backstrip, inside the box, is a very tight-grained Spruce and looks perfect.
Bridge is cleanly done.
The mahogany neck feels slightly boaty with a "V" shape but still very playable.
String spacing is generous and it's easy to hit all the notes.
The neck is stained dark and has a volute,
both Martin style. No buzzing but after the action is lowered it will need a neck adjustment or vice versa.
Peghead Inlay looks CNC'd and is perfectly done.
The finish is gloss and is very well done and polished without the usual wavy lines prevalent in cheap and poorly done high-end guitars.
The Tuners remind me of small Waverly's.. But!
Frets are cleanly done but could use a polish.
The action is too high and the saddle should be replaced with a
Martin Saddle seated flat into the bridge slot and intonated.
The nut seemed fine.
All in all, setup aside, this guitar is awesome with beautiful Tone!
and plenty of 000 vibe!
I was able to coax some very sweet notes from this guitar!
Even with the stock strings.
Now for the bad part: I should of bought two!
All this for "Market Survey"!
Someone has to do it!

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Taylor Guitars 816ce Grand Symphony Acoustic Electric Guitar Review

Taylor Guitars 816ce Grand Symphony Acoustic Electric Guitar
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About The Reviewer
I've been playing guitar for about 37 years, and I remember every acoustic guitar I've ever owned. My first guitar was a little nylon-string cheapie my Mom got me for Christmas. My second guitar was another cheapie, a Martin knockoff that I got from a local music store for about $80. Not long after I got my first part-time job, I got a tax refund and used it to buy my first "real" guitar ... an Ovation "deep body" model that I got for about $700, cash, and man, I was in heaven. It came with a tan-colored, custom-fitted Samsonite case, and the action on it played "like buttah."
Not long after I acquired that Ovation, a close friend started writing and performing contemporary Christian music. We toured the US and Canada off and on for about 3 years, and I played rhythm on the Ovation ... really for the first time in a live band setting, at full stage volume. It was great, but I frequently had trouble with resonant feedback ... a common problem with all full-bodied acoustic electric guitars.
After grappling with these problems for years, I stumbled upon a new variety of Ovation at my local guitar shop ... an acoustic electric hybrid, called a Viper. Ovation totally eliminated the problem of resonant feedback by combining acoustic and solid body elements into one guitar ... literally hollowing out enough open space in a solid mahogany body to generate a true acoustic waveform, then using a specialized pickup to capture the sound and transmit it through the guitar's preamp. I plugged that thing into a Trace Acoustic amp at my local guitar shop, and I was hooked. The Viper was literally made to be played through an amp, using an amp like a regular acoustic uses tonewoods. I bought the Viper and the amp; it became my six-string workhorse; I played the beejeezus out of it for 15 years (primarily in house of worship and solo guitarist/singer settings, but also in occasional live band settings), and have been completely happy with every aspect of its performance ... "hot" gain and the most precise intonation, clarity and definition, all with ZERO resonant feedback. The only downside of the Viper is that it can't really be played without an amp. (I later added a Guild Jumbo F-30 to the acoustic "quiver," but if I start talking about the Guild, this could turn into a novel.)
Over the past year, after having put the Viper into the shop several times to have the frets leveled and dressed, I finally started getting tired of the sound of it, and started craving an acoustic electric with a truer acoustic sound, that I could play with or without an amp. I also decided that after playing guitar more or less continuously for nearly 40 years, it was finally time that I got myself a premium, solid wood guitar. Taylor vs. Martin
Anyone who knows anything about acoustic guitars knows that Martin has dominated the U.S. "premium" market for decades, and for good reason. I've never owned a Martin, but I've sampled many of their premium guitars over the years, and noted two things about the various models I've tried: 1) they always sound fantastic, but 2) the "action" on them is typically very stiff and difficult to play. (There's a reason for that by the way ... when the action is stiff, it typically means heavier gauge strings and/or higher lift off the saddle and frets. It takes more strength to play, but also permits the player to hit the strings harder with no fret "buzz" or degradation of the individual strings' integrity. Louder acoustic volume ... clean sound ... a classic characteristic of Martin guitars.) Over the same period, however, I've noted the rise of Taylor's reputation as a maker of premium acoustics, and have seen many professional musicians that I like and respect using them, to great effect. Already pretty familiar with Martin's reputation and basic product line, the first place I looked was the Taylor website, and I liked everything I saw. I quickly figured out that the line I was most interested in was the 800 series, and more particularly, the 816ce.
In terms of materials, design, craftsmanship, cost and performance, the 816ce is nearly identical to Martin's GPCPA1, and probably several other Martin "cutaway" acoustic-electric models. The only meaningful difference between the two (other than the action) is the electronics. The Martin model uses a system developed by Fishman, the "F1 Aura" system. Up until a few years ago, Taylor also used pickup/preamp systems developed by Fishman, until Taylor developed their own, proprietary "Expression" pickup/preamp system. More about that in a minute. Acoustic Electric Pickup Systems in General
Any honest discussion about acoustic electric technology has to start with a fundamental question: Is it possible to generate a "natural" sound from electronic pickup elements placed inside the body of an acoustic guitar? For example, when an acoustic guitar is played without amplification, what we all hear through our ears (and feel as a player) is a complex mix: the sound of vibrating strings, blending together inside a box made of resonant woods, and then projected outward from a hole cut in the top of the box. Is what a pickup element "hears" inside the box, or in direct contact with one of its surfaces, ever going to sound like what we hear outside the box? The honest answer to that question is "probably not," and that auditory conundrum is exactly what separates the Fishman F1 Aura from the Taylor "Expression" System.
The Fishman F1 Aura system is more digital signal processor than a simple pickup and pre-amp combo. It's a mini-computer that actually modifies the signal received from the guitar's pickups, in ways more complex and diverse than Taylor's "Expression" system. The F1 Aura gives the player the option of just using a "dry" signal from the guitar's pickups, or applying digital processing to that signal to make it sound more "natural." Among other features, the F1 Aura system is outfitted, for example, with a number of preset digital waveforms that mimic those created by certain types of microphones, commonly applied to acoustic guitars in professional studio settings. You access the effects, and adjust the amount of effect being applied to the guitar's signal output, by pushing two button/knobs on the "upper" side of the guitar in a particular sequence, and then turning them to adjust levels. The irony of the F1 Aura system, however, is that the more of its admittedly remarkable technology you apply to the guitar's signal output, the less the result sounds like the "native" sound of the guitar, and more like Fishman's programmed effects.
Taylor's "Expression" system, on the other hand, has no such user-accessible digital processing features. The backbone of the system is a newly-designed pickup element developed by Taylor that they call a "dynamic body sensor." Taylor developed the dynamic body sensor for the specific purpose of making the signal output of its acoustic electric guitars sound more "natural," without the necessity for added processing. These sensors are basically a hybrid, combining piezoelectric technology that has been around for decades with diaphragm technology previously used only in microphones. The idea with the Expression system was to mount two of these little hybrid pickup "mics" at strategic spots on the underside of the guitar's soundboard, and combine the signal received from them with the signal received from a more traditional, piezo-based "dynamic string sensor," implanted in the guitar under the base of the fretboard. All three signals are then routed into a state-of-the-art pre-amp designed by legendary audio engineer Rupert Neve. The pre-amp is reputedly as good as or better than the pre-amps found in most current studio mixing consoles. Nice. Particulars of the Expression System
I have to confess that after 20-plus years of working with more traditional, piezo-based acoustic electric pickup systems, at first, I didn't quite know what to make of Taylor's Expression system. It's very different from systems I've used in the past. Plugging in a Taylor guitar equipped with the Expression system is not like plugging in a guitar with a pickup. It's more like plugging in a multi-source microphone that's specifically designed for one kind of "singer" ... the guitar it's attached to. As a result, the player's whole approach to amplified acoustic guitar has to be tweaked a bit, to enjoy the full benefit of the technology. For example, conventional wisdom dictates that a guitar is never supposed to be plugged directly into a mixer. Not so with the Expression system. It sends a "balanced" line feed, which can be plugged directly into a mixer or PA, and then simply reflected back at the player from a monitor. Of course, it can also be plugged into an amp, but the tricks to using an amp with Taylor's Expression system are: 1) getting an amp that's capable of faithfully reproducing what's coming out of the Taylor, and 2) getting used to the idea that you don't need to do much for the signal output to sound "natural." You basically start with "natural" (all three knobs at center, or "detent" position) and then make minor adjustments to compensate for your amp, personal taste and playing conditions, e.g., bringing out a bit more of the highs, beefing up the bass, pulling a little of either or both out, or beefing up both to boost the overall dynamics. The system is ingenious, simple and effective.
The design and placement of the system components is also pretty clever. The "dynamic string sensor," for example, is not placed under the saddle or bridge of the guitar, as is the case with most other factory-installed acoustic electric systems (like my Viper). Rather,...Read more›

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Taylor Guitars Baby Taylor, BT2, Mahogany, Natural, Left Review

Taylor Guitars Baby Taylor, BT2, Mahogany, Natural, Left
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This item is one of the best guitars I have seen in history, for one because of the sound, and for two because of the price. I'd predict that something this gorgeous should actually be priced at least towards the 1000 dollar mark, and look at what you're getting it for! It'll work for almost anything - a beginning guitar for the child or a travel guitar for the master. The only thing I have against it is the fact that it is difficult to find a pickup for this item. And I might even be wrong there - I haven't done much looking :). Maybe 3 minutes and 2 google searches, but that is all. Still, you'd think the manufacturer would let a pickup for this item jump out at you. Back to the beaten path, nothing beats this guitar. No other 3/4 size can do what this guitar can.

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An alternate version of the original Baby Taylor substitutes a solid mahogany top, giving this 3/4-size Dreadnought a dark, attractive complexion and a mid-range boost.


The Baby Taylor Series The Baby Taylor is the ultimate travel companion, delivering volume and tone that surprise for its diminutive dimensions. At three-quarters the size of a full-sized guitar, the Baby Taylor lives for the road. It also loves little hands, which makes it an irresistible choice for kids taking lessons. Available with either a solid spruce or solid mahogany top.
Tropical American Mahogany Top Mahogany is supple enough to make excellent, responsive bodies, yet sufficiently strong and stable to use in necks. Mahogany produces a bright, clear tone, with a unique balance that yields an expressive dynamic range in response to even the lightest touch. This makes Taylor's 500 Series guitars especially popular with fingerstyle guitarists and blues players, and it gives this particular Baby Taylor great looks and a more pronounced mid-range.
Sapele Laminate Back/Sides This exceptional, mahogany-like wood grows throughout the tropical rain forests of Nigeria and the Ivory Coast of Africa. Ever since we introduced it in 1998, its legion of fans has grown exponentially. As a tonewood, it's denser and harder than mahogany, so it has a crisper, clearer, brighter, "pop"-ier sound than its more familiar counterpart. Loud and robust, with a lovely ribboned grain, sapele has been used by Spanish guitar makers for many years.
Dreadnought Body ShapeThe original Dreadnought acoustic guitar appeared early in the 20th Century, and its no-frills, no-nonsense shape made it a logical namesake of the huge battleships of that day. Most subsequent Dreadnoughts, including Taylor's, have been derivative of that early design. In 1997, however, Bob Taylor re-designed the Taylor Dreadnought by softening the curves at the top and bottom and generally refining its overall shape. In 2003, gloss-finish Dreadnoughts also underwent bracing refinements that substantially increased their overall volume and bass response, without sacrificing Taylor's signature balance and clarity. Dreadnought six-strings shine as "plectrum" or "rhythm" guitars because they respond well to flatpicking or light-to-heavy strumming.
Varnish FinishA durable varnish finish offers protection, good looks, and a smooth feel to the touch. The spruce top's beauty shines right through.

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