this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2023
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Classical Guitar
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Hey! Thanks for the reply - no worries about it taking some time. You responded, and that's what matters ๐
Anyway, I ended up getting it fixed for about $40 by a guy a friend of mine recommended. It was a small crack leading to a tuner peg.
What is very serendipitous about your timing is that yesterday I finally upgraded to a new guitar. After sampling 7 guitars I settled on an Esteve 7SR. It is by a huge margin the most outstanding guitar I've ever played.
Oh nice, happy to hear that! 40 bucks doesn't sound like a lot. And congrats on the new instrument! The best guitar is the one that make you wanna play the most :)
Regarding the timing, the truth is that I just joined Lemmy and discovered this channel a few days ago. Not too much is happening here. Early adoption can be tough, hey? :)
Yeah, he was a local guy and he said it was a quick fix and had no real material cost. Nice dude.
This sub has been quiet. I guess it's a pretty niche group of people who are into classical guitar, and also fed up with reddit shenanigans.
I just thought it was a funny coincidence that the reply was the same day. ๐
The biggest issues my old guitar has are the low tones feeling dull, and the general playability. I thought I couldn't do clean Barre chords, but it turns out the guitar had at least a little to do with it. My technique needs a little work, but Barres on the new guitar are so much cleaner.
Re sub, yeah, I guess it's a combination of both. I do not read reddit still as it does contain a lot of uswful info, but I don't want to contribute there anymore.
Re barres, it's not an easy thing at all, to be fair. I've been playing guitar (primarily, electric) for some 20 years if not more and only once I picked up classical guitar I realized that my technique if very dodgy and basically wrong in almost every possible way. And barres really made me realize that the hard and painful way. I've been pondering on this for a while and since have found a couple of really helpful videos on YT that helped me to analize and dissect the problem and redevelop my technique in such a way, that now I can play literally for hours with almost no pain, while previosly I had to stop after some 5-10 minutes of i tense "barring" as the pain was shifting from discomfort to basically cramps. I'll actually share it in a separate thread as I think many more people struggle with figuring our a "correct" technique for the left-hand, wo hopefully it will help someone as well.