not so, Mary Lou...
BBB said:
No shit.
Get a top of the line Strat if only for the resale value? I don't think so.
Think about it. The guitar is going to depreciate at least a couple of hundred just by taking it out the door. Then it's going to depreciate even more when you actually play it and it gets a little scuffed up. Not only that, but you didn't know exactly what you were looking for when you got it, so now you realize that you prefer a rosewood neck to a maple, but didn't get the rosewood because you weren't familiar with the nuances when you purchased your first guitar. Hell. Once you've been playing for a while, you may realize that you really prefer the tone and feel of a Les Paul. Now you're stuck selling the guitar when you finally decide on what you really want after playing for a while.
Point being, you can get a good guitar for $300-500 or even less if you shop around. If you are considering an investment, unless you have money to burn, you should check out mutual funds with the money you save in buying a decent mid-priced guitar.
Sure you'll get some additional snob pleasure and a marginal increase in tone and playability out of an expensive guitar. However, the resale value hardly even comes close to the difference in price.
Yes, shit. But only if you need to.
Getting a "top of the line 'Strat if only for the resale value"
is truly stupid- however if you decide further down the road
"to change horses in midstream", at least you won't get soaked as bad.
Everything depreciates. That is inevitable. And it might get
"scuffed up". Fender has a new "cosmetically aged" product
line called "Relics"- seems that use and some mild abuse add
some character and value to these noble axes.
As far as not knowing what one likes- such as rosewood vs
maple for the neck, choice of finishes I will say this but once-
whatever you want you'll study and get, every damned time.
You'll drool over literature until you finally find the "right one".
And-gasp! Heaven forbid- that the one you thought you loved
is not "the one"- like I said, and Bongolation did- you won't get
hurt near as bad changing your mind. Point being, even those of us with mutual funds don't have money to burn. We buy what
we want, period end of report. A guitar is an investment to a collector. To a musician it is an extension of his creative spirit
and will. It is something that defies mere monetary valuing. This
also clearly seperates the musicians from the non- musicians.
This one simple view. Are you a musician? perhaps?
There is a quiet sense of confidence one has when in a jam session with a quality instrument. When the other musicians see the Fender Tweed case carried in by that musician they know
that person takes his music seriously. And what they hear when the music starts is pleasure to their ears. Nothing equals the sound produced by an instrument of quality and legend. Would
you settle for a copy, or a Stradivarius? a Kimball or a Steinway?
Music isn't cheap. But then again love isn't either. You pay for
everything in this life that you want, and you get what you pay
for too. Money comes and it goes. It is but our humble servant. Snobs are uneducated, prejudiced and opinionated,highly negative excuses for human beings who worship things
and use people. If I were to lose every last thing I have I can say
this...
"Far better to be a has-been than one who never was."
And dream of the next Fender I'll own... what'll it be now? a
Tele, or maybe that 'Strat... or I'll just roll over and pester the
redhead for awhile.
Faithmonster
