Taylor 110 Acoustic Guitar Review
The Best $600 Acoustic Guitar, Period.
Taylor 110 Acoustic Guitar free shipping now today.
Not too long ago I decided to purchase a new acoustic guitar. I'd grown tired of my 7-year-old Ovation Celebrity
Deluxe - the shallow-bowl Lyrachord backing makes for a plastic-sounding attack. I gave myself a budget of $1500
and set out to find an all-wood guitar that would meet all of my criteria: a natural, woody sound; even tone
between strings and throughout the higher registers; and a great playability. My main buy targets were Martin and
Taylor guitars, both well-respected guitars.
Down in Florida for a holiday weekend, I decided to hit the local guitar center to sample some
guitars, figuring I would get a taste of what I wanted and refine my search later back in my home state of
Tennessee. I found the acoustic section and began to look around. Since a clearly deranged individual occupied the
"expensive" room, yowling and banging away on a two thousand dollar guitar, I decided to sample the budget guitars
first just to get warmed up. The first guitar I picked up was a Taylor 110 acoustic guitar, which I eventually took
into the classical guitar room in hopes of escaping the sounds of the Lithium-deprived individual and some nu-metal
kid playing the same riff over and over. Taylor 110 Acoustic Guitar buy now,
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What struck me almost immediately (even before moving out of the noise) was how easy it was to play the Taylor
110 acoustic guitars. I knew the strings were mediums (I play custom lights on my Ovation), and I had been out of
practice, but it was still easy to play all my songs, even the technically difficult ones. Jumps from 1st to 5th
position were just as easy as on my Ovation, and the narrower neck kept my hand from getting fatigued when playing
hand-stretching chords.
After playing the Taylor for a little while, I picked up a Martin of a similar price and went back to my
sanctuary. I was surprised to notice that the build quality of the Martin seemed inferior to the Taylor - there was
a fair amount of buzzing on the frets (although the intonation was fine), and the Martin just felt more clunky than
the Taylor 110 acoustic guitar for some reason. The strings unfortunately were rather dull - Martin strings their
guitars with their own strings; Taylor uses Elixir Nanowebs, which in combination with the Martin's darker, woodier
tone made it difficult for me to get even sound on the higher strings, particularly in higher positions on the
fretboard. I tried a more expensive Martin ($1100) that had less of the same issues but enough that I felt a bit
disappointed.
By this time the psycho's friend had convinced him to leave, and I was able to venture safely into the
"expensive" room. Unfortunately there was only one guitar in there below my budget of $1500, another Martin. I
played it for a bit, but it just didn't have the same feel as the Taylor and suffered from dull string syndrome as
well. I went back to the Taylor 110 acoustic guitar, having fallen for its simple beauty, great sounds, and great
craftsmanship.
I was a little amazed that the Taylor sounded and played better than a guitar more than twice the price and
pretty excited about shaving $900 off my budget. The shop sale actually pushed the price down even further on an
already on-sale guitar, so when I added an SKB hard case, the total came to around $600 including tax - a real
steal by any definition that doesn't include jail time.
To be fair to the other guitars I tried, the Taylor guitar isn't perfect - it's got a Sitka spruce top with
Sapele laminate sides and back, which combined with the Elixirs creates a tone that's almost too bright. The finish
and inlays are plain and ordinary, and for this price you don't get a preamp. I couldn't argue with the sound - I
had a friend play the guitar for me, and it was "that sound" - the sound I'd come looking for in a new acoustic
guitar.
For about $600, you simply can't purchase a better guitar than the Taylor 110 acoustic guitar. Taylor 110 Acoustic Guitar additional information.
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