Thin Bodied Nylon (Cedar) and Thin Steel Stringed Guitar Help!
In another post, I mentioned that after a long hiatus, I now find myself capo-ing above the 3rd and 4th frets. The sound becomes ukelele-ish on my GK Studio Negra. Therefore, I tried playing on my darker sounding, cedar topped classical and it was much better...
I decided the best bet for me would be use of a cedar top nylon, and a steel string to avoid the ukelele-ish sound. I'm a longtime tennis player/coach with an old rotator cuff injury -- I discovered that I can not play my current standard sized guitars for very long. Can anyone recommend a thin-bodied, cedar nylon string, and a thin steel stringed instrument with superior amplified sound that is reasonable in cost? Thanks in advance! |
I would be concerned than anything thin bodied would get thin sounding with a capo up the fretboard.
I would thing something cedar over rosewood would be the best bet, if your going that direction. From a brand you already know: https://www.cordobaguitars.com/guitars/f7-paco/ I've not yet found a thin body cedar topped steel string guitar, in a quick search. I was thinking maybe a Seagull Folk stye might. They also use different woods than many other builders. |
I think you can get both nylon and steel string thin body guitars at Kiesel...aka Carvin.
Might take a few months but you order exactly what you want and they have a great plugged in sound as well. Takamine is now building thin body guitars as well....not sure about cedar tops but worth looking into it. Happy Hunting! |
....if you are just concerned with amplified tone Godin has great thin line models to check out...Godin Multiacs
https://godinguitars.com/product-cat...uitars/multiac |
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If your budget is in the $800 plus range....
Another vote for Godin here. You can find your steel and nylon thin-bodies in their lineup. They are audible when unplugged, so you can still practice unplugged if needed. It's just not a full sound and not very loud. You'll need a decent amp to get a good plugged in sound, obviously. |
I have a nice Cordoba crossover. Very easy to play. Sounds lovely too.
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Have you tried playing a shorter scale guitar with a smaller body, like a travel size guitar? Something like a Taylor GS Mini or Martin's travel guitar? May be worth trying to see if they'd work with your shoulder.
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Reasonable cost? This is for medical reasons and will be covered under your insurance, no doubt. ;) |
I’d try a Turner, but They are out of my price range. However, there was a Michael Kelly and Turner collaboration series for much less.
The N6 and the S6. Those ARE in your range. Check out videos and Reverb. |
These days I'm playing a Córdoba Cadete 3/4 nylon short scale "student" guitar. I have shoulder issues and even my GS Mini is hard to play. I have found a good position for me to play the Cadete for my purposes. The body is somewhat thinner. I play it live at nursing homes with our folk group. Because it's not expensive I don't have to baby it and it gets bumped around in the settings I bring it to. And it sounds pretty good, at least to me. The nursing home residents aren't complaining.
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I doubt this is an option, just want to show what can be. I would like to build a thin guitar one day. It has more bass than its size lets on. Don't really notice how thin it is with his playing but when you look through the pictures... ... (don't forget to click on the picture).
https://www.guitarsalon.com/store/p5...ya-spcsar.html |
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