Why Are Vintage Guitars & Amps Considered Better?

Posted by on 5th February 2008 in Blues
Vintage Guitars
austinusapowers asked:


Vintage guitars, and some vintage amps, often are priced far higher than new guitars. Why is that? I’ve always felt that as technology improves the quality of a modern guitar should be better, too. I know that mass manufacturing versus handcrafted is an issue, but some new boutique guitars are still handcrafted.

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2 Responses to “Why Are Vintage Guitars & Amps Considered Better?”

  1. macdoodle Says:

    think antiques.
    and yes more hand crafting is better sound and more $
    and for certain kinds of music older is better. made fro that music sound.
    see older better.. like me.. none could ever repeat the sound of these babies and so ..

    FBI Top Ten Art Crimes – Theft of the Davidoff-Morini Stradivarius
    In October 1995, it was reported that a $3 million Stradivarius violin had been stolen from the New York City apartment of Erica Morini, a noted concert …

  2. kabum Says:

    First of all, they aren’t ALL better.

    However, with guitars in particular, the fact that the wood has aged and mellowed can create a tone that cannot be equaled by newer wood. Another draw to vintage is simply design. Some of the guitars I’ve purchased were bought based on appearance alone. Sometimes, it’s rather like the draw of a ’54 Chevy or the muscle cars of the sixties. With vintage guitars, hand-crafted does not have as much to do with it as so many guitars considered “vintage” were indeed mass produced. I also have brand new guitars, some handcrafted, some not. They are no better, no worse, than vintage although they are often easier to play and the electronics may be more stable. The wiring in my vintage electrics must be repaired frequently and is more easily affected by dust, humidity, etc.

    With amplifiers, it’s all in the electronics. Tube amplifiers simply sound different than solid-state. If you want to sound just like the Beatles, you must purchase the same guitars and the same amplifiers. Thus, vintage. Again, though, todays more modern amplifiers are definitely more stable and hold up better. I currently use only one vintage amp, and use it sparingly. All of the rest of my amplification equipment is new.

    If you want to know more, check out some of the vintag sites on the net by searching “vintage guitars” and “vintage amps.” You’ll find many different opinions out there.

    Good question!

    Kabum

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