Reddit Reddit reviews Jasmine S34C NEX Acoustic Guitar

We found 7 Reddit comments about Jasmine S34C NEX Acoustic Guitar. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Musical Instruments
Guitars
Acoustic Guitars
Steel-string Acoustic Guitars
Jasmine S34C NEX Acoustic Guitar
Gloss NaturalDreadnought body styleLaminate Spruce topSapele back and sidesRosewood FingerboardSynthetic bone nut and saddle
Check price on Amazon

7 Reddit comments about Jasmine S34C NEX Acoustic Guitar:

u/ThereAreFourLights_ · 7 pointsr/army

Check out GOG.com for some good old games and good, new indie games. They're DRM-free and cheap. I'm a big fan of FTL and Roller Coaster Tycoon 3.

Order this guitar from Amazon and start teaching yourself to play. I got mine at Christmas for $80. There's a lot of great tutorials on YouTube.

Skype with friends and loved ones back home.

Read books. MWR probably has some. If you have a Kindle, even better. Did you know that you can get free Kindle library e-books through AKO? Log in, go to Self Service, click My Library, click "Read or Listen to a Book," then click the small text link to go to the Audio eBook Library. You can check out up to five books at a time for up to three weeks.

I think the important thing is to do something creative, whether it's building the perfect park in RCT3, learning a piece on guitar, or exercising your imagination with a good book. Hope this helps. Trust me, I've been there.

u/CookieMonNOMNOM · 3 pointsr/Guitar

Take a look at this one:

http://www.amazon.com/Jasmine-Takamine-S34C-Acoustic-Guitar/dp/B0002GXZK4/ref=cm_cr-mr-title

It's a Jasmine S34C and they are about $120. I bought it for my son after reading a lot of recommendations for inexpensive, but playable acoustics for a beginner.

I love to play this guitar. It has a nice natural flat finish, and it is very comfortable. I pick it up before my other acoustics...it just feels better than my more expensive guitars.

I did hear other reviewers complain that it needed a set-up after it was shipped, but you should probably do that with any new guitar, anyway...especially for a new player.

Good luck. Practice a lot, and let us hear how you are doing!

u/brock_lee · 2 pointsr/AskReddit

http://www.amazon.com/Jasmine-Takamine-S34C-Cutaway-Acoustic/dp/B0002GXZK4

That one seems to be very reasonably priced with great reviews. Metal strings though. Gut strings are really for classical (mostly). If you want to play popular music, I'd learn to like metal.

Oh, and I didn't just google "cheap guitar", I've been playing for 30 years. I've looked at that guitar before for other people (although no one I know has one).

u/gnarlyneighbor · 2 pointsr/Guitar

I started my brother out with a Jasmine S34C and I personally loved to play it. Very nice sounding guitar with a low price point. Nicely built and beautiful.

u/Yeargdribble · 2 pointsr/piano

Well if you want to just play chords for singalong of specific songs, try googling the title and "lead sheet." Sometimes you can get lucky and find a decent one for free. Otherwise you can search the title and "chords" and you'll usually end up on ultimate guitar. The chords can be very close, but can sometimes be suspect as they are being simplified for guitarists for guitarists at times.

Though, that might be close enough for you and the simplification might actually make it easier.

From there you can look around on youtube for simple comping patterns and combine that with some basic chord spelling knowledge and maybe noodle yourself up to a basic proficiency to just play the chords while she and you sing or something.

I honestly generally just recommend guitar for this to a lot of people because it's very easy to learn to just start strumming the 4-6 chords you need to play most pop songs in like a month. On guitar you basically just memorize a few hand shapes and get good at moving between them. You don't have to have any idea how to spell the chords. You don't need to know what notes are on which string. You don't have to create a composite rhythm between two hands as your strumming hand has one job and the fretting hand has the other. It's also just more naturally rhythmic.

Meanwhile, on piano, the barrier to entry to be at the level of a near beginner hobbyist guitarist is just insane. You do have to be able to spell the chords and rather than one shape, there are dozens are potential ways to voice them. Context matters more and moving between chords won't be one shape to another shape but could be any number of voicings of one chord to any number of voicings of the next chord.

Creating rhythm requires interplay between the two hands and the voicing is wrapped up in that too.

This is all a very great disappointment to guitarists who want to pick up piano an expect it to be similar to guitar.

I totally understand that as an adult with responsibilities you probably don't want to add an instrument, but just in case you're curious, here is an absolutely passable, cheap entry level acoustic. And guitar is pretty easily self taught by looking almost anywhere on Youtube or the internet for beginner chords or whatever.

u/iggyReillydammit · 2 pointsr/Guitar

There was a post the other day in here about this Jasmine guitar. I played one a few weeks ago, played every string at every fret - no buzz, and the intonation was fine. For $100 bucks, it's definitely a good buy and one that you wouldn't have to be concerned about should it get blown up. There's a version without the cutaway that's about $20 cheaper.