Reasons To Buy A PRS Guitar

By Jack Wogan


PRS Guitars should be your option because each of them has appeared as a result of a unique ongoing quest. Just like the famous guitar players, special instruments have histories of their own to tell, and so do the best guitar makers like Paul Reed Smith, who has launched PRS Guitars.

Sounds can sometimes interweave guitar-related tales of destinies that would otherwise seem distant. Brian May was born in 1947 in the UK and Paul Reed Smith was born in 1956 in Maryland, US. The lead guitarist of world famous band Queen and the successful modern guitar maker have but one experience in common: they both had learned to play small guitars when very young. Those highly unique childhood vibrations have then outcome a two directional quest for the best sound.

A ukulele was Paul's first musical experience related to making music. This very tiny four corded Hawaiian guitar produces distinctive sweet sounds. Brian took lessons of classical piano at an early age, but a received banjolele brought them to an early end, as the boy grew fond of his small banjo-like instrument with a ukulele neck. The sounds a banjolele produces are both harsh like those of a banjo and sweet like those of a ukulele.

A 16 years old Brain May together with his father, who was an aeronautical engineer, would disembody an old fireplace, an old motorbike and would add a knitting needle to put a famous guitar together: the Red Special. Poverty had nothing to do with their options. Instead of buying any of the guitars he could afford, young Brian was in search for an electric instrument to produce certain combinations of harsh and mellow sounds, an idea that most likely started with his banjolele.

Paul Reed Smith, who did not become world famous as a musician, became interested in obtaining the perfect sound, too. He was in college when he made his first guitar. And he made a second one as soon as the first was ready. And he made another one every month for quite some time, while introducing them to musicians backstage, one by one. This is the first line of PRS Guitars.

The significant advance was made when Paul met Ted Mc Carty, former director at Gibson and the maker of well-known Explorer guitars. Ted became Paul's mentor and associate. Their lifetimes spent in search of the special sound have the modern PRS Guitars as tokens.




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