@@hyperbolekidyup. They look at you assuming you're there to steal something. Most of there guitars on the floor are all busted, scratched, and beat up... lol then they try to sell em at full price. The only thing they're good for is guitar strings in a pinch.
I have been going to my local Samash for over 20 years, and it is one of the stores currently closing. Walking in now to the dying husk of years of good memories and buys, it's just sad. I have played way more than guitars and basses over the years, and Samash always had things I needed. Being able to touch and feel things before you purchase them is invaluable, especially for musical instrument and equipment.
I live in Prague, Czech Republic and it’s the same here. About 8 years ago I went to a local store here… (I used to go there for a long time before that, but this was really their golden era.) They just expanded from one floor to two and extra rooms, they had one of the first sound insulated tryout rooms in the city, wide range of guitars and amps, good setups and new strings on all the guitars (!) and they had this expensive guitar room. I walked in and grabbed the cheapest les paul in that room and fell in love with it. It played easier than some of the pauls that were more than double the price. It was a 2016 studio sprint run with the deathbed les paul signature on the headstock. Fun fact: in 2016 Gibson was doing all kinds of weird sh* like wide nuts and people hated it. So they tried to recover the year by recutting already cut necks into some sort of most popular shape, basically they did people’s popular choice out of them and it turns out it worked, at least on this guitar. So anyway I didn’t even want a guitar and walked out with a les paul. Now when I go to this store they have a couple somewhat nice guitars but a lot more beginner stuff and a lot more pianos. If you go there wanting to check out a specific thing (say a 1000-2000 $ SSS strat) you probably won’t have much to try out. Even worse with amps. They basically discontinued Orange. Like really? And this is the best retailer in the city, other big places don’t even have Fender for example lol! All of this points to online business, I for one consider trying out stuff in person essential, amps or guitars. Guitars you can get away with it if you choose well and don’t care. But amps? It’s your entire sound, you should at least hear it in person. Now the funniest thing is I expect the same with guitar amps in the future. Picture a distopian reality, where everyone has access to any realistic amp profile you can think of, but because nobody bothers to buy the real amps, the builders go out of business and amps become a rare collector’s item. You wish your grandpa bought that 1959 les paul? Well your kids will wish you bought a 2024 friedman. ☠️
I got the best 4x12 cab deal ever at a Sam Ash in Jersey.... An Avatar Vintage 4x12 loaded with V30's and G12H30's in an X pattern. The cab was in absolutely mint condition and was only $435.00 shipped from Jersey to east TN. I found it on their Reverb store. It was a fantastic transaction. Too bad they are calling it quits.
The premier guitar store here in Tucson, Arizona called "Rainbow Guitars" ...they carried the best of the best for 50 years. They shut their doors to public open entry, and do only appointment-only business. They stopped setting up the showroom in a nice/appealing way, and shit is just laying around everywhere in cardboard boxes.... its' startling.
Everyone is so used to ordering everything online so many stores don't want to sit there all day waiting for the door to open so they cut hours or go to appointment only. The only way to correct this is to shop at your local store. Go in and see them. If the walking traffic increases the store will open back up. I have a music store that I opened 2 1/2 years ago. Honestly, the only reason I stay open past 5 pm is for lessons.
Hate what happened to them. I had drove down there several times from 2012-2015 to visit and play some nice high end guitars, boutique pedals and amps. Finally made a trip down there in 2021 and saw they completely changed everything. Used to be one of my favorite reasons to visit Tucson
And yet, in Canada, Long & McQuade is aggressively expanding all the time. They must know something we don't. Looks like betting on the music schools, easy and cheap rentals and integrating into the communities and promoting music playing to the youth is what keeps them relevant.
@@ScreaminT81 they must be doing something good! They buy off failing mom & pop stores, move them into big locations where another business failed... and thrive! I'm starting to think their model is really buying real estate. They own all their locations, selling guitars and lessons just needs to pay for the mortgage. Sometimes I almost get a "Costco" kind of feel where keeping you as a customer is more valuable than getting max profit. I've used and abused their 30 days return policy and they never bat an eye.
@@yessitsme6884 they bought off the big local mom and pop shop here in Saint John Hugga guitar. The staff all signed on to Long and they have thrived ever since.
It is cause in Canada you cannot by direct from Gibson or Fenders website and get it shipped to Canada. I bet if Sweetwater or the direct company shipped to Canada it would be a big hit to Long and McQuade.
@@devinboucher4963 I’m hard pressed to argue/debate this. Also with the exchange and stupid high shipping costs, not sure how many would buy. Many would thought I suppose to buy from Sweetwater
The end of your video is exactly spot on. The music industry will revert back to smaller hometown shops. The online thing will always be there from now on, but where they will fall is customer service. I have seen this with specialty shops and music is one of those. You will have Sweetwater, Amazon, and smaller shops. The days of the big box stores are over, I see Guitar Center will be the next to start closing stores. The big thing is going to be where you get your AMPs and Guitars worked on. Support your locally owned Music Store, they are the ones that are going to provide service carry cool gear, and take care of you. Help them grow by supporting them. These corporate stores care about one thing and that's the bottom line and making shareholders happy.
I am very happy that my local music instrument shop, Parkway Music, in Clifton Park NY, doesn't appear to be having any issues with business. I stop in there weekly (sometimes more than that 😀) just to see what they have, hang out a bit and find something I needed or something I didn't know I needed until I saw it there. Great owners and staff along with a lot of variety in gear.
My favorite store MN is Eclipse Music in West St. Paul. John the owner is the sweetest dude, and so knowledgeable! Their big stand out is that they have the most incredible selection of pedals to try before you buy, new and used! My mind was absolutely blown when I first called ahead and then went in there! Another kick-ass store in MN is Lavonne Music in Savage, MN (The same Savage where Savage Amps came from). They've got a whole bunch of killer vintage guitars, and Pete and the team are amazing!
I live in the Albany/Troy area. There are three independent guitar shops here that seem to do really well. I think this is mostly because they always have unique pieces that you can't get at an online retailer (old guitars/small pedal builders, etc).
There is a local shop near me that focuses almost entirely on repairs, lessons and used/consignment guitars and they seem to be doing incredibly well. They only carry one guitar brand new and it makes up maybe 5% of their inventory. It's fun going there because the inventory changes so much each visit.
I hope Music go Round continues to do well. The one I go to in St Louis is moving to a bigger building in June because they're running out of room. Music go Round is amazing! They're friendly and have a great atmosphere and they buy, sell and trade.
I love music go round. I have a great relationship with my local store and the guys that work there. Sometimes the owner/manager will email me ahead of listing something on the site so I can come down and nerd over it before it goes up for sale. They had an original MOOG once, and currently have a Fender Rhodes. In the past, they have had a few of the one-off Jackson Custom NAMM models come through, also. They seems to attract a lot of case queen guitars and some antique Suhrs, Marshall's, and Fender's too. I wouldn't have been able to get my hands on some of this stuff, ever. I like my local GC, too, for different reasons, but I usually know more about some of their stuff, new or used, than they do, and have on a few occasions set up a sale for one of the floor guys because I knew more about whatever the customer was asking about and approached it as a conversation. Fun times, there, and, they've thrown me a bone on some things because of it. Personal relationships are still where it's at. Sweetwater does well with this but at the end of the day its still a salesperson at the end of an email no matter how cordial they may be. When I go to MGR I get to be involved in things like the wedding of one of the counter guys (who played a local festival last night with his now wife- she's a keeper), or GC one of the younger sales guys is a new dad and was freaking out about being a dad one day that he was at work and his wife was in pre-labor, and I got to talk to him about it as a friend and not as a customer. Those things stay with you, and you don't get them from a website.
I’ve bought 7 guitars so far. All but one of them was online because I’m a lefty and 99% of the guitars I see in most stores are right handed guitars. American Musical Supply and my local guitar shop has been my source for guitars and they haven’t disappointed, yet.
I tend to look online, and then if I know I can’t get said gear at the Long and McQuade in my hometown then boom, I drive to the store and talk about pricing etc. They have rental programs, lessons, kids camps, they have a tots lil bingo thing they’re doing this weekend. There’s a UKULELE camp in July for the younger kids. It’s the place for me to go to be happy, and as a left handed guitar player it is frustrating, the guys are good to deal with.
Great video Kyle! You summed up everything succinctly. The very first music store in Stratford, CT I ever walked into went out of business years ago because the owner passed away. They almost exclusively sold Peavey gear, but had other brands to try/order. After that Sam Ash in New Haven, CT was the nearest music store and I have many fond memories from there. I agree with you everyone is tired of seeing all the budget gear at a music store. The biggest issue for me has been trying to find a brick and mortar store that has high-end boutique equipment that I want to try out and maybe even purchase. Sweetwater has made that very easy and if I wanted to return it so I pay a little bit in return shipping/restocking but at least I got to try it out. The CEO of Guitar Center released a statement not too long ago I think saying the same thing that the large floor space footprint has not worked for many years and they have not executed well in their business model for a number of years. I fully expect they will be severely downsizing not just their size of their stores but the number of them as well and only focusing on boutique stuff on the floor. I think you and I are very close in age Kyle and 100% agree with you things need to go back to the way things were when we were kids where we can make more of those fond memories at the music stores in our local areas.
The guitar industry greed during COVID inflation killed those stores. I watched guitar prices shoot up 40% in some cases and they can just eff right off with that. Marshall is dead to me after they jacked up US prices but Europe stayed at the normal prices. If I was brick and mortar, I'd have precious little to do with the big names and push brands and imports that maintained a steady pricepoint like Solar.
COVID-19 inflation came from transportation costs. With fuel prices and labor cost going up it increase the cost of goods. Before Covid shipping containers would cost about $3k and during Covid they went up to $33k so everything inside them went up. These cargo ships between the fuel cost and sitting for weeks to get unloaded is the reason for the price increases. Greed and price gouging is another word I have heard and that's just not the case. I own a retail store and my profit margins have not gone up, in many cases, they have decreased.
@@Rich-ur4kvCOVID was just a huge economic adjustment. If everything was so bad, why did every corporation and huge company see record profits? I saw a 9$ bag of m&M's the other day. Every brand changed their look and packaging. If a box of something had 6 in it, it's now 4. If there was 4, there's now 2. Yet prices went up. You can't just print cash as it waters down the cash you currently have out. Alot of wealth was exchanged and made during COVID. It's really fucked the world. And everyone seeing record profits could honestly care less. The lower class have been pushed down a few rungs.same for the poor, and modest middle class. While the high class stepped up a few several rungs.its not like prices went up so ppl could get by and "hey just bare with us" it was just the same as in 08,09 and '13'14 when things just started going up again. But this time it was an absurd degree. And the amount of business lost just created bigger opportunity for places like Wal Mart to grab more market space. And than when everything settle AI became a thing. It's not hard to tell that something was up, things happened while we where all distracted, and the new order of things has been set in place and will continue to play out for a long time
So many things, in retail, are changing. Hell. I was talking to staff at the bike store and they’re telling me that no one is buying new bikes. But their repair services are booked out for weeks. Wild.
I find guitars (and other gears) sold at local stores in our city at least are a bit more expensive than purchasing online. You can at least try and haggle but aside from having very limited selections, it just makes more sense to purchase online because of the price difference.
I just went to a guitar center for the first time in a while and they were complaining that a 7 string I was looking at wouldn’t sell and it was a mistake to buy (it was used). The setup had like 3mm of relief and the action was so high that fretting any note would put it out of tune.
@Kyle Bull I think you made a good roundup of the development, which started almost 20 years ago. I live in the countryside in germany and i also remember doing what you described for the past, having event days with friends, driving hundreds of kilometers to a cool store, hanging out there the whole day, chatting with employees, other customers, eating something together etc. This internet shopping lifestyle is a global thing, i suggest. But, i also notice small boutique style shops coming back, which hold something special, that the big names don't have. This doesn't only concern music stuff. I'm interested in that development.
The closest stores to me are little mom and pop places, and they really don't have much. The closest guitar center is 100 miles away in Memphis because I moved years ago,so I only drive out there about once a year if that . So 99% of what I buy is online, but there is something about going in there and hearing a kid playing the same songs I learned when I was a kid. As well as familiar faces, some of those guys have been working there for a long time.
I don't agree 100%. Companies with a retail storefront need to have a strong website e-commerce presence so it's blended model. Like, for example, it's so much easier ordering and picking up and/or returning items to a physical versus packing it up.
New England had a small chain called Daddy's Junky Music. They got run out from the inside when the founder/ president retired. I hear it was intentional by someone who didn't get a corporate promotion, but that's hearsay. I miss hitting their stores. I was assistant manager at one in Connecticut for a while but always went there first for anything.
You're totally on point with the experience of the journey. About 30 years ago when I lived in NY, I remember taking a 5 hour journey with my buds to the famous House of Guitars in Rochester, NY. Very cool and memorable day and at the time I'd never seen a shop with as much as they had to offer. Not to mention all the rock stars that had visited and left some memorabilia.
Here in Newark, OH the original shop I used to go to as a teenager at least appears to be doing well. We're a small city about 35 minutes from Columbus, OH and they really have no competition here locally. They're called Guitar Guys now, but used to called Sheets & Sons Music way back in the day. Check them out. It's just a few hours drive at best from Erie, PA! 👍
I feel fortunate. We have a mom and pop guitar shop named "The Band Attic" in Spencer NC, within 15 minutes of my home. They are a PRS dealer with a very impressive selection of all types of gear.
I have two music store stories. When I was a junior in highschool ('84/'85), I had already cut my teeth on a Peavey T-25 and showed my folks I was serious about playing. They agreed to get me a 'next level' guitar. So, we went to my favorite (very) small music store in Missoula, MT called E.S.P. (Electronic Sound & Percussion), and they're STILL in business today! I saw and instantly fell in love with a Kramer Explorer/Destroyer style guitar, with a Floyd Rose, and that was the one! My folks were the BEST! In '86, our band moved to Seattle to make it big, and I remember walking into the main Guitar Center in downtown Seattle for the first time. To a kid from small-town Montana, that store was HUGE!! I was in awe and remember walking around, looking at all the Gibsons and Marshalls with fire in my heart. I did, eventually, give in and finance a Gibson V and a Marshall JMC800 half-stack from that store.
Here in 🇦🇺 all the local guitar store’s prices are almost 3 times what you can get online. Even a pack of strings, I can get a few packs delivered for the same price as picking up one pack in person. It’s quite sad to see from an older guy who grew up seeing everything in local the music stores. Also, the experience back in the 80s being able to go into a record store and look through all the records and so and put it on in the booth or the store PA to see if you wanted to purchase it. Very different times.
Drum Center of Portsmouth, NH. Amazing drum shop. Music Zoo in Long Island, NY. Awesome higher end guitar store that just reopened their showroom, Saturdays only.
clicked to watch, saw us mentioned. thanks! we are indeed reopened for Saturdays, and Mon-Fri you can make an appointment to shop privately and really dial in focus to what you're looking for. thanks!
Interestingly here in the UK I've noticed a rise in small independent guitar dealers who operate on a 'by appointment only' basis and most of their business seems to revolve around high-end used gear. Frankly it's cool to see and having dealt with a few now they generally seem to be run by cool people.
Music Gallery in Highland Park, IL. Have been around for 50 years this year and still seem to be doing quite well (also offer music lessons for just about everything). I’ve been going there for going on 13 years and am pretty much on a first name basis with everyone at this point. Over half my collection I acquired from them, and they’ve always taken care of me.
nstuff music in pittsburgh is my favorite local guitar store!! the staff is super helpful and they always have a great selection of guitars pedals amps and lots of used stuff as well! i’ve gotten a bunch of gear there over the years and always go back whenever im in town even when im not looking to buy something
If ever in michigan you need to check out Motor City Guitar in Waterford, MI. Been going there 30 years, owned by same guy and have all the good stuff. Beat any price and can just go in and play around with whatever you want.
I’d love to see Sweetwater buy or partner those Sam Ash to save most of Stores as an investment of sorts. Imagine them updating the things that Sam Ash couldn’t do with online and shipping, while the Sam Ash shops could let Sweetwater customers have an easy place to try items or have easy ways to drop off returns and get repairs without having the hassle of shipping giant boxes to Indiana. They really could help each other. You could call the physical stores Sam Ash by Sweetwater. Partnering really could be a mutual way of improving and growing both brands, in an ironic twist sort of way.
The music equivalent of closing Toys R Us for kids ☹️It started when W 48th St went from a vibrant block full of music stores to just another block in NYC. So many famous musicians went in & out of the stores over decades & bought iconic instruments. So much history is lost & future generations miss out. Very sad.
In Canada, I don't think we really have an all online store. The brick and mortar places do a pretty good job with their websites. Long and McQuade, and guitarworks here in Calgary are the big ones.
Here in Cincinnati there was so many Guitar stores. Once guitar Center & then Mars Music moved in and crushed Cincinnati’s rich guitar shop diversity! Buddy Roger’s, Carter’s Music , Rockin Ron’s ,Midwest Music, Keller Music, Denny Heglin Music. Drum Shine Shop. Just to give them a mention in honor of their memory! Truly miss those stores. The personal touches was great they knew who you were. It wasn’t let’s just recommend junk and take your money like what the big stores have become
I’d say, the only thing that might save them is 1. Niche and 2. Community. We have a couple of guitar centers in town, but I go to the small one every week, because that’s where I take my daughter for lessons. They also supply (rent) the local schools with band equipment… and measure each kid for their instruments . They also host workshops. They do repairs. As far as sales, I’ve bought a pedal here and there. My thing is, I like weird unique gear and shops usually have pretty normal stuff.
I do think the internet has ruined a lot of stuff. It was fun to not know about everything in the world. It was fun to make a trek with friends to just check out some shop you had heard about. I use those little jazz picks and I had two left and couldn’t find them at the local shops. I was touring and was killing time at a shop in Lincoln Nebraska and the shop had like 100. I bought them all. You cannot imagine how amped I was… which seems completely stupid now. I’m sure I could find them in 3 minutes now.
Georges Music and Guitar Center are surviving but sadly my area has lost all their small mom and pop shops. People are flocking to sites like Reverb and Sweetwater
I’ve never purchased a guitar online. I specifically focus on the neck. Every guitar has a different feel even though it may be the same make and model. It must just feel right.
Also, my favorite guitar store memory is from the late Vandengerg Music, which was killed off when Guitar Center came to town. They had PRS and Mesa up front and a paintball shop in the back corner. The owner, even in South Carolina, sounded like he was still in an 80s hair band, so when I told I him I wanted Fender Bullet strings (because that was the only thing I knew from my Squier Strat Pack), he responded with, "Fender? Fender freakin' sucks. Here's some Ernie Ball."
I love going to local pawn shops because most of the ones around have a good selection of guitars at fair prices and they're selling some high end (I can't afford them but I can look at them) and mid level guitars not just $50 squires
I still remember sending an email to a local shop asking for the price of the AKG K240 Studio and being told that they don't give prices online or by phone... How the times have changed
The one in Manhattan last year had a bunch of empty wall space and was dingy in the store. I was looking forward to it on my trip, but it wasn't even in the same league as the guitar centers out there. The guitar center in Brooklyn was a highlight of the non appointment shops.
Very sad. I bought my first amp, a peavy combo, at Sam Ash in Queens many years ago. Have since moved to the St Louis area where the only options are the entry level GC, fancy stores by appointment only, and Killer Vintage which is pretty cool, but narrow in scope. Miss those days of discovery. Being able to experience something before buying it is ….well just a memory in itself.
When I was younger, going to guitar center was exciting. I got to try out gear i couldn't afford, and probably had no right playing. lol. But it was something myself and my bandmates looked forward to doing. As i got older i started buying more and more online. Especially with stores like guitar center having return policies on used gear, so if i ordered something i didn't like, new or used, i could always return it and get my full money back. I am probably one of many who have contributed to the decline of brick and mortar music stores. Now i get bummed out when i walk into guitar center because there is virtually no gear in the quality level that i now purchase. It's really sad, but i guess i have no one to blame but myself...
There are a couple of new guitars shops. Drones Sounds died out because the owner just age out. Collar City Guitar is one of the newer store. Love Of Fuzz is a guitar pedal and amplifier fixing stove in Troy NY USA. Maybe we could be seeing more of fixing amplifier and other guitars related items.
The sam ash in Cleveland is a store I've been in a few times and the guitar center there too. For drums specifically there's Stebal Drums in mentor I like going there to support the local business and the owner is helpful.
I was just thinking the other day about how much I miss music stores. There used to be a lot of 'em in Austin. The day I bought my DC5, I went to at least 6 music stores, and a couple pawn shops with stashes of good gear. Most of those stores, including Musicmakers and Heart of Texas Music, are gone now. I'm sure there's still a handful of little stores around the area, but it's nothing like it used to be.
I live in Hollywood California, I shop at Guitar Center here, the Sam Ash that’s closing is on the same block, I guess the music district on Sunset strip. Guitar Center seems to be rebranding and looks to be going strong, they sell a lot of high end stuff in what they call the vintage room…
Alpha Music in Virginia Beach. I've been a customer there since before their expansion when they were located in Norfolk, VA. When I was 14 or 15, my friend and I would actually walk 3 miles there to check out all the gear. In the 90s, this was where I learned about not scooping mids, using less gain, and how to use overdrive pedals as a boost. It was a store for local musicians that was run and employed by local musicians. I once bought a guitar there, and ran into the sales guy I bought it from at the Aerosmith concert that week, and he gave me a green room pass to meet the band. You could always see any of the employees on any given weekend night playing out in their band. It's still like that today. It seems like the big box stores have shied away from that and hired "associates" instead.
love my local shops. my usual search for gear is the local facespace or cl marketplace, then local shops, then the dreaded local GC, then the internet. i usually buy a set of strings or picks each time i visit a local shop, even if i don't need them at that moment.
80's and early 90's there were a ton of big awesome music stores. They are all gone, but it seems to be coming back. as there are a few stores around, just not like the old days where there was a mile long row of metal shredder guitars, Ibanez, Jackson. Charvel. Music Sound World, Roy & Candy's, Music City West. All gone for a while now.
I grew up in suburban DC, not far from Atomic Music and the country's second-largest Guitar Center in Rockville, MD. I bought my first "nice" guitar (Gibson SG Standard) from the Guitar Center in Rockville with money I earned from my first summer job. I still have that guitar. Both places were special to me as a young guitar player and helped show me how to create and make my own distinctive tone.
If you want to fine Hi end gear at guitar center. You have to go to a Guitar Center Platinum Store. Lucky there one close to where I live in Dallas TX. They carry Diezel Friedman, Soldano and very pricey guitars.
I've been looking for another business to open and I'm really debating a Music Go Around. I think a lot of the issue is people buying used more than they are new
You're going to have to book a flight and go to a remaining big guitar store or drive farther. Besides Sweetwater and Guitar Center, I shop a lot at Wildwood Guitars and Chicago Music Exchange.
I live in a city of less than 60k people and we have three music stores blues angel, leitz, and guitar center. Not to mention numerous pawn shops. There are definitely places left
Just like Toys R Us. When I was younger I would always want to go physically look at Transformers and GI Joe's. Now everyone has to hope they find it at Walmart or they are forced to order online.
I found out that my local store (Ernie Williamson) will give me the same discounted price that Sweetwater, or Zzounds, or GC will give me, if I have it in writing, so I am buying local again. I loved guitar stores decades ago. There was a place in The Lou called McMurry Music that was the sh#@! I used to go drool on a sorta' wine colored Les Paul studio for a while, but I was a kid that could never afford it.
I worked at Daddy’s Junky Music when I was in a touring band and we could move gear around between stores and try everything. Used to grab stuff and go nuts turning stuff up to 11 in the warehouse and learned so much about tone and feel and everything to do with good equipment.
I remember being 18 years old and finally saved enough money for my first decent guitar. This is in the mid 90s. My first guitar was a fender duo sonic. Which was kinda terrible. So I knew I needed to upgrade. I saved I think 600 hundred dollars. I end up buying a fender made in Japan jag stang. I had that guitar for almost 20 years. It was a first year production model. I bought it at the music store in stroudsburg. Which burned down a few years ago and the owner decided not to rebuild. I also bought my first amp there too . Peavey 65 watt bandit. For 165 bucks. Guitar center by me disappointing. Not only in what they have in the store but customer service is not great saying it nicely. So I discovered a music go round. Which actually has better selection and the people there are actually helpful. I can actually find unique items there I would never see at guitar center. I had to drive almost 2 hours away just to even see a 5150 amp. Music go round has them there consistently. I feel music go round has reasonable prices. As long as it isn’t getting shipped. Shipping prices for them are super high.
There is a sam ash in king of prussia that is the closest to me. I love this place. Was just there the other day to see what they had. This was the first big music store I had seen. We now have a guitar center in Lancaster Pa, but sam ash was better. Thankfully too, we have tone taylors in Lititz, pa and a really good one in Red lion pa. We do have a decent mom and pop shop inventory here.
In Johnson City, Tennessee, there's an awesome guitar store called honeycutt music it's not a huge store but it sells everything from low end to high end guitars and equipment it used to be one of the only guitar stores in the area until guitar center moved about a mile down the road seems like I don't see nearly as many people in honeycutt as I used to but I think it's 10 times better than any corporate store the two main guys who run it, Danny and Chris, have always been so cool to talk to and both know their stuff and I've been given killer deals on guitars and equipment there I've been going there for years now I'd hate to see them lose their business to a guitar center if anyone is ever in the northeast part of Tennessee I'd 10/10 recommend giving them a visit
It’s been happening in the UK since 2007. Mainly high street retailers. We’re lucky to Andertons as they have a huge guitar RU-vid channel and online store. So they’re probably going nowhere, but it is just the one store in the south of the country. We also have GAK and a few other large retailers. But street retail in general is doing worse and worse as the online markets grow.
Sam Ash has been the go to store for many legends. My mother would shop there so this hits me pretty hard. The inventory in store was sick. Every time I would go there I would buy something. But even modding my Ibanez the tech would tell me Steve Vai stories when he would drop off his tremolo bar stuck in his Floyd. The sales people in my teen years were like family in Carle Place. I spoke to young Sammy and David Ash about doing an e commerce campaign but we're not really buying into it while I was working at a NYC marketing agency. They knew what they had to do in 2016. It hurts because it could have been avoided.
In columbus-oh growing up in the 80's , we had only mom and pop stores the biggest was lang music. I'd go there for lessons every week, and dream of buying the blue voodoo half stack! Sadly they went out of business. Music go round is great to find used gems and trying out equipment and not getting stuck with it.
I went to the guitar center on Monroeville a few months ago, prices were sky high no deals at all, the used section was a straight rip off, used dinged up dirty gutars that were basically almost the proce of a new one, for instance they had a jackson dk2xr that was pretty heavily beat up, its a 450$ guitar they wanted 379$ dollars, a total and complete joke, just no reason to go at all anymore, guitar center used was a gold mine back in the day now it's a complete scam
Going to Sam Ash to try out gear and then going home and ordering it from somewhere else a little cheaper is why they are closing. Brick and mortar stores are expensive to keep running.
I now feel as though we order/buy a guitar to try it & return it if we don't like it. At this point bed mattresses should be ordered online. It sucks reading a spec sheet on a guitar instead of going into a store & playing multiple guitars before buy one.
As far as amps go etc... I don'r really care about in person because it's about sound and we even got good plugin emulations now that help decide with that investment but for someone starting out or still figuring out what they like though, having access to a wide range of instruments is a good thing. You can like the look of something all you want but when you get that baseball bat neck vs a thin one in your hands, you can tell right away where you feel like going.