🎤 Rock Your World with Every Strum!
The Ibanez GRGM 6 String Solid-Body Electric Guitar in Candy Apple is designed for aspiring musicians, featuring high output Infinity R pickups, a comfortable poplar body, and a smooth maple neck. Ideal for both beginners and intermediate players, this guitar combines style and substance, ensuring you can create music with passion and ease.
Guitar Bridge System | Fixed |
Number of Strings | 6 |
Hand Orientation | Right |
Guitar Pickup Configuration | S |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 42.1"L x 17.75"W x 3.5"H |
String Nut Width | 1.65 Inches |
Scale Length | 22.2 |
Neck Material Type | Maple |
String Material Type | Nickel |
Fretboard Material Type | Maple Wood |
Body Material Type | Basswood |
Back Material Type | Basswood |
Top Material Type | Engineered Wood |
Color | Candy Apple |
J**R
Great for kids, high quality build, great versatility
I received this guitar when my kid was showing more interest in playing guitar. I wanted something that was lighter than my guitars and had a fretboard with all frets reasonably accessible without having to overstretch but would also serve for them as they grew. I do recommend this for kids possibly as young as 6 if they are kind of tall or long limbed. Otherwise, I think this is a great guitar for around 8-11.To begin with, the material quality is excellent for the money:- Knobs and switches work smoothly- Tuning keys work well and hold- Body and neck materials and finish are excellent- Frets are reasonably well finished, not protrusive or sharp- Fretboard is not a wood I am familiar with, but the feel is good and the tone it helps produce is very mid-range and versatile- Pickup quality is excellent for the moneyThe guitar has a nice tone. With the amp settings set very neutrally on an amp that is normally a bit bright, this guitar was not too much either top or bottom and sits nicely in a mid-range with a minor lean toward top end (could have been the bias of the amp). This would allow for versatility of style for play from metal, blues, country, rock, and so on. It would respond well to the amp's tonal quality.The pickup arrangement is excellent. The pickup selector can select between humbucker (warmer, fuller tone) and single coil (brighter, twangier). It will let you select between neck (brighter, more for lead), bridge (mellow, rhythm). The combinations you can pick are neck humbucker, neck single coil, neck & bridge humbucker, neck & bridge single coil, and bridge humbucker. Really, really tonally versatile.Some other reviews may observe (complain) that higher up the fretboard (closer to the body), it is hard to play. That shouldn't surprise anyone. As a short scale guitar, frets must be smaller and the frets higher up are always smaller (simply how it works as the distance from the fret to the neck reduces). One should not expect to easily play high frets on a short scale guitar. However, for kids with smaller fingers, it is perfectly fine.Compared to some other guitars of similar price range, I found this to be really worth the money and better constructed. I played several mini-strats and found them all unserviceable due to very poor fretting. I did not think those would be an enjoyable experience and therefore would disincentivize the player from continuing to play and learn.This was a pleasure to play, highly versatile, and well-built.Great 3/4 size guitar. Great guitar for young players.
G**X
Best value and perfect for small hands. Fun guitar!
I bought this for fun and to replace a Squier Mini-Strat I gave away. I was very impressed with the quality of this little guitar! First, the body appears to be one solid piece of poplar. No visible seam. Very cool. The neck is one piece of maple with a maple fretboard, which is not something you see on cheap guitars. I have a more expensive full-size guitar which has a scarfed neck! The fretboard appears to have about a 12" radius, fairly flat and set up for shredding. The frets edges are smooth and the fit and finish are excellent; what you'd expect from a guitar costing about $100 more. The humbuckers(!) are not as great, but not terrible. You can get HUGE sounds from this thing. The nut is 41mm, like a full-size. However, if you have big hands, remember that the distance between frets is less and you have to cram fingers in there. I have slender hands. The electronics are pretty good; the tone pot actually works well, which is something I can't say about some guitars I've owned. All controls are smooth and responsive. It was intonated and set up right out of the box. Your experience may vary.The ONLY thing I found with this guitar is the frets are rough. Like VERY rough. I have a dressing stone and will take care of it next time I change strings. This was probably a QC issue at the plant which slipped through.If you are deciding between the Squier and this one for a 3/4 guitar, buy this one. It's head and shoulders above the Squier.
M**H
Pretty good for the money, but tuning is difficult
I bought this inexpensive Ibanez GRGM guitar to use teaching young beginners and adult beginners with small hands. I like its walnut sunburst look, it feels good to the touch--no obvious roughness of the frets--and the tone and volume of output from the pickups is quite good to my intermediate player ears.At the very low price, I didn't expect great sound, but I'd (foolishly) hoped for pretty good sound out of the box.Unfortunately, the one I got is a bear to tune to get both basic chords and barre chords to sound good.When I tuned each string to supposedly just right, using 2 different electronic tuners, all the basic chords (E, A, C, D, G, etc.) sounded terrible. Even with my really nice Martin Laurence Juber Custom acoustic-electric guitar, I have to tune the strings a bit flat (the A more so that the others) so the basic chords & barre chords sound good, so I'm used to doing that.I finally got it sound okay by tuning the low E and A strings way down (A more so) to get them in tune on the 5th fret. Since I had to tune the other 4 strings down some too so they'd be in tune on the 5th fret, the basic chords now sound okay, and the barre chords sound pretty good.From reading another post, I suspect that this problem will be ameliorated by adjusting each string's intonation by modifying its length at the bridge. I've never done before, but I am about to try it. I'm hopeful that routine tuning will be much easier then. We'll see.(Added the next day) After watching several YouTube videos on adjusting intonation, I spent well over an hour trying to get it adjusted properly. I finally got it reasonably close to same pitch for the open note and the 12th fret note for each string, and the chords then sounded better when strummed quickly, but still not great when strummed arpeggio or finger picked. I can't understand why this $150 guitar is so much more difficult to get to play in tune, compared to a Squier (cheap Fender) Strat I bought for $150 in 2000.
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