Ask Paul: Five Great Guitars for Under $500, Part 1
There are plenty of great, affordable guitars available these days. With all the precise automation in guitar manufacturing, it’s difficult to find poorly made guitars. Here are two of five cool choices for less than $500. Click here to read about the next three guitars.
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In addition to receiving lots of praise and hate mail as Guitar World’s gear editor on video, I’m often asked, “Hey, Paul, can you tell me a good guitar I can get for under $500?”
To which I say, “Why do you want to go ahead and ruin your life by playing guitar?”
Seriously, though, there are plenty of great, affordable guitars available nowadays. With all the precise automation in guitar manufacturing, it’s difficult to find poorly made guitars. Not to say that they don’t exist; but for the most part, I find many guitars from overseas are surprisingly good and won’t have you rifling for money from your mother’s purse.
Rather than listing five affordable guitars, I decided to categorize this topic by application, including "metal/shred" and "classic" (with three more coming up in part two).
Be sure to check out the four photos in the photo gallery at the bottom of this blog post.
1. METAL/SHRED: Schecter Guitars Damien Elite, $499
Schecter Guitars has always had the unfair stigma for producing guitars that cater to metal and shred players; so what the hell, I’ll perpetuate that stereotype: Yes, the Damien Elite with its low-action, 24 extra-jumbo frets and full metal requisite of EMG 81 and 85 active humbuckers for tight and aggressive sounds makes this one Godzilla of a guitar.
For the price, it comes with top-of-the-line pro hardware like Grover tuners, Tone Pros Tune-o-matic bridge with thru-body string mounts, GraphTech TUSQ nut (for precise intonation and tuning stability), and having the upgraded EMGs means you won’t have to change the pickups!
I like the see-thru black and crimson-red finishes on this guitar because it makes it look far more expensive than it actually is. I also love the headstock because it’s not obnoxious or overtly pointy like other metal guitars.
2. CLASSIC: Epiphone Les Paul Traditional Pro, $499
The Les Paul is my favorite guitar, and after many years of coveting them, I now have way too many of them. But for those of you who have always dreamed of owning one, Epiphone puts them within reach.
Nine times out of 10, I’m recommending an Epiphone guitar because, across their line of electrics, arch tops and acoustics, they’re well made and set up perfectly right out of the case. The Les Paul Traditional has uncovered zebra pickups, which give you a throaty humbucking tone but also include push/pull coil splitting so you can get some single coil sounds. It has all the expected Les Paul appointments like mahogany body, set neck and Locktone Tune-o-matic bridge. You’ll never get thrown out of an audition for showing up with this sharp-looking guitar.
For an extra $100, bump yourself up to the Epiphone Les Paul Custom. It’s what I use most, and with its elegant looks and awesome playability, you can’t go wrong.
Click here to read about guitars 3 through 5.
Paul Riario on Paul Riario: I try very hard to remain under the radar, despite being on camera as gear editor at Guitar World; but in this age of social media, it was only a matter of time before it came to this. So with that, I’ll make my blog painless and a quick and easy read so you can get onto more important things like practicing guitar and sweep picking. Or, if you’re like me, getting tiger blood transfusions and figuring out how to be Olivia Wilde’s boy toy. I’ll use this blog to inform you of things I find cool, like new gear I’m playing through and what I’m watching, reading or listening to at any given moment. So feel free to ask me anything that’s gear-related — or if you have a problem with your girlfriend, ya know, life-lesson stuff, I’m pretty good at that too — and I’ll do my best to answer or address it here.
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HendrixwannaB
October 09, 2011 at 12:25am
Well to tell ya the truth, as far as the epi goes, I picked up a slash gold top, it's a hollow body version, duncun pickups with treble bleed elecs already in it. Got a flawless used one for 500 bucks. However, I also have a all mahogany studio les Paul Gibson. It came standard with burst buckers and grovers. The epi is a solid playing guitar, but for a couple hundred more,180 to be exact, the Gibson plays circles around the epi... Just my opinion, love both guitars, and love the cheaper studio Gibson better than my three thousand dollar appetite lp. Gues I just like those chambered bodys better. Has anyone bought, or played the new ultra three, I think the Gibson version is almost six thousand or something ridiculous like that, so I won't be getting one of those anytime soon. But for home studio ease, I.e. The USB and stero jacks in the ultra, what kind of quality is the guitar. I think we all can agree there are high end epis and low end ones, any thoughts?+
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Coopster
June 05, 2011 at 3:14pm
Awesome to see something about affordable, good guitars. I loathe the snobbery that is everpresent in the guitar playing world, not everyone can afford, or wants, a three thousand dollar guitar or amp and I know for a fact there are some really great import guitars out there that just get laughed off simply because they're imports. Ibanez has some fantastic stuff out there as well. Bravo Paul! Thanks for looking out for the regular guy.
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Jedizen07
June 02, 2011 at 7:49am
Good article. But this does not help those who are lefties though.
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tcbischof
June 02, 2011 at 3:42am
Hey Paul what do you think of the new epiphone riviera P-93 WIne Red Guitar. A video review would be nice otherwise if you could talk about the history of the guitar & what it's made out of.
Thanks
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dfanelli
June 06, 2011 at 3:38pm
Hey, tcbischof:
Check out Paul Riario's reply about the Epiphone Riviera P-93, right here.
Thanks for the comment!

















