Does anyone play Electric only

I started on acoustic at 8. I hated the songs and method; I quit. Bought an electric at 14, got lessons at a local guitar shop, and I loved it. I have my wife's acoustic, nice but never gets used.

This sounds a familiar story...except for the bit about the wife’s acoustic.

Started at 6 with lessons on a nylon string classical. Gave up lessons at the first opportunity my parents gave me to quit.
Started playing again electric this time at 13 as a way of getting out of the school music class. If you were halfway competent at an instrument they let you take whatever you wanted to another room with the other kids and jam while the rest learnt the recorder and the triangle!!!!

I often play a 3/4 size nylon string acoustic I have lying around if the family are awake. It’s good fun.
 
I like to play my acoustic guitars once in a while. They’re nice to have around, and good exercise for me.
I have two. One that I’ve had since 1994, and one I picked up just a few years ago. I was attracted to both by their necks feeling like a good fit for me.
Lately I’ve been eyeballing some more compact acoustic 6 string offerings, since one of my patients loaned me a baritone ukulele a couple of winters ago.
These have caught my eye locally...
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...but no way am I giving up my electrics....just no way.
 
97.8% electrical......I have one nice 70's era EPIPHONE Norlin acoustic I LOVE and cherish and do NOT want to FOOK up so ---it stays cased most the time. Same with my HACKMASTER DELUXE 59 Harmony Montclair --- gorgeous lovely case queen.......the grunt work and daily floggings go to the Electrics ;)
 
Mom has a 1978 Takemine Dreadnaught she got as a promotional deal. She now has several Takemine's, and one Ibanez single cutaway acoustic...
 
I like to play my acoustic guitars once in a while. They’re nice to have around, and good exercise for me.
I have two. One that I’ve had since 1994, and one I picked up just a few years ago. I was attracted to both by their necks feeling like a good fit for me.
Lately I’ve been eyeballing some more compact acoustic 6 string offerings, since one of my patients loaned me a baritone ukulele a couple of winters ago.
These have caught my eye locally...
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...but no way am I giving up my electrics....just no way.
I like the Luna guitars. I actually bought one a few years ago, but returned it due to a flaw in the craftsmanship. That is when I got my Takamine... no regrets, no looking back.
 
I like the Luna guitars. I actually bought one a few years ago, but returned it due to a flaw in the craftsmanship. That is when I got my Takamine... no regrets, no looking back.

My oldest Son recently bought a 1980's Takemine from mom's steel guitar player for next to nothing.
 
Tiny Tim was NOT cool... he was a freak. Maybe a lovable freak, but still...
Hearing him sing always made me want to reach for a baseball bat. And I am a
man of peace. A paragon of tolerance and the open mind.

Also, I am a switch hitter, like many of my friends and colleagues.
I play acoustic and electric and bass. My early years were spent on acoustic,
but the first guitar I bought with my own money was a Japan made ES-335 copy.
If you don't have enough money to afford both a guitar and an amp, a hollow body
electric gives you something to practice with until (maybe) you can save up more.
You can dream.

I was a student then, working for $1.25 an hour. A 1966 Gibson SG would have cost about
$330.00 new then, and that was way beyond my means. I needed all my money for school.
A used Gibson SG would have cost probably $250 in a pawn shop, but even that was so far
beyond what I could make. A Fender Deluxe amp from those days would have cost a couple
hundred too. So acoustic was what I played, because I needed to play.
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Here I am, fifty years later, still gigging. My acoustic guitars have served me well, and entertained people at
literally thousands of gigs. Being able to play both acoustic and bass helped me get started, as did being able
to sing harmony, and later to sing lead. The first good electric guitar I ever bought was a 2007 Gibson SG special.
It was my gift to myself for reaching sixty in 2008. I never believed I'd get this old. Electric was always my first love,
but the acoustic and the bass get the job done and pay the bills. Go figure.

G.A.S. does tend to affect me, so I now have a fine collection of ten interesting guitars, each of which has its own
unique tone. I have worked the electrics into my music, so that I often will have a work station like the
one above. But if we have to travel light, or play as part of a program that requires quick changeovers
between groups, I can do with just one acoustic and one bass, and one amp. I don't tend to think of one
guitar or type of guitar as being better than another, they are all different... and they are all useful in one
way or another. It depends on the song, and what it needs.

I think each of these guys is laughing at the other...
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Though I have both, I tend to play solid body electrics way more than acoustics.
It's just easier and there are more options.
But in the grand scheme of things, even my acoustics and resonators are "electric" all having pickups of some sort, piezo and magnetic.

So yes, I only play electrics.
 
At the moment all I own is one electric guitar so playing an acoustic isn't an option, but when I do have an acoustic around that I like I generally do most of my writing with it.
 
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I'm slightly larger, and an SG looks like a Ukulele on me. :LOL:

You're a big boy John!:wink:

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;>)/
 
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