Fender Telecaster guitars hanging on a wall rack.
Many Fender Telecasters via Wikimedia/Dennis Brown (CC0 1.0)

Guitar sales have dropped by a third over the past decade. On the Washington Post, Geoff Edgers tries to find out why.

Maybe itโ€™s because we donโ€™t have guitar gods anymore. Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, that sound is โ€” well โ€” itโ€™s old. And the new crop of stars donโ€™t inspire the pursuit of guitar god status the way someone like Carlos Santana did.

Hereโ€™s Dave Gruhn, a 71-year old Nashville guitar dealer who helped sell off part of Eric Claptonโ€™s collection:

โ€œWhat we need is guitar heroes,โ€ he says.

He is asked about Clapton, who himself recently downsized his collection. Gruhn sold 29 of his guitars.

โ€œEric Clapton is my age,โ€ he says.

How about Creedโ€™s Mark Tremonti, Joe Bonamassa, John Mayer? He shakes his head.

โ€œJohn Mayer?โ€ he asks. โ€œYou donโ€™t see a bunch of kids emulating John Mayer and listening to him and wanting to pick up a guitar because of him.โ€

Sir Paul McCartney has a similar take on the decline in the guitarโ€™s popularity.

โ€œThe electric guitar was new and fascinatingly exciting in a period before Jimi and immediately after,โ€ the former Beatle says wistfully in a recent interview. โ€œSo you got loads of great players emulating guys like B.B. King and Buddy Guy, and you had a few generations there.โ€

He pauses.

โ€œNow, itโ€™s more electronic music and kids listen differently,โ€ McCartney says. โ€œThey donโ€™t have guitar heroes like you and I did.โ€

Something Edgers doesnโ€™t address in his article?  Uke sales have doubled in the same period in which guitar sales have declined.  In her Ukulele Anthem, Dresden Dolls front-woman Amanda Palmer says you can teach someone to play the ukulele in  โ€œabout the same to teach someone to build a standard pipe bomb โ€” you do the math.โ€ A kid can pick up the uke and find it satisfying in considerably less time than it takes to master the guitar. A few years back, a young Hawaii resident named Jake Shimabukuro made heads spin with his ukulele cover of While My Guitar Gently Weeps, proving that the ukeโ€™s simplicity doesnโ€™t limit its musical possibilities.

The ukulele has replaced the recorder in many public school music education programs, too. And the forgiving little axe serves well as a stepping stone to the guitar. The next generation of wanna-be guitar gods could well be out there; theyโ€™re just taking a different route to blazing, finger-blistering stardom.


Not so confidential to Grover Norquist โ€” you can absolutely get your kid a starter uke for 35 bucks, including sales tax.

How Republicans are bornโ€ฆ
Daughter, 8, has been savings up to buy her first Guitar.
Found it for $35. She had 35 exact.
Thenโ€ฆsales tax

โ€” Grover Norquist (@GroverNorquist) June 25, 2017


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