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Godin MultiAc Nylon SA - Natural Review

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Hockey Review Rating 96%
5 Reviews
Deals (3) Popularity: 818
MSRP:
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Godin MultiAc Nylon SA - Natural For Sale

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Specifications

Brand Godin
Category Classical & Nylon String Guitars
String Type: Nylon,
Body Style: Single Cutaway,
Finish: Acrylic Lacquer,
Top Wood: Spruce,
Back & Sides Wood: Mahogany,
Neck Wood: Mahogany,
Nut/Saddle Material: Tusq nut,
Electronics: RMC electronics with 13-pin out,
Number of Strings: 6,
Left-/Right-handed: Right-handed,
Body Shape: MultiAc,
Color: Natural,
Radius: 16",
Fingerboard Material: Richlite,
Fingerboard Inlay: Mini dots,
Number of Frets: 22,
Scale Length: 25.5",
Nut Width: 1.875",
Strings: D'Addario Pro Arte hard tension nylon,
Case Included: Gig Bag,
Manufacturer Part Number: 004690,

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Godin MultiAc Nylon SA - Natural Reviews

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I’m back.

Robb
6 years ago

This for me is a beautiful guitar. I get so much out of it as far as playability. Classic feel,and rich sound. I play it all the time.

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Beautiful Tone!

Gregg
7 years ago

This is a great nylon string guitar for live performance or recording. Beautiful rich balanced tone and plays effortlessly.

Great Gig Guitar

George Wrigley
9 years ago

This is a great nylon string guitar for many reasons. First it doesn't feed back. Second it has a real nylon sound, especially played through the Roland GR55 Synth. But, more than that, you can get virtually any sound you want between the bass, mid, and treble adjustments using the transducer pickup system, or using the synth, or both at the same time, the sounds you can produce read more are infinite. The quality is really first class. The fit and finish are perfect. I love the neck, it is designed like an electric guitar neck, smooth, slim and fast. Also, it is one of the few nylon guitars that tunes perfectly all over the fingerboard. Godin really hit one out of the park with this incredible guitar. I use it for all my gigs as I play fingerstyle and steel strings tear up the finger nails. I occasionally play rock with a pick and it sounds great on this guitar too.

What An Excellent Guitar!

Greg Williamson
10 years ago

I love this guitar! It is the first nylon string guitar I have owned and I am amazed at the versatility it has so far as sound goes. Forgetting the guitar synth capabilities, it still has a wonderful fullness of tone that I did not expect. Through the Roland GR-55 there really is no end to the possibilities. The quality of the guitar is incredible, I think it has the best finish read more of any guitar I have ever owned. To top the deal off my sales person Greg was (as usual) right on with his excellent service and suggestions of extra strings and other accessories.I LOVE Sweetwater and LOVE my Godin Multiac!!

I got lucky!

Nelson Ueno
12 years ago

I have an old Ibanez RG-470 with a Roland Gk-3 pickup and I've been using it with the Roland VG-99 and the GR-20. I play mostly with a christian worship band. As time passed I noticed I mostly play steel string and nylong string guitar with or without a combination of Bass on the lower two string or orchestra strings from the GR-20. Occasionally I play some mildly overdriven electric read more guitar. So, I decided to shop for a more acoustic looking guitar with the 13-pin connector. I decided for the Godin because of positive reviews on the Internet. But at first I got very disappointed. None of my usual VG-99 patches sounded right. Not a problem with the GR-20, which is MIDI based. The steel string acoustic guitar patch on the VG-99 sounded completely off . No matter how much I tried to tweak it the sound was always of an nylon string guitar. I didn't realize how much the VG-99 is affected by the guitar's natural tone. The electric guitar patches also sounded funny, never like a strat of les paul, or any of the guitars. I thought of returning the guitar. I started searching for alternatives, and I saw the Roland GC-1, which is a classic stratocaster with the GK-3 pickup, but again, it doesn't look acoustic at all. Probably Roland fine tuned all the VG-99 patches with a stratocaster acoustic tone in mind. I could return the Multiac Nylon and get a Multiac steel or spectrum, but then I had this idea. The Godin's scale lengh is the same as the stratocaster, so I though maybe steel strings will help on the tone. I ordered strings with just about one pound more tension than the nylon strings, plain steel on the three treble strings and flatwounds on the lower three. Miracle happens! The tones of the VG-99 factory presets sounded as realistic as never before. Better than with my Ibanez! I didn't have to tweak anything. The most notable difference was on the nylon string patches, they sounded perfect with no adjustments. (I had to tweak o lot with the Ibanez). Actually I'd say the nylon string guitar from the VG-99 now sounds equal or better than the Multiac with nylon strings! Of course the Godin now sounds like a steel string guitar umplugged or using the 1/4" cable, but the tone is wonderful. Probably because of the much lower string tension compared to the acoustic steel string guitars (15 lbs as opposed to 25-30 lbs). I think I got very lucky! The Mulitac Nylon SA with with electric guitar strings is the perfect match for the VG-99/GR20. As a plus, I'm loving the 1 7/8" nut width. No more accidental string muting or buzzing. Notes on the guitar with the original nylon strings. It's not a Classical Guitar, so classical guitar players should stay away from this one. Unplugged the sound lacks the depth of a classical guitar. Through a PA with the 1/4" cable, there is a big change in tone for the lower three strings. It doesn't sound "nylon-ish" and adds an irritating buzz on those strings' attack, which doesn't happen umplugged (Actually that buzz disappeared when I switched to flatwound steels). For anything, but a classical guitar concert, this guitar has is awesome. You can get that nice nylon string tone you here in pop, latino, flamenco, and Brazilian music (movie sound tracks too).

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