Chords for Acoustic Guitar Review - Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar
Tempo:
72.4 bpm
Chords used:
E
D
B
A
Eb
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret

Jam Along & Learn...
[B]
[N] I'm here with the Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar model guitar, which we chose to represent
range in our midsize guitar review.
In this price range, you can find several different approaches to build a great guitar.
have fancy inlay and looks that rival more expensive guitars,
[E] woods to build the instruments.
woods to make their instruments.
woods generally sound better as they age and give the guitar a fuller, richer sound.
[N] I'm here with the Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar model guitar, which we chose to represent
range in our midsize guitar review.
In this price range, you can find several different approaches to build a great guitar.
have fancy inlay and looks that rival more expensive guitars,
[E] woods to build the instruments.
woods to make their instruments.
woods generally sound better as they age and give the guitar a fuller, richer sound.
100% ➙ 72BPM
E
D
B
A
Eb
E
D
B
_ _ [B] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [N] I'm here with the Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar model guitar, which we chose to represent
the $250 to $500 price range in our midsize guitar review.
This particular guitar has a street price of about $400.
In this price range, you can find several different approaches to build a great guitar.
Some manufacturers [Eb] choose to have fancy inlay and looks that rival more expensive guitars,
but they use lower quality, lower grade [E] woods to build the instruments.
Other manufacturers [D] choose a more plain aesthetic [Db] and use high quality woods to make their instruments.
You can find solid woods all around.
You can also find [F] laminate woods a lot of the time.
Solid woods generally sound better as they age and give the guitar a fuller, richer sound.
So it's a segment in the market that really pays to shop carefully, compare specs, and
educate yourself in what will really [E] result in a great tone.
This Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar that I'm holding is built with [C] a solid cedar top, solid
cherry wood back and sides.
It has forward shifted X bracing inside the top.
It has a
24.84 inch scale, which would be considered a short scale.
It has a 1.8 inch nut width,
and [D] it has 2 and 116 inch [Ab] string spacing at the saddle.
Guitars with cedar tops are often praised for their great responsiveness, especially
to a soft touch.
And this Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar is no exception to that.
The guitar's
body is also quite a bit deeper than a lot of mid-sized guitars would be, which probably
helps it develop some bass response as well.
In addition, the guitar has the Seagull typical
pointed headstock, which is actually a clever design because it allows the strings to follow
a fairly straight path from the nut to the tuners, which can lead to great tuning stability.
So I'm going to start out demonstrating the guitar by playing a little bit of strummed
material [A] with a flat pick.
_ _ [A] _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ And here's the Seagull plate finger style.
I'm tuned to dadgad tuning [D] now. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ So that's the Seagull Coastline [N] Folk Cedar.
It's a guitar that has a street price of about
$400 and represents the $250 to $500 segment in our review of mid-sized guitars.
_ _ _ [B] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [N] I'm here with the Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar model guitar, which we chose to represent
the $250 to $500 price range in our midsize guitar review.
This particular guitar has a street price of about $400.
In this price range, you can find several different approaches to build a great guitar.
Some manufacturers [Eb] choose to have fancy inlay and looks that rival more expensive guitars,
but they use lower quality, lower grade [E] woods to build the instruments.
Other manufacturers [D] choose a more plain aesthetic [Db] and use high quality woods to make their instruments.
You can find solid woods all around.
You can also find [F] laminate woods a lot of the time.
Solid woods generally sound better as they age and give the guitar a fuller, richer sound.
So it's a segment in the market that really pays to shop carefully, compare specs, and
educate yourself in what will really [E] result in a great tone.
This Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar that I'm holding is built with [C] a solid cedar top, solid
cherry wood back and sides.
It has forward shifted X bracing inside the top.
It has a
24.84 inch scale, which would be considered a short scale.
It has a 1.8 inch nut width,
and [D] it has 2 and 116 inch [Ab] string spacing at the saddle.
Guitars with cedar tops are often praised for their great responsiveness, especially
to a soft touch.
And this Seagull Coastline Folk Cedar is no exception to that.
The guitar's
body is also quite a bit deeper than a lot of mid-sized guitars would be, which probably
helps it develop some bass response as well.
In addition, the guitar has the Seagull typical
pointed headstock, which is actually a clever design because it allows the strings to follow
a fairly straight path from the nut to the tuners, which can lead to great tuning stability.
So I'm going to start out demonstrating the guitar by playing a little bit of strummed
material [A] with a flat pick.
_ _ [A] _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ And here's the Seagull plate finger style.
I'm tuned to dadgad tuning [D] now. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ So that's the Seagull Coastline [N] Folk Cedar.
It's a guitar that has a street price of about
$400 and represents the $250 to $500 segment in our review of mid-sized guitars.
_ _ _ [B] _ _