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

Start Jamming...
[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]
Key:
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] _ _