🎤 Rock Your World with the YRG-1000!
The You Rock Guitars YRG-1000 MIDI Guitar is a cutting-edge digital guitar featuring 25 authentic guitar sounds and 50 synth sounds, designed for musicians on the go. With low latency USB and 5-pin DIN outputs, it allows for seamless recording on Mac or PC. The removable neck and battery power make it perfect for mobile jamming, while the stereo audio input jack lets you play along with your favorite tracks. Plus, it's compatible with popular music games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band.
Guitar Bridge System | Fixed |
Number of Strings | 6 |
Hand Orientation | Right |
Guitar Pickup Configuration | MIDI |
Neck Material Type | Maple |
Fretboard Material Type | Rosewood |
W**.
SUPERB GUITAR/SYNTH FOR THE PRICE !!!
In all the time I have been using Amazon, there have only been a handful of times when I wrote a review. However, I had to comment that I am EXTREMELY pleased with the YOU GUITAR. Within a half-hour of use, I had figured out how to produce all the effects of my normal guitars, with the added bonus of playing with a "classical" sound, if I felt like it, or like a metal "shred head", with lots of "guts" and "feed-back" if I was in the mood.So, let's address some of the comments made in other reviews.1. "The YOU GUITAR doesn't allow me to do hammers/pull-offs" : WRONG. I noticed that if you had a finger on a string, you COULD hammer or pull-off a higher note. SO, simple suggesttion would be to mechanically capo the first fret so the guitar considers the strings "closed", allowing you to hammer/pull-off on the fret-board.2. "The plastic construction seemed somewhat fragile, and if I dropped the guitar it would probably break": Well, folks, if you're a drugged-out rock-aholic that regularly walks in to walls, or drops your guitars, ANY guitar would break.3. "The Whammy seems a little flimsy" : True. Just don't hammer the whammy. It is quite sensitive, and doesn't need much of a touch to produce a strong whammy effect.4. "The pre-recorded tracks are not so good": Have to agree here. I also noticed that the rhythm's don't always stay consistent. But personally, I will be running the main tracks/beats/rhythms out of my comp software, with the guitar as the solo leading instrument, so I can disregard this feature with ease.5. "Tapping out on the fret-board is not as fast and crisp as with a standard guitar": This was the only weakness I found to be true. Tapping out does not respond as quickly as it should, so occassionally, some notes will drop out. However, unless you are playing "Flight of the Bumble-bee", fooling around with a few changes in playing style should be workable.The only thing I have left to figure out is how to get the best string "action" on slides. But I am confident that I will be able to find a solution to this as well.All in all, the plusses of the YOU GUITAR are far greater than its minuses, and for a couple hundred bucks, I don't think you are going to do any better.A FEW MORE NOTES, AFTER 24 HOURS OF MESSING WITH THE YOU ROCK GUITAR:1. I have noticed that YOU ROCK offers a web-site where additional tracks and synths can be purchased. Different grades, from "regular" to "Professional" seem to be available, so this may address some of the initial weaknesses found in the stuff that came with the guitar.2. I REALLY like the style of this guitar. I prefer smaller-bodied instruments, and the "no-head" and simple black body and design greatly appeal to my "minimalist" nature.3. The somewhat "heavy" action needed to pluck or pick the input strings was o.k.,by me (although I may alter them *slightly* in the future). I am an advanced classical guitarist, and an intermediate rocker shred head, with a fair amount ofstrength and technique in both hands. Figuring that most of you out there are in roughly the same category, the heavier action won't be a strain.NOTES ON PLAY:"Classical Gas": No problem. The guitar is up to the technique of Parker, Segovia, Montoya....etc, with a clear classical synth. More stately music such as Vivaldi orBach... again no problem. "FOTBB" is problematic, as the speed and fingering of thispiece seems to over-power the capabilities of the guitar at times. For classicalfun, try running "TAP" mode while pluckiing and playing with the fingers as normal. This gives a rather interesting out-put reminiscient of a rather funky guitar duet."Rocking, Metalicity and Shredding": Speed shreds are problematic. But if you go for more plaintive, slightly slower progressions, and don't look to pump out ten notes in 1.5 seconds, no problem. The "guitar" synth quality is great, with some really fun set-ups, such as "Dirty electric" that sounds like a 25-year old Stratocaster run on an amp soaked in beer..."The Blues": Good Blues and/or R&B guitar synths. I like to play in the styleof Diana Krall, and this guitar is great for that. Again, I could see that speedmight be a problem if you are a blues "scatter"...."New Age": Hey, man its a guitar/synth, so new age stuff is "cream cheese" to thisrig. I spent a several hours playing around with ENYA and VANGELIS derivatives withno problem.A FEW THINGS I WOULD CHANGE:I would put the ear-phone/head-phone jack on the butt of the unit. Having it pokingout on the underside of the guitar gets in the way sometimes. Same with the otherI/O jacks on the under-side.I would make the set-ups and designations of the synths, and instrument stylesmore intuitive. "Stacking" the applications is a bit confusing. For veterans ofthe PC and Microsoft, figuring this type of stuff out is "old-hat", but there area lot of APPLE people out there that are used to their computer instructionmanual consisting of one sentence: "Turn on the machine...". So, in deference tothose of us lacking degrees in computer science, take mercy on us, YRG! : - )OVER-ALL SUMMATION:A great guitar/synth/comp/game that is worth the money. If you are an amateurplayer of any skill level, and even up to a "Semi-Pro" maybe playing quietclassicals in a small coffe-shop or cafe, or a NYC street-corner nickel-and-dimeplayer making enough money for a couple of burritos and a cheap flop-house, you are good to go.If you are a seasoned traveling professional musician, who needs aguitar that can take some hard traveling, needs super-high-quality synths,....etc, this 200 buck set-up won't hack it. But SHAME ON YOU if you everexpected it to, to begin with. You'll have to spend $4000.00 to do it on thislevel....
S**E
Fragile Guitar
First, let me say that I love the concept of this product and some YRGs probably work quite well. But, someone considering this purchase needs to be aware of the following:(1) though Amazon listed the product it came from another seller and it was poorly packaged, which may have caused damage, I don't really know ... there was no cushioning, it just came in the original box ...(2) the volume knob did not work...(3) the sound stopped suddenly w/out warning and the guitar needed to be turned off and put down for a while before it could re-start...(4) the guitar patches were all worbly sounding as if they were stuck on some truly awful effect...This could have happened from a bump during shipping, I don't know. But I had to return it (Amazon was very helpful with this) because I either cannot trust the workmanship of the product (fault of the manufacturer) or I cannot trust how the product is shipped (fault of the seller and/or shipper), either one is a deal-breaker for me.The YRG company itself offered to fix it; I decided to return it because I didn't buy a remanufactured product but a new product -- if it needs to be rebuilt ten minutes after I receive it then that's not the quality I'm looking for. I suppose if YRG had offered to double-package a new YRG and send it to me as a replacement I might have considered that option.
C**E
Major Disappointment
I can play my plain old acoustic guitar fairly well but it wasn't a premium brand to begin with and now it's quite old -- the frets are worn and the finger board is double-warped, making the action unpleasant and the intonation intolerable. I considered another folk or electric guitar, and then I saw this -- an electronic MIDI guitar, with zero clearance action, perfect tempered intonation, never needs tuning, headphone output, plenty of internal voices, and MIDI out for nearly limitless sounds and versatility. All that is so appealing, but the problem is that the instrument is basically unplayable for anything but strumming the simplest chords. Playing it, or rather attempting to operate it since it is unplayable, is nothing like a regular guitar. The frets are closer together than standard, which is a difficult adjustment on its own, and fingers have to be placed essentially perfectly to register correctly to the touch-sensitive fingerboard. The short strings which pick up strums or finger-picking have such fidgety tolerances that getting a note to sound is a matter of chance. Forget lead riffs or arpeggios. The metal bar right below the strings which is supposed to silence the strings when touched is unpredictable and is in an awkward location even if it worked. I watched a Youtube video demonstration and it was hard to believe that it wasn't faked.Why did I give it two stars instead of zero? That's because though I can't PLAY it to make music, I can and do PLAY WITH it, like a toy.
K**U
One up from Game Controller
The string sensitivity isn't as good as I hope it'd be. Doing everything with the picks is wonderful, but finger picking causes the guitar to miss notes.The built-in sound bank is usable, but doesn't sound too good. I've tried inputting music with it and it work well for that purpose. All in all this is probably not the best guitar to learn guitar with, you'd be better off with a cheap acoustic. It's for people who are looking to get a midi controller or want something extra when they're looking for a game controller.
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