June 01, 2026
I have bought many Glarry instruments over the last few years - electric guitars, basses, and acoustic guitars. Only once have I been disappointed with a Glarry purchase - an acoustic guitar I bought last month that was horribly sloppily constructed. This white Ibanez-style guitar is another example of instruments that when purchased for a ridiculously low price, with a little setup, can be a decent, attractive guitar that is easy to play. As I've said in my other comments, I buy cheap guitars t ...
I have bought many Glarry instruments over the last few years - electric guitars, basses, and acoustic guitars. Only once have I been disappointed with a Glarry purchase - an acoustic guitar I bought last month that was horribly sloppily constructed. This white Ibanez-style guitar is another example of instruments that when purchased for a ridiculously low price, with a little setup, can be a decent, attractive guitar that is easy to play. As I've said in my other comments, I buy cheap guitars to practice luthier skills or use as ornamentation to hang on the wall in my studio. Once I mess around with them, they are generally easy to play and sound good. If you buy one and have no idea how to adjust it, you might be disappointed with the high action or other things that are common to inexpensive guitars. But for the most part, every Glarry guitar I've received has had outstanding finishes and look really good. No - they won't last long enough to pass down to your heirs, but for the price, I love them and give them five stars, not because they are Gibson, fender, Ibanez, or PRS quality, but they are five star for this price range.