Edmonton Journal

Music stores facing drop in demand for electric guitars

- MITCH GOLDENBERG

In each of his hands, Axe Music salesman Scott McCarthy holds guitars.

Grasped with his right hand is an American-made Fender ’52 Butterscot­ch Blonde, a $2,700 masterpiec­e often seen in the hands of Bruce Springstee­n and Keith Richards. With his left, McCarthy holds a Chinese-made Fender Squier Classic Vibe, ringing in at one-fifth of the price for $539.

“The Squier actually stacks up remarkably well to the Butterscot­ch,” McCarthy said. “You can buy a Kia or a Ferrari, both of them will get you to work, but one of them will do it in some serious style.”

Guitar consumers have never been so spoiled. The oversatura­ted entry-level market for such an instrument dips below $200. By the $500 range, customers are buying instrument­s comparable to the ones being plugged into Rogers Place amplifiers by the night’s latest headliner.

“It’s a healthy fight for the consumer,” McCarthy said. “Manufactur­ers are duking it out and increasing the quality of their instrument­s to win a bigger part of the market share.”

The problem, however, is local music stores are selling fewer guitars to fewer customers.

Rick Shermack, Axe Music’s general manager, lists the struggling economy and intensifie­d competitio­n for disposable income as reasons for a decline in guitar sales.

“Music stores that sit back are not going to make it, we have to find ways to reinvent ourselves,” he said.

Edmonton’s music stores are dealing with a major transforma­tion in customer dynamics when it comes to selling guitars.

“The day of the guitar hero and the mid-’70s, seven-minute guitar solo — nobody really goes for that anymore,” McCarthy said.

“That era was seminal in putting us where we are today, but they have had their day.

“What we’re seeing (now) is people who are looking at the guitar as nothing more than a tool, plugging it into technology they have on their phone, laptops and tablets.”

The vast majority of today’s popular hits, including Canadian pop icon Justin Bieber’s current hit Despacito, have abandoned the sound of a strumming guitar.

“It used to be that you just needed a Les Paul and you could play everything on the radio,” said Tyler Stang, who owns a guitar shop on 76 Avenue. “But now, there are very few guitars plugged straight into the amplifier.”

Instead of spending hundreds or even thousands of dollars on instrument­s in a tight economy, Stang said customers prefer to invest $200 or less into guitar pedals that distort, loop and manipulate sounds from their guitar.

“Pedals have exploded. The amount of brands you have to carry — it seems like there are 10 times the amount of pedal companies than when I first started in 2005,” Stang said.

Pedal effects have become the colours of paint that define a musician’s art and demonstrat­e their capabiliti­es, with guitars more often being used like the paintbrush.

“There are infinite sounds and companies have really expanded their capabiliti­es,” Stang said of the pedals.

While interest in electric guitars might be shrinking, McCarthy does not believe the future of musicians is in trouble.

“As long as girls are still in love with musicians, they will continue to make noise,” he joked.

 ?? IAN KUCERAK ?? Scott McCarthy, an Axe Music guitar sales representa­tive, plays a Seagull guitar in the company’s Wayne Gretzky Drive location on Saturday. He’s found interest in guitars has waned recently.
IAN KUCERAK Scott McCarthy, an Axe Music guitar sales representa­tive, plays a Seagull guitar in the company’s Wayne Gretzky Drive location on Saturday. He’s found interest in guitars has waned recently.

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