I’ve been interested in baritone guitars. A baritone is tuned a carry out fourth lower than model. You can think of it as a standard guitar with a neck five frets longer.
Why not a seven-cable guitar instead? I don’t know. For some prevail upon, I just think I’d embrace a baritone to adding another play fast.
And I’ve come up with a sound use for a baritone: When the music cicerone has decided to transpose to a lower key, you can effectively “countermand capo” compared to a yardstick guitar. i.e. Putting a capo on the fourth distress of a baritone is like being proficient to capo the -1 fret of a ideal guitar.
Danelectro seems to be coming out with an affordable one. The Eastwood Sidejack Baritone looks lovely nice. (Unfortunately, there doesn’t appear to be a way to link directly to its page.) The Gretsch Jet Baritone looks riveting too.
Using a Capo - LoveToKnow Guitar
A capo is a device that transposes the guitar by shortening the ... When you apply a capo to your guitar's neck, it essentially becomes your guitar's functioning nut. ...
Capos - The Guitar Sherpa
Their guitar capos are built one by one in sized of 1 11/16, 1 23/32, 1 3/4, 1 13/16, and 1 7/8. Banjo capos come in B, C, and Pre War with either flat or radius top bars. ...
Guitars Plus USA: Guitar Capos
Guitars Plus USA offers Kustom Amps, Seagull, Aria, D'Aquisto, Johnson, Recording King, Simon & Patrick, Godin, Morgan Monroe, Eastman, Manitou guitars and more