Am I the only one not excited over this model?
Clearly, I will have to reserve final judgment until I get to play one, but the traditional jumbo body was a beautiful (and traditional ...read "good") shape: the one I was looking forward to Taylor revoicing and impressing us with. This "GO" looks bulky and overweight ...a definite -1 on aesthetics, IMHO.
Of course, tone will tell. But if all I wanted was sheer volume I'd plug in. Jumbo bodies (Taylors and others) had a nice voice going on there that somehow suited its voluptuous shape. Given the "GO" pics so far, I'm not enamored regardless of how "big" it sounds. Perhaps that's a bit shallow (and again, admittedly premature), but I am hoping its voice will win me over.
Edward
I'm in total agreement with you, Edward, as stated earlier in this thread. If you think about it, Taylor's new line including the GA, the GS, the GO and the DN is a heavily concentrated on large guitars, while the GC sits all by itself as the only "smallish" guitar in the line. In this plug-in age, I don't think that we need more volume to emanate from a guitar's size. For me, it's all about tone. If the GO is going to be equipped with medium gauge strings like the GS, that will also be a turn-off for me, no matter how "rich" it sounds. With all the tradition of 00s, 000s and OMs out there, it would nice if Taylor would bring something new to the table in this arena. I would still like to see an SJ or something a bit larger than the GS mini as an idea... I'll certainly give one or two of these GOs a try, but as I'm not a big GS fan, I doubt that I'll be pleasantly surprised.