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In-Tune Guitar Works
5 ★★★★★ 3 Google reviews · Guitar & music store in Milford, Connecticut
Plan your visit
- Repairs & setups a repair bench comes up in reviews and the store's own info — call ahead for turnaround, since good techs run a queue
- Lessons lessons come up in reviews and the store's own info — call about openings, instruments taught, and rates before the first visit
- Today see hours ·
- Phone (860) 209-1693
- Website intuneguitarworks.net
Hours
| Monday | 9 AM–6 PM |
| Tuesday | 9 AM–6 PM |
| Wednesday | 9 AM–6 PM |
| Thursday | 9 AM–6 PM |
| Friday | 9 AM–6 PM |
| Saturday | Closed |
| Sunday | Closed |
What's on the wall
“I recently brought the necks from both of my American Standard Strats to Greg (my new guitar guy) for level, crown and polishing.”
“He had advised me that a lot of material would come off, and that they’d be vintage spec from medium jumbo.”
“I am planning on having greg set up my PRS next and would recommend him highly.”
Brands they deal
“I am planning on having greg set up my PRS next and would recommend him highly.”
What players say again and again
“I am planning on having greg set up my PRS next and would recommend him highly.”
From the reviews
Greg at In-Tune Guitar Woks did the nearly impossible for me – he created a truly “wide neck” Jazz archtop by converting a 7 string instrument into a 6 string one!
I recently brought the necks from both of my American Standard Strats to Greg (my new guitar guy) for level, crown and polishing. The divets in these things had rendered the guitars unplayable and I was expecting to be told I’d have to go for re-frets on both.
I brought my LP to Greg to have a nut replaced and new strings installed. He did a beauful job cutting and fitting a new bone nut to replace the original which had broken and set the guitar up beautifully-it has never sounded this good or played this well.
Lessons at In-Tune Guitar Works
Reviews and the store's own info mention lessons at In-Tune Guitar Works. If you're signing up a beginner (or restarting yourself), a quick call ahead answers the three things that matter: which instruments they teach, whether the schedule has openings at the time you actually need, and what a first lesson costs. There's no wrong first guitar — a good teacher will happily work with whatever you walk in with, and a shop that teaches usually keeps affordable starter instruments on hand for exactly this reason.