We know you travel, and that’s why the Voyage-Air Guitar enables you to take your music with you, anywhere you go. This section features photos, stories, and videos from real owners. Play. Fold. Travel.

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Dear Voyage Air Guitar – As promised I send you here a little series of pics from Kefalonia (Greece)! Unfortunately I don´t have good mics with me to make a nice video, but it will come another time!

I wanted to let you know that I´m absolutely happy with the VAOM-2C!

“SHE” is wonderful to play… beautiful warm sound thanks to the rosewood back and sides! For me -as the VAOM-2C has a cutaway form- the rosewood back and sides correlates perfectly for the sound! As what the cutaway cuts of from bass and treble, the rosewood substitutes exactly in the right frequencies! Or with other words… it´s the BALANCE… or the RIGHT DOSAGE that makes me smile… whenever I play the sound inspires me… this is what a
singer songwriter loves most… to find a guitar that makes him WANT to play… and dive into the SOUND… amazing! Also in studio recordings this balance in sound is amazing!

Another thing that makes me smile is, that the guitar sound great for finger-style as well as for strumming. Only very less guitars I was playing had this balance between strumming and fingerstyle in there sound! And one of these was the Martin OM John Mayer which costs more then double of the price then the VAOM-2C.

With simple words! Your team created a masterpiece in many aspects! Not to forget in these context, the fold-ability of the guitar… the unique system you created, which makes traveling in aircrafts again affordable for musicians all over the globe…. a highlight itself! And all this still for an absolutely fair price!
My love & respect for your work!

My website is: https://erwin.bandcamp.com/

Peace & Love from Greece
E R W I N :-)

Growing up in a small town in Austria, I fell in love with my first guitar already in young age. Music, yoga & nature is aconstant river of joy since that time. This is probably why I travel so much. Life is beautiful if we feel the inner connection! Hope my songs can inspire lots of loving souls out there :-)

Editors note: This in from one our most tan customers. If this doesn’t make you want to get out and enjoy the summer with a Voyage Air guitar, well we don’t know what does.

I received my Voyage Air guitar just in time to take it to Cabo San Lucas for a week for my niece’s wedding at the Grand Fiesta Americana Resort. I played a couple songs at the the reception (outdoors by the pools) while my brother (the bride’s father) sang. I also spent several afternoons on my deck overlooking the grounds and sea strumming some Jimmy Buffet tunes, receiving some occasional applause from people enjoying the pools below.

It was great having the Voyage Air with me. The guitar got many comments, starting with the security guy running the x-ray machine at the airport in San Diego, who shouted out “is that one of those guitars from Shark Tank?”!

Traveling with a Voyage Air is a great way to make new friends.

In August 2015, I flew out out to Thailand from Manchester, England. After an overnight in Bangkok, I continued by coach and ferry to Koh Samui, an island off Thailand’s eastern seaboard where I was to work for a month as a volunteer teacher of English.

The part of the teaching I enjoyed most was in the kindergarten where we found songs to be an excellent means of teaching and learning. “No Woman No Cry” and “Have you Ever Seen The Rain?” also went down really well on those couple of occasions when we taught older students.

After Thailand it was on to Shanghai where I was booked to sing at two private functions and while I was there I was asked to do another at the celebrated Jiashan Market.

I have had my Voyage Air (VAOM-2CNA) fitted with an L.R. Baggs M1 Pickup, which has enabled me to take on a wider variety of gigs when I am traveling. It’s great to have a quality instrument readily available when overseas and although it took me a few months to get used to my Voyage-Air, I have grown to appreciate its quality and craft. I also use my Voyage Air when gigging at home.

Keep Music Live!
A. Sherwood

I use music to empower and inspire youth all over the country as a motivational speaker and entertainer.

Voyage Air Guitar has been an amazing help! My wife, dog and I traveled for over 60 days and over 14,000 miles in a mini cooper wrapped in cartoons. It was an amazing journey and my Voyage Air is compact, beautiful sounding, and very well made! I use that guitar at every hospital and speaking event! It is amazing and I am so thankful.

I discovered the power of music after receiving a severe head injury, music and song writing served as a creative outlet during my recovery, I had no idea how much music would play a role in my life. I was able to write silly songs and create music videos to cheer up my mother who was suffering from terminal cancer. Years later after her passing I continue to use music to bring healing, empowerment and a positive distraction to cancer patients. I created an interactive music program called Outside the Music Box, after my mother passed away. I wanted to preserve the legacies of patients and give them a creative outlet to release stress. We help kids in the cancer units write songs and create animated music videos for each of their songs. The program was having such an impact in Boston Hospitals that my wife and I knew we had to bring this to more patients. We recently set off on a U.S. Hospital Tour working with pediatric oncology patients all over the nation.  The tour was made possible with the help from our sponsors at Toontastic and Google. The results were amazing and this wonderful work continues each day thanks to additional sponsors like Fastcap and MUSIC beats Hearts. The program brings normalcy, positivity and creativity to very difficult situations.

My name is James Orrigo, I am the CEO and founder of Lad in a Battle LLC.

Video from the U.S. Hospital Tour.


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One of the many pediatric patient songs created.


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Please check out the videos we are making and subscribe to our YouTube Channel: JAMES ORRIGO

If anyone claims to know me, then they would know one very important fact about me.  I almost never travel without a guitar.  To give a little background on me and my guitar (Rent reference), I started playing guitar in second grade under the tutelage of Jim Hurley.  Jim always insisted to my parents and grandparents that I should only practice when I wanted to practice.  Unfortunately, I did not practice very often.  When fourth grade rolled around, I started violin and mandolin and guitar took a backseat.  Bass came along later and guitar was still in the backseat.  Not until seventh grade did I start playing guitar frequently again.

Now if you ask any of my best friends, I am quite often inseparable from my guitar.  Since eighth grade, I have pursued the guitar much more heavily to become a better guitar player and a better song leader.  It used to be that my grandmother would be angry at me for not practicing.  I bet now she would tell me to put down the guitar and come to the dinner table.  Most teenagers cannot be without their phones for long periods of time, I hate being without my guitar.

This change happened in part because of camp (This is where the Jewish part of this blog post comes in).  It used to be that I would go to camp and practice music for Shabbat Shira (big Shabbat dance party for those who do not know).  In Hagigah, I practiced guitar for my song leading major.  But during Hagigah, guitar started to take on a whole new meaning for me.  Guitar became a sort of coping mechanism for me.  When something did not go my way, I would play guitar and forget about my problems.  Just before going to camp for Hagigah, I took my guitar with me to Israel for my first trip to Israel.  It was certainly an experience to have my guitar with me, but it is nothing like the experience my guitar and I are having on this trip to Israel.

My guitar is still my coping mechanism for whenever things do not go well.  Sometimes I play my heart and soul out while playing my guitar.  It has come to the point where I can sit for hours at a time and just play my guitar.  At the Bedouin Tent,  I sat for twoish hours straight and played guitar.  There were other people there of course.  Reuben, Leana, Josh, Ben, Rocky, Jacob and Rachel (I apologise if I forgot anyone) sat listening to me play.  They were just there.  In my mind, it was just me and my guitar enjoying the warm night in the desert.  The week of Gadna I could not play my guitar and I will admit it was very hard.  After hurting my feet, I had no real way of coping because I could not play guitar and I could not practice my karate.  When I finally took my guitar out in Eilat, I was overjoyed.
Quite a few people brought their guitars with them to Israel.  I would have no matter what, but I am very grateful to be playing my Voyage Air Guitar.  (I promise this is not a sales pitch, just my thoughts about Voyage Air guitar and how grateful I am to them for making this guitar.)  If my guitar could not fold, traveling with it would be so much harder.  I would not have been able to bring it with to me the Arava or the Negev.  I would not have been able to take it to Eilat either.  The portability of my guitar makes it so much easier to take it everywhere I need to take.  Next week the group flies to Poland.  It will be one of the most trying points in my life because of what we are going to see there.  I am very grateful that I will be able to bring my guitar with me, so I have it to be my support when I am feeling sad about what we are learning about in Poland.

Back to Jewish part.  Part of the reason I pursued guitar more heavily is to be able to song lead.  I personally find a much deeper spiritual connection when I am pray when I play the guitar and am helping other people find their spiritual connection.  Music is one thing that has always helped me pray and I want to be able to help others through the power of music.  I know the song leading does not require a guitar, but it certainly helps and I am very grateful that I have been helped along by so many mentors in learning how to play the guitar.  Jim Hurley, all the song leaders at Camp Newman, Sarah Edelstein, Dan Nichols and of course my dad have all influenced me and pushed harder to become a better song leader than I was before and I am very grateful to them for that.  Song leading has become so important to me that I do not what I would do without it because it has become part of my Jewish identity.  Even though my Jewish identity has changed some during my stay in Israel so far and I know it will continue to evolve, I know that song leading and guitar will always be a part of my Jewish identity no matter what.

 

Good thing I had the guitar. Four days in, I’d had enough and was real glad I had it to turn to. We who play know there’s a hole in any vacation that doesn’t include a guitar. It was so easy popping her into the overhead compartment. Such a relief not having to relegate one of my babies to being tossed about by a baggage handler. Before I got my Voyage Air, I had stopped traveling on planes with a guitar. Too great a risk of loss. Now, I’m back in the saddle. It’s really a remarkable concept. Wish I’d have thought of it. Not only does the fold-up work, but the guitar sounds great. You pulled it off.  Anyway, just want to thank you. As you can see from the photos, you helped make it a great trip. Best personal regards.
– Dave R, NY