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2019 AGS Magazine_V5

Magazine for the 2019 Artisan Guitar Show

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April 12, 13, & 14, <strong>2019</strong>


LUTHIERS OF FINE STRINGED<br />

INSTRUMENTS<br />

The Artisan Guitar Show welcomes you to its third annual<br />

celebration of guitars and music. This is the complete show for<br />

guitar and music lovers and includes guitar makers, a concert<br />

series, and master classes. This shows provides an opportunity<br />

for music lovers, musicians, students, guitar enthusiasts,<br />

and luthiers alike to experience a showcase of the finest<br />

handcrafted guitars in the world and their makers.<br />

The performing artists who appear in our concert series can<br />

only be described as world-class talent. The lecturers who<br />

teach at our master classes are truly leaders in their fields and<br />

are respected around the world.<br />

The Artisan Guitar Show would like to thank the artists,<br />

educators, guitar makers, and sponsors who help to make<br />

this event a premier hand-crafted guitar, education, and live<br />

performance venue.<br />

A show is nothing without the many great enthusiasts<br />

who attend, so thank you for coming. It is our sincere<br />

hope that your memories from the Artisan Guitar Show<br />

will bring you joy for many years to come.<br />

Musical instruments are your passion.<br />

Protecting them is ours.<br />

For over 25 years, fine musical instrument players,<br />

collectors, builders and sellers have depended on<br />

Heritage to customize a comprehensive and affordable<br />

insurance policy for their needs. It’s time you<br />

joined them!<br />

Compare our dealer and maker protection options<br />

with your current policy... and see why 11,000+<br />

clients throughout the U.S. and Canada trust<br />

Heritage Insurance Services, Inc.<br />

Nobody appreciates fine instruments like Heritage.<br />

That’s why we’re committed to protecting your<br />

instruments from damage and theft on a worldwide<br />

basis. We have flexible and affordable policies<br />

that are customized to meet your needs.<br />

COVERAGE HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDES:<br />

● Your stock in trade<br />

● Consignments/Entrustments<br />

● Non-owned instruments<br />

● Worldwide coverage<br />

● Instruments at shows<br />

● Work in progress<br />

● Shipments<br />

● Breakage including devaluation<br />

● Business personal property including<br />

raw wood, tools, fixtures, machinery<br />

Call or e-mail to ask about the best<br />

coverage in the industiry.<br />

1-800-289-8837 info@musicins.com<br />

SHOW HOURS<br />

Friday, April 12, <strong>2019</strong> • 6:00 - 10:00PM<br />

(Private Sneak Preview and Concerts for VIP Ticket Holders Only)<br />

Saturday, April 13, <strong>2019</strong> • 10:00AM - 6:00PM<br />

(General Admission Show Hours)<br />

Saturday, April 13, <strong>2019</strong> • 6:00PM - 10:00PM<br />

(Private Reception and Concerts for VIP Ticket Holders Only)<br />

Sunday, April 14, <strong>2019</strong> • 10:00AM - 4:00PM<br />

(General Admission Show Hours)<br />

CONTENTS<br />

Exhibitor Layout 2<br />

Concert and Master Class Schedule 3<br />

Master Class Information 5<br />

Artisan Giveaway Guitar 6<br />

The Tree 8<br />

Kalamazoo Gals 10<br />

Brent Mason 14<br />

Amplifying Quality Instruments 18<br />

The Invisible Guitar 24<br />

Five Minutes with Kathy Wingert 32<br />

Pearl Inlay 34<br />

Jimmy Webb 38<br />

Five Minutes with Kent “Carlos” Everett 44<br />

Five Minutes with Bruce Sexauer 45<br />

Dana Borgeois - An Amazing Time 48<br />

In the Eye of the Beholder 52<br />

Five Minutes with Rick Maguire 58<br />

Five Minutes with Bill Comins 63<br />

www.musicins.com 1.800.289.8837<br />

Web: www.artisanguitarshow.com • Instagram: @artisanguitarshow<br />

Twitter: @ArtisanGTRshow • Facebook: /artisanguitarshow<br />

©The contents of this magazine may not be reproduced without the express<br />

permission and approval of the contributors, publisher and/or The Artisan Guitar Show.<br />

<strong>Magazine</strong> design and production - Stuart Mono<br />

Cover and Contents Photos:<br />

Guitar: The GRAND CENTRAL<br />

by John Monteleone<br />

Photo Credit: Rod Franklin<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 1


Exhibitor Map<br />

Maxmonte<br />

Guitars<br />

5 6<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9' 8' X 9' 8' X 18' 8' X 9' 8' X 18' 8' X 9' 8' X 18'<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Maxmonte<br />

Humphrey<br />

DHR Guitar Experience Monteleone<br />

Bourgeois Guitars<br />

Comins<br />

Damman Jack Daniel’s<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

DHR Publishing<br />

Guitars Instruments<br />

5 6<br />

7<br />

13<br />

8<br />

9<br />

10<br />

11 12 8' X 10'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9' 8' X 9' 8' X 18' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 18' 8' X 9' 8' X 18'<br />

Yen<br />

Maguire<br />

Mirabella<br />

MacCubbin Circa Guitars<br />

Heritage<br />

Osthoff<br />

Galloup Guitars Lehmann<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

Insurance<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

Strings<br />

DNA Ryer<br />

14<br />

Guitars<br />

31 32<br />

39 40<br />

47 48<br />

55<br />

8' X 10'<br />

56<br />

8' X 9' 8' Maguire X 9'<br />

Mirabella 8' X 9' MacCubbin 8' X 9' Circa Guitars<br />

8' X 9' Heritage 8' X 9'<br />

8' X Henriksen<br />

Galloup 9' 8' Lehmann X 9'<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

Insurance<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

Emergency Exit<br />

Amps<br />

Strings<br />

DNA Ryer Wilborn Duke of Pearl<br />

Tim Bram<br />

FE Tellier<br />

Sam Guidry<br />

Pellerin<br />

Bethany<br />

Trenier<br />

4<br />

10' X 12'<br />

Guitars Guitars 31 ' 32<br />

Guitars 39 Guitars40<br />

Guitars 47<br />

Guitars 48<br />

15 55Guitars<br />

56 Guitars<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' 8' X 9' 10' 8' X 9'<br />

Skytop<br />

30 33 Wilborn Duke of Pearl 38 41Tim Bram<br />

FE Tellier 46<br />

Sam Guidry 49<br />

Pellerin 54 Bethany<br />

Bam Cases 57 Trenier<br />

Guitars 4<br />

8' X 9' 8'<br />

10' X 12'<br />

Guitars X 9'<br />

' 8' X 9'<br />

Guitars 8' X 9' Guitars<br />

8' X 9' Guitars 8' X 9' Guitars<br />

8' X Guitars 9' 8' Guitars X 9'<br />

Morrissey<br />

Wingert<br />

Davide Serracini,<br />

Phifer<br />

Bruce Sexauer,<br />

LeGeyt<br />

Robbins<br />

Everett<br />

Skytop Guitars 30 Guitars 33<br />

Luthier 38 Guitars41<br />

luthier 46 Instruments 49<br />

16 54 Acoustics 57<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' 8' X 9' 10'<br />

Guitars<br />

3<br />

8' X 9'<br />

9' X 10'<br />

Guitars<br />

Morrissey<br />

Wingert<br />

Davide Serracini,<br />

Phifer<br />

Bruce Sexauer,<br />

LeGeyt<br />

Solid Robbins Ground<br />

29 34<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars<br />

37 42<br />

Luthier<br />

Guitars<br />

45 50<br />

Instruments<br />

53<br />

Acoustics Stands 58<br />

Acoustic<br />

Guitars<br />

3<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

9' X 10'<br />

Remedy<br />

Zimnicki 29 Kostal 34<br />

American Music 37 Greenfield 42<br />

Borghino 45 50 Circle<br />

17 53 American 58Ken Parker<br />

Acoustic Guitars<br />

Guitars 8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

Furniture 8' X Guitars 9' 8' X 9'<br />

Guitars 8' X 9' Strings8' X 9'<br />

Archtop 8' 8' X 9' 10' Archtops 8' X 9'<br />

Remedy<br />

Zimnicki<br />

Kostal<br />

American Music<br />

Borghino<br />

Circle<br />

Guitars American McKnight Ken Parker<br />

2<br />

28 35 Guitars<br />

Guitars 36 43Furniture<br />

Guitars 44<br />

Guitars 51<br />

Strings 52<br />

Archtop Guitars 59 Archtops<br />

10' X 12'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X Guitars 9' 8' X 9'<br />

2<br />

28 35<br />

36 43<br />

44 51<br />

18<br />

10' X 12'<br />

52 8' 10' 59<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

Kalamazoo<br />

Laurent Brondel<br />

Luthier<br />

Gals<br />

Kalamazoo<br />

Klein-Kauffman<br />

Exhibit<br />

Gals<br />

Emergency Exit Guitars<br />

19<br />

LIE-NIELSEN<br />

Benedetto Exhibit<br />

Maegen<br />

LHT Guitars<br />

Ribbecke<br />

Hearne 8' X 10' Froggy Bottom<br />

Guitars<br />

TOOLWORKS<br />

LIE-NIELSEN<br />

Wells Maegen<br />

LHT Guitars Guitars Ribbecke<br />

Hardwoods Widman Hearne Custom Guitars<br />

TOOLWORKS<br />

Guitars 24Wells<br />

Guitars<br />

Hardwoods Electrics<br />

Guitars<br />

Guitars 6' X 24 9'<br />

6' X 6'8''<br />

1 27<br />

26<br />

25<br />

6' 23 X 9'<br />

22<br />

1 27<br />

26<br />

25<br />

23<br />

22 20 6' X 6'8'' 21<br />

10' X 12'<br />

8' X 10' 8' X 10' 8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 10' 21<br />

10' X 12'<br />

8' X 10' 8' X 10' 8' X 9' 8' X 9'<br />

8' X 10'<br />

8' X 10' 8' X 10'<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Exhibitor/Guest<br />

Entry<br />

2<br />

52<br />

36<br />

16<br />

54<br />

44<br />

10<br />

45<br />

40<br />

51<br />

11<br />

13<br />

37<br />

8<br />

Exhibitor/Guest<br />

Entry<br />

American Archtop Guitars<br />

American Music Furniture<br />

BAM Cases<br />

Bethany Guitars<br />

Borghino Guitars<br />

Bourgeois Guitars<br />

Bruce Sexauer, luthier<br />

Circa Guitars<br />

Circle Strings<br />

Dammann Instrument<br />

Davide Serracini, Luthier<br />

DHR Guitar Experience<br />

6<br />

19<br />

50<br />

56<br />

24<br />

27<br />

39<br />

25<br />

31<br />

5<br />

18<br />

32<br />

9<br />

29<br />

48<br />

Emergency Exit<br />

ARTISAN GUITAR SHOW EXHIBITORS:<br />

26<br />

Lattanze<br />

Guitars<br />

7<br />

Humphrey<br />

Amplifiers<br />

8<br />

DHR Guitar Experience<br />

DHR Publishing<br />

Laurent Brondel Luthier<br />

LeGeyt Instruments<br />

Lehmann Strings<br />

LHT Guitars<br />

LIE-NIELSEN<br />

MacCubbin Guitars<br />

Maegen Wells Guitars<br />

Maguire Guitars<br />

Maxmonte Guitars<br />

McKnight Guitars<br />

Mirabella Guitars<br />

Monteleone<br />

9<br />

Morrissey Guitars<br />

Monteleone<br />

10<br />

4<br />

33<br />

58<br />

41<br />

21<br />

55<br />

43<br />

22<br />

15<br />

47<br />

7<br />

12<br />

59<br />

1<br />

35<br />

Bourgeois Guitars<br />

Emergency Exit<br />

DNA Ryer Guitars<br />

Duke of Pearl<br />

FE Tellier Guitars<br />

Galloup Guitars<br />

Hearne Hardwoods<br />

Henriksen Amps<br />

Heritage Insurance Services, Inc.<br />

Jack Daniel’s<br />

Ken Parker Archtops<br />

Kostal Guitars<br />

11<br />

Comins<br />

Guitars<br />

12<br />

49<br />

42<br />

23<br />

53<br />

46<br />

3<br />

17<br />

38<br />

57<br />

20<br />

30<br />

34<br />

14<br />

28<br />

Jack Daniel’s<br />

Exhibitor/Guest<br />

Entry Entry<br />

Pellerin Guitars<br />

Phifer Guitars<br />

Ribbecke Guitars<br />

The The Central Central Ballroom Ballroom<br />

Sam Guidry Handmade Guitars<br />

Skytop Guitars<br />

Solid Ground Stands<br />

Tim Bram Guitars<br />

Trenier Guitars<br />

Widman Guitars<br />

Wilborn Guitars<br />

Wingert Guitars<br />

Yen Guitars<br />

Zimnicki Guitars<br />

13<br />

14<br />

15<br />

16<br />

17<br />

20<br />

Damman<br />

Instruments<br />

Yen<br />

Guitars<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Henriksen<br />

Amps<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Bam Cases<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Solid Ground<br />

Stands<br />

8' X 10'<br />

McKnight<br />

Guitars<br />

18<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Laurent Brondel<br />

Luthier<br />

19<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Widman Custom<br />

Electrics<br />

8' X 10'<br />

Concert & Master Class Schedule<br />

The Artisan Guitar Show Concert Series features great concert performances throughout the weekend with highly<br />

talented and respected musicians showcasing only the finest instruments being created today. These performances<br />

include presentations by international performers with an emphasis on finger-style masters, singer-songwriters, harp<br />

guitarists, and players who make jazz archtop guitars sing.<br />

TIME ARTISAN GUITAR SHOW CONCERT SERIES SPONSOR LOCATION<br />

SATURDAY 4/13<br />

11:00 AM Hiroya Tsukamoto Robbins Acoustics Heritage Room<br />

12:00 PM Mark Lemaire Yen Guitar Heritage Room<br />

1:00 PM Robin Bullock MacCubbin Guitars Heritage Room<br />

2:00 PM Tim Farrell DHR Guitar Experience Heritage Room<br />

3:00 PM Adam Miller Greenfield Guitars Heritage Room<br />

4:00 PM Richie Hart and David Gilmore Phifer Guitars Heritage Room<br />

5:00 PM Courtney Hartman Bourgeois Guitar Heritage Room<br />

SUNDAY 4/14<br />

10:30 AM Alex Anderson Pellerin Guitars Heritage Room<br />

11:30 AM Kinloch Nelson Lehmann Strings Heritage Room<br />

12:30 PM Lyle Brewer Ken Parker Archtops Heritage Room<br />

1:30 PM Joe Mass McKnight Guitars Heritage Room<br />

2:30 PM Luke Brindley Circle Strings Heritage Room<br />

TIME ARTISAN GUITAR SHOW VIP EVENTS SPONSOR LOCATION<br />

FRIDAY 4/12<br />

6:00 PM Jazz All-Stars featuring Jimmy Bruno, Sean McGowan,<br />

and Steve Herberman<br />

Comins Guitars<br />

Henriksen Amplifiers<br />

Heritage Room<br />

8:00 PM Brent Mason Artisan Guitar Show Heritage Room<br />

SATURDAY 4/13<br />

6:00 PM Maurizio Brunod Borghino Guitars Heritage Room<br />

8:00 PM Jimmy Webb Artisan Guitar Show Heritage Room<br />

The Artisan Guitar Show Master Class Series provides learning opportunities that are nearly impossible to find<br />

elsewhere. These master classes are diverse and our lecturers are quite literally masters in their fields.<br />

TIME ARTISAN GUITAR SHOW MASTER CLASS SERIES SPONSOR LOCATION<br />

SATURDAY 4/13<br />

11:00 AM Tim Farrell - Acoustic Guitar Music of The Beatles Cameron Room<br />

12:00 PM Dick Boak - The Many Elements and Variables of Tone Cameron Room<br />

1:00 PM Brent Mason - Blurring the Lines Between Country & Jazz Guitar Cameron Room<br />

2:00 PM Jimmy Webb - Songwriting Clinic Cameron Room<br />

4:00 PM Sean McGowan - Fingerstyle Jazz Guitar Cameron Room<br />

5:00 PM John Thomas - Kalamazoo Gals Cameron Room<br />

SUNDAY 4/14<br />

11:00 AM Lie-Nielsen - Working with Heirloom Quality Hand Tools Cameron Room<br />

12:00 PM Dana Bourgeois - Top Voicing the Steel String Guitar Cameron Room<br />

1:30 PM Jimmy Bruno - Jazz Master Class Cameron Room<br />

REPRESENTING THE VERY FINEST ARCHTOP LUTHIERS AND RELATED BUSINESSES<br />

www.finearchtops.com<br />

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Adam Miller Alex Anderson Brent Mason Jimmy Webb


Master Classes<br />

All take place in the Cameron Room<br />

Courtney Hartman<br />

Jimmy Bruno<br />

Joe Mass<br />

Maurizio Brunod<br />

Hiroya Tsukamoto<br />

Sean McGowan<br />

Luke Brindley<br />

Dana Bourgeois<br />

Acoustic Guitar Music of The Beatles - Tim Farrell<br />

In this workshop we will discuss the importance of the acoustic<br />

guitar in the songwriting, performances and recordings of<br />

the music of The Beatles, beginning with their first single and<br />

throughout their career. We will explore the unique compositional<br />

approaches, choices of chord voicings, playing techniques, etc<br />

… that have made The Beatles music both enjoyed and revered<br />

for many years. Examples will include iconic acoustic guitar parts<br />

from classic and timeless songs such as Yesterday, Here Comes<br />

The Sun, Blackbird, etc … We will walk step by step through the<br />

creation of a solo guitar arrangement for You Never Give Me Your<br />

Money. This is a hands-on workshop so bringing your guitar is<br />

recommended but not required.<br />

Saturday, April 13, 11:00AM<br />

The Many Elements and Variables of Tone - Dick Boak<br />

Most simply, Dick Boak will delve into those aspects of a guitar<br />

that influence tone. Nearly everything plays a part. The wood of<br />

the soundboard, the tonewood choice for back and sides, the<br />

weight of the guitar, of course, the bracing, the scale length, the<br />

choice of strings, the size of the body. There are as many variables<br />

in an instrument as there are words to describe the tonal result.<br />

What do you look for in an instrument? Warmth, clarity, brilliance,<br />

volume, projection? What choices should you make to achieve<br />

the tone you aspire to. Dick Boak spent his career assisting the<br />

greatest guitar players of our time make these choices. Come join<br />

in the discussion.<br />

Saturday, April 13, 12:00PM<br />

Blurring the Lines Between Country and Jazz Guitar -<br />

Brent Mason<br />

Brent Mason is one of the most recorded guitarists in history.<br />

He was discovered by and recorded with legendary guitarist Chet<br />

Atkins and is a Grammy Award winner. His honors include 12<br />

Academy of Country Music Guitarist of the Year awards, and two<br />

CMA Musician of the Year awards. Brent has been named<br />

as one of the top ten session guitarists in the world. Please<br />

join Brent as he instructs on how to blur the lines between<br />

country and jazz guitar.<br />

Saturday, April 13, 1:00PM<br />

lamazoo Gals -- a story of the extraordinary women and Gibson’s<br />

banner guitars of World War II.<br />

Saturday, April 13, 5:00PM<br />

Hand Tool Tips for Superior Results -<br />

Lie-Nielsen Toolworks<br />

Roger Benton owns and operates a custom design/build furniture<br />

shop and lumberyard, RE-CO BKLYN, which works with local<br />

arborists in the New York City area and specializes in harvesting<br />

storm damaged trees for lumber. In addition to sourcing, milling,<br />

and drying lumber and slabs, the RE-CO BKLYN design and build<br />

team has created one-of-a-kind pieces for private and commercial<br />

clients ranging from local homeowners to popular celebrities as<br />

well as hotels, restaurants, bars, retail stores and more.<br />

Roger has been a member of the Lie-Nielsen Toolworks Hand<br />

Tool Event® staff since 2011.<br />

Sunday, April 14, 11:00AM<br />

Top Voicing the Steel String Guitar - Dana Bourgeois<br />

Dana Bourgeois has been building guitars for more than 40<br />

years. He is known throughout the world for his superb craftsmanship<br />

and as one of the foremost authorities on the voicing, selection<br />

and utilization of fine acoustic tonewoods. Learn what makes<br />

Bourgeois guitars unique and why they sound the way they do as<br />

Dana delves into a comprehensive analysis of top voicing strategy.<br />

Sunday, April 14, 12:00PM<br />

Jazz Players Master Class - Jimmy Bruno<br />

Jimmy Bruno was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and is a<br />

master jazz guitarist and jazz educator. Jimmy is one of the most<br />

critically acclaimed jazz guitarists performing today. He came<br />

to prominence as a jazz musician in the 1990s after a successful<br />

twenty-year career as a sought-after commercial guitarist and<br />

session musician. Please “sit in” as Jimmy discusses the nuances<br />

of playing jazz guitar.<br />

Sunday, April 14, 1:30PM<br />

Lyle Brewer<br />

Mark Lemaire<br />

Alex Anderson<br />

Songwriting Clinic with Master Songwriter Jimmy<br />

Webb<br />

Jimmy Webb is an American songwriter, composer and<br />

singer known worldwide as a master of his trade. Since his<br />

first platinum hit “The Worst That Could Happen,” Webb has<br />

written numerous hits including “Up, Up and Away,” “By the<br />

Time I Get to Phoenix,” “Wichita Lineman,” “Galveston,”<br />

“Didn’t We,” “All I Know,” and “MacArthur Park.” Please join<br />

Jimmy as speaks on the intricacies of song writing.<br />

Saturday, April 13, 2:00PM<br />

Richie Hart<br />

David Gilmore<br />

Dick Boak<br />

Fingerstyle Jazz Guitar - Sean McGowan<br />

Sean McGowan is a fingerstyle jazz guitarist who combines<br />

many diverse musical influences with unconventional<br />

techniques to create a broad palette of textures within his<br />

compositions and arrangements for solo guitar. Learn the art<br />

of fingerstyle jazz guitar with this insightful lesson as Sean<br />

discusses several performance techniques, playing multiple<br />

parts, walking basslines, creating full arrangements, and<br />

improvisation.<br />

Saturday, April 13, 4:00PM<br />

Steve Herberman<br />

Tim Farrell<br />

Robin Bullock<br />

Kalamazoo Gals - John Thomas<br />

John Thomas is a “law professor by trade, a guitar player<br />

still striving for mediocrity, and a freelance writer by necessity.”<br />

Please join John as he tells the story of the amazing Ka-<br />

4 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

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WIN<br />

THIS<br />

GUITAR!<br />

“The Tree” Giveaway Guitar Specifications<br />

12 Fret Parlor Guitar<br />

Slot head<br />

24.75″ Scale<br />

1.75″ Nut<br />

2.25″ Bridge Spacing<br />

Old Growth Red Spruce Top<br />

and Bracing<br />

“The Tree” Mahogany Back<br />

and sides<br />

Honduran Mahogany Neck<br />

Ebony Fretboard with Abalone Diamond<br />

Inlays<br />

Ebony Pyramid Bridge<br />

Bone Nut and Saddle<br />

2 Way Adjustable truss rod with<br />

Carbon Fiber neck reinforcement<br />

Modified V profile to Neck<br />

Curly Maple Bindings and Trim<br />

Ablalone Rosette, Back Stripe<br />

and Top Purfling<br />

Side Purfling with Miters into<br />

End graft<br />

Waverly 3 on plate engraved tuners<br />

with Ebony Buttons<br />

Waverly Bone bridge pins<br />

Waverly strap pin and end pin<br />

The <strong>2019</strong> Artisan Guitar Show Giveaway Guitar<br />

When the Artisan Guitar<br />

Show learned that Adam<br />

Buchwald from Circle<br />

Strings would build the<br />

<strong>2019</strong> giveaway guitar, we could not<br />

have been more pleased. Adam is recognized<br />

and respected for building<br />

high-end acoustic guitars. The Mahogany<br />

12 Fret Parlor Guitar being created<br />

for the show giveaway is sure to make<br />

some lucky person very happy.<br />

Like so many guitar makers, Adam<br />

learned the craft through a combination<br />

of being mentored by masters and<br />

practical experience doing instrument<br />

repair. His mentors included noted<br />

Brooklyn-based guitar master repairman<br />

Bob Jones. He also enjoyed a<br />

stint working as head repairman with<br />

Steve Uhrik, Peter Kohman, and Jason<br />

Petty at RetroFret also in Brooklyn.<br />

Adam was destined to merge this<br />

fundamental understanding of guitar<br />

structure and function learned through<br />

repair with the art of handcrafting guitars.<br />

When Michael Millard of Froggy<br />

Bottom Guitars offered Adam the opportunity<br />

to build with the Froggy Bottom<br />

team, the final transition from repairman<br />

to respected guitar maker was<br />

complete. He remembers this time at<br />

Froggy Bottom as an “incredible experience”<br />

and commented “I learned<br />

so much about guitar building, dedication<br />

to a craft, hard work, and most<br />

importantly, myself.”<br />

Fundamental to building a fine instrument<br />

is not just an understanding<br />

of the mechanics of construction, but<br />

of the music itself. Adam is perhaps<br />

first and foremost a musician. He has<br />

a passion for the banjo, mandolin and<br />

guitar and is a skilled player. Being a<br />

working musician allows Adam as a<br />

guitar maker to more fully understand<br />

what another musician might seek in a<br />

fine instrument.<br />

Adam resides with his family in Vermont<br />

and is a graduate of UVM. Circle<br />

Strings and the new Buchwald venture<br />

Iris Guitar Company are located<br />

in South Burlington, Vermont. Adam<br />

Buchwald does his creative work in<br />

the same shop as Creston Electric Instruments;<br />

this is where noted guitar<br />

maker Creston Lea builds his custom<br />

electric guitars.<br />

Luthier Nicholas Durkee assists in<br />

running the shop with Adam. Nick<br />

studied at the Galloup School of Lutherie<br />

in Big Rapids, Michigan where<br />

he completed the Master Program.<br />

During his time at Galloup, Nick completed<br />

a solid body electric guitar, two<br />

acoustic guitars, and an archtop guitar.<br />

Ultimately, he accepted an apprenticeship<br />

working under master builders<br />

Sam Guidry and Brian Galloup. Adam<br />

refers to his protégé as a “killer worker<br />

and great guy.” Most importantly,<br />

Adam is quick to say, “I am lucky to<br />

have him.”<br />

This Artisan Guitar Show giveaway<br />

guitar has been handcrafted by Adam<br />

Buchwald of Circle Strings and it features<br />

stunning Mahogany back and<br />

sides from the “The Tree”, which is<br />

now legendary for its appearance and<br />

tonal qualities. “The Tree” is described<br />

by luthier tools and guitar parts provider<br />

StewMac as the source of the “most<br />

notorious tonewood in the world and<br />

its look is unlike any other mahogany<br />

in the entire world.”<br />

Only great things can come from a<br />

venture that includes Circle Strings and<br />

StewMac.<br />

We will see you on Sunday afternoon<br />

of the Artisan Guitar Show at 3:00 PM<br />

when some amazingly fortunate guitar<br />

enthusiast will take ownership of this<br />

beautiful guitar. Remember, you must<br />

be present to win!<br />

The Iris Guitar Company is the vision<br />

of guitar maker Adam Buchwald of<br />

Circle Strings. Adam wanted the great<br />

musicians who could not afford an<br />

expensive hand-crafted guitar to have<br />

access to quality instruments that are<br />

affordable. Each Iris Guitar is made<br />

by hand in Burlington, Vermont in<br />

the same small shop as Circle Strings<br />

and Creston Guitars. Circle Strings is<br />

known and respected by players and<br />

collectors alike; Iris Guitars feature<br />

the same fine attention to detail and<br />

quality. The build process of the Iris<br />

line has been streamlined by focusing<br />

on a single model with limited options<br />

and this has allowed Adam to create<br />

a quality instrument that is affordable.<br />

This simple philosophy will help to<br />

make a more affordable version of<br />

already incredible instruments keep<br />

coming out of the same shop for years<br />

to come. For more information, please<br />

visit www.irisguitarcompany.com.<br />

6 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 7


The<br />

Tree<br />

James Brill of StewMac<br />

StewMac is proud to have<br />

supplied all of the woods<br />

and materials for this remarkable<br />

build. The mahogany<br />

used for this stunning guitar is from<br />

our own stash of The Tree.<br />

More than any other wood, the mahogany<br />

of The Tree has become nearly<br />

mythical to builders and players alike.<br />

The story of The Tree is a true wild jungle<br />

adventure.<br />

The Tree—a figure like no other<br />

The Tree was a massive 500-year-old<br />

mahogany located in the Chiquibul<br />

Jungle of Belize. More than just a typical<br />

straight-grained mahogany, The<br />

Tree takes figured wood to a whole<br />

new level.<br />

What is it that makes this wood so<br />

unique? The rarity comes from the fact<br />

that we only know of a single mahogany<br />

tree with this intensity of quilt. Every<br />

inch is covered with dense, three-dimensional<br />

movement. More than just<br />

“figured” or “flamed”, The Tree exhibits<br />

the even more rare “tortoise shell”<br />

figure and “rolling sausage quilt”.<br />

Quilt this concentrated is rare for most<br />

woods, even more so for mahogany.<br />

The fight and recovery<br />

Before it was known for its amazing<br />

figure, it was first desired by loggers<br />

solely for its massive size. In 1965 the<br />

original loggers, cutting with hand<br />

axes, started to chip away at the enormous<br />

10-foot diameter base. It was<br />

slow going with such limited tools, and<br />

took weeks of chopping one axe swing<br />

at a time. But The Tree would not go<br />

without a fight.<br />

After the arduous chopping, The<br />

Tree finally started to give way—but in<br />

the wrong direction. The giant 100-foot<br />

tall mahogany fell backward, and violently<br />

tumbled down a ravine to rest on<br />

the jungle floor. The loggers were unable<br />

to move the massive log out of the<br />

8 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

ravine and abandoned The Tree to rot.<br />

Ten years later, Robert Novak was<br />

made aware of this fantastic wood<br />

while he was living in Belize. With just<br />

one look at the intense figuring in his<br />

small sample, he knew he had to find<br />

The Tree. After securing more modern<br />

logging equipment and an experienced<br />

team, he began the quest to<br />

locate the log in the late 1970s.<br />

After endless searching through the<br />

jungle, Novak finally found The Tree<br />

and began the daunting task of processing<br />

it into usable timber. Due to<br />

its massive size and remote location,<br />

this was not a simple operation. Novak<br />

and his team chopped and dragged<br />

The Tree for miles through the barely<br />

accessible jungle just one small section<br />

at a time, and then had to float each<br />

section 90 miles down the river to the<br />

closest mill.<br />

From raw wood to guitars<br />

What makes this wood even more<br />

rare is that only a small portion was<br />

sold to luthiers, initially most went to<br />

custom furniture makers. There are<br />

thought to be less than 200 acoustic<br />

guitar sets of The Tree remaining<br />

worldwide.<br />

It was not until the late 1980s and<br />

early 1990s when boutique builders<br />

like Tom Ribbecke, Richard Hoover,<br />

and Harvey Leach began making showpieces<br />

from The Tree that guitar lovers<br />

became aware of this incredible wood.<br />

In the last 20 years with the explosion<br />

in boutique guitar building and the<br />

growth of the internet, more builders<br />

and customers have been able to see<br />

this beautiful wood, behold its uniqueness,<br />

and want to experience it.<br />

Once only seen in the dark corner of<br />

a guitar show and discussed in hushed<br />

tones, more and more makers have finally<br />

been able to start their own builds<br />

with this breathtaking wood.<br />

Over the last year, StewMac has<br />

been adding to our WOODSTAX collection<br />

of exotic and rare woods, and<br />

we have been fortunate to have a limited<br />

supply of The Tree. We are happy<br />

to be stewards for this amazing wood<br />

and bring it to the guitar market.<br />

STEAMING OUT A DENT ACTION ADJUSTMENT STAINING<br />

BOARD ROUTING FOR BINDING FIXING A WARPED TOP C<br />

A TRUSS ROD CHANNEL ADJUSTING PICKUP HEIGHT INST<br />

ING NEW PICKUPS REWIRING A GUITAR LEVELING FRETS<br />

CROWNING FRETS POLISHING FRETS INSTALLING A SKIN<br />

JO HEAD SHIMMING A NECK FIXING A CRACKED SOUNDBO<br />

FIXING A SCRATCHED FINISH DROP FILLING A FINISH INST<br />

BINDING PEARL INLAY SHAPING A NUT BUILDING AN EFFE<br />

PEDAL BUILDING AN AMP SPRAYING A FINISH FILING A NUT<br />

JUSTING A TRUSS ROD GLUING FRETS STEAMING OUT A<br />

UPGRADING TUNERS STAINING A FRETBOARD ROUTING<br />

BINDING FIXING A WARPED TOP CUTTING A TRUSS ROD<br />

NEL ADJUSTING PICKUP HEIGHT INSTALLING NEW PICKUP<br />

WIRING A GUITAR LEVELING FRETS RECROWNING FRETS<br />

ISHING FRETS INSTALLING A SKIN BANJO HEAD SHIMMING<br />

NECK FIXING A CRACKED SOUNDBOARD FIXING A SCRATC<br />

FINISH DROP FILLING A FINISH INSTALLING BINDING PEARL<br />

SHAPING A NUT BUILDING AN EFFECTS PEDAL BUILDING<br />

SPRAYING A FINISH FILING A NUT ADJUSTING A TRUSS RO<br />

IUT G FRETS STEAMING OUT A DENT UPGRADING TUNERS<br />

ING A FRETBOARD ROUTING FOR BINDING FIXING A WARP<br />

TOP CUTTING A TRUSS ROD CHANNEL ADJUSTING ACTIO<br />

CK TRADE SECRETS SWAPPING PICKUPS REWIRING A GU<br />

ELING SETUPS FRETWORK POLISHING DROP FILLS INSTA<br />

ING A SKIN<br />

BUILDERS<br />

BANJO HEAD SHIMMING<br />

FOR<br />

A NECK<br />

LIFE.<br />

KERFED LINING<br />

SOUNDBOARD FIXING A SCRATCHED SETUPS DROP FILLIN<br />

EADSTOCK ROUTING FOR BINDING PEARL INLAY SHAPING<br />

ED STRING<br />

At StewMac,<br />

CHANGING<br />

lutherie is our passion.<br />

BODY<br />

Real,<br />

TEMPLATE<br />

working guitar techs<br />

REPLACE<br />

and builders<br />

SADDLE<br />

develop our products that we guarantee for life.<br />

FINISH TRUSS ROD FILING GLUING FRET SPROUT NUT SLO<br />

UPGRADING Most of all, we TUNERS enjoy engaging STAINING with you. We strive A to FRETBOARD provide the best instructional ROUTING<br />

S VOICING content FIXING to inspire A you, WARPED and listen to every TOP bit of CUTTING feedback you send A us. ROD CLAMP<br />

NEL RADIUSED FINGERBOARD If lutherie is your passion too, PICKUP come join us. WINDING TANG NI<br />

ET BUZZ LEVELING RECROWNING GUITAR MODS CARVING<br />

SHIMMING A NECK FIXING A CRACKED SOUNDBOARD FIX<br />

SCRATCHED FINISH DROP FILLING .com A FINISH BRACING BIN<br />

EFFECTS PEDALS REFINISHING BUILDING AN AMP SPRAY<br />

OARD SLOTTING SHIELDING ROUTING BRIDGE REPAIR GLU<br />

NG PRECISION NECK JIG TUNER INSTALLATION TONE CHA<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 9


Kalamazoo<br />

Gals:<br />

The Story of the Unsung Women<br />

Who Built Gibson’s “Banner”<br />

Guitar during WWII.<br />

by John Thomas<br />

“Only a Gibson is Good Enough,”<br />

proclaim Carl Kress, Nick Lucas, Rudy Vallee, and<br />

other leading musicians of the early twentieth<br />

century. Grinning broadly and holding shiny new<br />

Gibson guitars, nearly every famous guitarist of<br />

that era peers from the pages of Gibson’s 1936<br />

catalog, holding the only instruments that “meet<br />

the demands of the day.” Moreover, intones the<br />

catalog, “Ask any guitar player, whether he is just<br />

a beginner or high salaried artist, what kind of a<br />

guitar he is playing, and then notice the feeling of<br />

pride in his voice when he answers, ‘A Gibson.’”<br />

The “Good Enough” slogan moved from the<br />

ad copy of Gibson’s marketers to the mouths of<br />

its artist endorsers, and on to the pages of Gibson’s<br />

catalogs, and by 1942 it had come to rest on<br />

the golden banners appearing on the headstocks<br />

of Gibson’s World War II flattop guitars. There it<br />

would reside for four short years, and then vanish<br />

sometime in 1945.<br />

It is here that our mystery begins. Why did<br />

the “Banner” disappear? Was it because rival<br />

Epiphone touted its guitars as suitable for those<br />

for whom “Good Enough Isn’t Good Enough”?<br />

Was it the result of management and ownership<br />

changes at World War II’s end? Was it a signal that<br />

the company would embark in a new direction<br />

with the return of its work force after the war? Or,<br />

does the explanation lie in a confluence of these<br />

factors?<br />

This mystery runs much deeper than a silkscreened<br />

company motto, though. The guitars<br />

that were graced with the Banner are some of the<br />

finest steel string instruments ever built. Those<br />

from the period 1942 to 1945 are not only unique<br />

in having that golden Banner; they are unique in<br />

construction and tone. They are more delicately<br />

built, perhaps more refined, than their pre-war<br />

predecessors and post-war successors, sporting<br />

thinner bracing and top and back plates and an<br />

overall lighter construction. Indeed, the Banner<br />

guitars embody a watershed in Gibson’s development<br />

of its flattop models. After a little over<br />

a decade of experimentation with the bracing<br />

that reinforces a guitar’s top (and thus influences<br />

its sound), Gibson settled on a configuration<br />

that persists in its instruments to this day. Moreover, it<br />

introduced the new architecture in a new line of guitars<br />

that began shipment during the trying days of the Second<br />

World War.<br />

How was Gibson able to shine during one of the darkest<br />

periods of American civilian industry? The authors of<br />

Gibson’s Fabulous Flattops offer the conventional explanation:<br />

“[T]hough nearly 90% of Gibson’s work force<br />

was taken from guitar production and put to work on war<br />

contracts, the 10% remaining were the company’s most<br />

seasoned craftsmen.”<br />

Hmmm? A quick glance at the company photos of the<br />

workforce during the war years reveals that nearly every<br />

one of those “craftsmen” was actually craftswoman. Yes,<br />

nearly every single luthier employed at the Gibson Company<br />

during World War II was a woman. Indeed, at a 1944<br />

meeting of the Stringed Instrument Manufacturers Subcommittee<br />

of the nation’s War Production Board, Gibson<br />

General Manager Guy Hart announced that the “plant is<br />

now being run almost entirely by women.”<br />

The altered workforce gender balance did not adversely<br />

impact Gibson’s productivity. Despite shortages of raw<br />

materials and the demands of wartime contracts to produce<br />

aircraft and radio parts, those women still managed<br />

to produce nearly 25,000 musical instruments, including<br />

over 9,000 of those “Banner” flattop guitars. So, in that<br />

confidential meeting of the War Production Board Subcommittee<br />

was the company’s General Manager bragging<br />

about his workforce? No, he was complaining. In<br />

public, the company simply denied that it was building<br />

guitars. Its wartime advertisements asserted that because<br />

it “had to convert almost 100%” from producing “musical<br />

instruments to intricate parts of metal,” it had ceased guitar<br />

production entirely. It claimed that it would turn back<br />

to musical instrument manufacture upon “the safe return<br />

of our boys at the front.”<br />

That’s right—although Gibson was able to build and<br />

sell tens of thousands of guitars during WWII, it nonetheless<br />

disavowed making them. The passage of time<br />

has rendered the story even more curious. In 1973, Julius<br />

Bellson, who was Gibson’s personnel director at that<br />

time and thus oversaw the hiring and retention of those<br />

women, published a history of the company in which he<br />

contended that the challenges of WWII “forced us to stop<br />

the manufacture of musical instruments.” Since that publication,<br />

musical instrument historians have been repeat-<br />

10 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 11


12 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

ing Bellson’s erroneous claim.<br />

When those women walked through the doors<br />

of Gibson’s factory at 225 Parsons Street in Kalamazoo,<br />

Michigan in January 1942, at the precise<br />

moment that Glenn Miller’s I’ve Got a Gal in Kalamazoo<br />

topped the Hit Parade, that little golden<br />

Banner slid right onto the headstocks of the guitars.<br />

And when the “boys” returned to reclaim<br />

their jobs, the Banner disappeared. If you are fortunate,<br />

and you find an old Gibson guitar bearing<br />

that Banner, you are holding in your hands the<br />

product of those forgotten craftswomen. Despite<br />

the contemporaneous denial and revisionist history,<br />

the evidence of the handiwork of these women,<br />

the Kalamazoo Gals, endures.<br />

No one has previously noted this, and no one<br />

has taken the time to try to interview the surviving<br />

women luthiers. A myriad of questions comes to<br />

mind. How were they trained? Did they use different<br />

techniques than their male predecessors? How<br />

did they feel when ceding their jobs back to the<br />

men? Where are these women now? How do they<br />

feel about their anonymity? What do they think<br />

their legacy should be?<br />

The Case of the Mysterious Banner Guitars does<br />

not end with the guitars’ builders; the guitars themselves<br />

have also been slow to reveal their secrets.<br />

Gibson maintained few records during the war<br />

years. If you’re lucky enough to find a Banner Gibson,<br />

what you see is what you get. True, there are<br />

some catalogs from the post-war era that depict<br />

the Banner guitars, but they are chock-full of<br />

inaccuracies. Many models were never<br />

depicted in a photograph and the<br />

images that the catalogs do present<br />

were often re-touched examples<br />

from prior years. Sometimes they<br />

display constellations of features<br />

that have never been seen on<br />

actual guitars. In fact, the guitars<br />

themselves all seem to be one-off<br />

instruments.<br />

Read the available literature, surf<br />

the Web, join in any of the online forums,<br />

and head off to find a Banner<br />

Gibson. Chances are that the guitar<br />

that you come across won’t quite fit<br />

the description that you’ve envisioned.<br />

Back and side woods vary, as does neck<br />

construction. Indeed, it may be more<br />

difficult to find two Banner Gibsons that<br />

are alike than it is to find a one-of-a-kind<br />

collector’s piece.<br />

If you do find a Banner Gibson, you will likely not<br />

be able to determine precisely when it was made.<br />

The Gibson Company is not like their main competition—the<br />

Martin Company, a company that has<br />

maintained meticulous records over the years. Find<br />

the serial number on a Martin, log onto their online<br />

data base, and you’ll discover the precise date<br />

when your guitar was built, whether it was made in<br />

1898 or 1998.<br />

You’ll not have such an easy time dating a Gibson,<br />

since the company failed to use a consistent<br />

numbering system. Sometimes they neglected to<br />

put any identifying numbers on a guitar, and at other<br />

times the instrument had two completely unique<br />

numbers. That’s right. Two different numbers. Gibson<br />

used an equally unpredictable serial number<br />

system on its high-end, carved, archtop guitars,<br />

and employed a beguiling Factory Order Number<br />

(FON) system that it put on batches of most other<br />

guitars. Gibson sometimes used both numbering<br />

systems on a single guitar, and, to add to the confusion,<br />

neither numbering system is sequential. If<br />

your guitar has that golden Banner, then you can<br />

assume that it appeared, apparently out of thin<br />

air, during the war years when Gibson claimed it<br />

wasn’t building guitars. But, if you want to know<br />

more about your instrument and those who made<br />

it, you’ll need to conduct a serious inquiry.<br />

So, grab your tweed jacket, magnifying glass<br />

and pipe, don your deerstalker cap, and make like<br />

Sherlock Holmes. Join author John Thomas in his<br />

quest to solve the Case of the Mysterious Banner<br />

Gibsons. Using photographs, historical documents,<br />

and video clips of his interviews, John will tell the<br />

story of finding and interviewing twelve women who<br />

appeared in Gibson’s 1944 workforce photograph.<br />

He will also present X-ray evidence that demonstrates<br />

that the “Banner” Gibsons are more refined<br />

than those instruments built by the male<br />

predecessors and successors to the<br />

Kalamazoo Gals.<br />

As novelist Jonathan Kellerman put<br />

it in his foreword to Kalamazoo<br />

Gals, “The contributions of Rosie<br />

the Riveter and her cohorts to<br />

the survival of American manufacturing<br />

during the “Good War” are<br />

well known and beyond profound.<br />

But until now the contributions of<br />

a band of intrepid, unpretentious,<br />

stunningly skillful, thoroughly<br />

American women to both the war<br />

effort and to the endurance of one<br />

of the greatest musical instrument<br />

manufacturers ever known has gone<br />

unheralded. Let’s hear it for Jenny,<br />

Mary Jane, Delores, Helen, Alice, Ruth<br />

and their cohorts. Kudos to John Thomas<br />

for telling their story.”<br />

WELCOMES THE<br />

ARTISAN GUITAR SHOW<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

Pre-order your signed copy<br />

of Acquired of the Angels<br />

by Paul Schmidt<br />

ANNOUNCING THE 3RD EDITION:<br />

THE LIVES AND WORKS OF JOHN D’ANGELICO<br />

AND JAMES L. D’AQUISTO<br />

Guitars made by John D’Angelico and James L. D’Aquisto are regarded as<br />

the pinnacle of 20 th century lutherie. Paul Schmidt has written the defi nitive<br />

study of these masters, and the 3 rd Edition, published by DHR, features:<br />

• The complete story of the makers with new interviews and stories<br />

• Coffee table format with fi ne photo detail and elegant design<br />

• New e-book edition for your tablet<br />

• Rare and exclusive online archives and videos<br />

For over 30 years, DHR has helped players and collectors, both right and<br />

left-handed, pursue their passion. We offer a broad selection of guitars and<br />

services that is second to none:<br />

• Archtops by artisans like Monteleone, Comins, Harshbarger and others<br />

• Flattop acoustics by Preston Thompson, Eastman and others<br />

• Fine electric guitars by Koll, B&G, Rick Turner and K-line<br />

• Basses by Rick Turner and K-Line<br />

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SHOW SPECIAL<br />

$49.95 + shipping<br />

(a $59.95 value)<br />

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EXPERIENCE THE WORLD’S<br />

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• Services such as maintenance and repair, lessons by professionals and clinics<br />

Come see our instruments at Booth 8<br />

dhrguitarexperience.com<br />

Our shop is located at 577 Delta Ave, Suite C in Cincinnati, Ohio 45226 | 513-260-8260<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 13


A Very Special Session with Brent Mason<br />

14 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

In<br />

1974,<br />

the legendary band Steely Dan quit touring and<br />

became a highly-successful studio-only band. At<br />

that time, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen chose<br />

the approach of recording with only highly-talented<br />

studio session players. Using a collective of<br />

session players rather than a permanent band was<br />

not necessarily a unique approach in the recording<br />

industry.<br />

The modern history of recorded music was<br />

largely built on the backs of session players. These<br />

are the unsung heroes of modern music known as<br />

“sideman.” They have names that most have never<br />

heard such as Hal Blaine, James Jamerson, Carol<br />

Kaye, Tommy Tedesco, and Eddie Willis. A few<br />

of these “sideman” like Glen Campbell and Leon<br />

Russell emerged to enjoy successful solo careers,<br />

but for the most part these musicians lived in the<br />

shadows of the recording industry.<br />

The reality is that session players from informal<br />

collectives like the Wrecking Crew in Los Angeles<br />

and The Funk Brothers on Motown Records have<br />

played on more hit songs than literally anyone in<br />

the music business. As an example, Wrecking Crew<br />

drummer Hal Blaine, has played on more than 140<br />

top-ten hits with approximately 40 of them being<br />

number-one songs. In recent years, these fine musicians<br />

have been honored in the documentaries<br />

Hired Gun, Standing in the Shadows of Motown,<br />

and The Wrecking Crew (produced by Denny Tedesco<br />

who is the son of session guitar legend and<br />

by John Detrick<br />

Wrecking Crew member<br />

Tommy Tedesco).<br />

Among these unsung<br />

heroes of modern music<br />

is Nashville-based guitarist<br />

Brent Mason.<br />

Brent has quietly built a career as a session guitarist<br />

that is largely unparalleled in the industry.<br />

He is a Grammy Award winner, a 12-time winner<br />

of the Academy of Country Music (ACM) Guitarist<br />

of the Year Award, and a two-time winner of the<br />

CMA Award Musician of the Year. Brent has played<br />

on more than one-thousand albums and is credited<br />

with playing on 1,782 hit singles -- a number<br />

that continues to grow. Somehow, while amassing<br />

these awards and accomplishments, Brent has also<br />

released two of his own albums, worked as a producer,<br />

and also holds several credits as a songwriter.<br />

On a mid-winter Saturday morning I had the<br />

good fortune to talk with Brent about his life and<br />

career. Brent was born into a musical family in Van<br />

Wert, Ohio; it is almost as though he was destined<br />

for the life of a professional musician. His parents<br />

played in a popular country band and both were<br />

prominent on a tri-state music scene that included<br />

Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio. The Mason family<br />

home was often filled music and the musicians who<br />

came there to rehearse. Brent jokes about being<br />

treated to Buddy Rich “solos every morning of my<br />

life” by his brother Randy who was the drummer of<br />

the Mason family band.<br />

Music was always a part of his life. The family<br />

home was filled with the sounds of a “diverse,<br />

eclectic collection of music” that included Louis<br />

Armstrong, Merle Haggard, and Ray Charles. The<br />

mainstays were players like Chet Atkins and Jerry<br />

Reed. All families have their stories, and a favorite<br />

in the Mason home was about three-year-old Brent<br />

“piling up pillows” to reach inside the exceedingly<br />

tall family record player. As Brent tells the story, he<br />

was not tall enough to see inside the record player,<br />

so “I looped my arm up over and popped the<br />

arm down on my favorite song -- Mack the Knife by<br />

Bobby Darin.”<br />

Brent was eight years old when he began to take<br />

the guitar seriously. His parents provided unyielding<br />

support and encouragement. In conversation,<br />

Brent recalls being captivated by the playing of<br />

Chet Atkins and Jerry Reed who “played the bass<br />

line and melody lines together.” Brent’s father was<br />

a fingerstyle player and Brent remembers being<br />

inspired and asking about the Jerry Reed playing<br />

style “Dad, is he doing that all at once?” When it<br />

came time to further Brent’s career, the family never<br />

considered Los Angeles and New York – it was<br />

Nashville all the way.<br />

When Brent turned 15, his mother loaded him<br />

into a Ford Econoline van and headed to Nashville.<br />

He told me this great story about pulling into the<br />

rear parking lot of RCA Studios and seeing Chet<br />

Atkins walk across the lot to the studio. His mother,<br />

in her enthusiasm and excitement, sent Brent out<br />

of the van to approach Chet. Brent recalls being a<br />

“nervous wreck.” He followed Chet toward the studio<br />

playing like a “one-man Mariachi band” -- just<br />

to have the door close without any acknowledgement<br />

from the legendary country guitar player.<br />

Their paths would cross again.<br />

Brent also told the story of his meeting with an<br />

A&R representative from RCA around this same<br />

time. He had rehearsed and flawlessly played a<br />

complicated Jerry Read song “verbatim or notefor-note.”<br />

The executive was polite and encouraging,<br />

but nonetheless recommended that Brent “go<br />

home and finish school.” At the time, the industry<br />

was looking for “commercial artists” and not necessarily<br />

flawless technical players. Brent mentioned<br />

that at 16 he was probably pretty young to begin<br />

a music career, but noted that 15-16 is probably<br />

now a common age for young musicians to pursue<br />

their artistry.<br />

Brent arrived in Nashville permanently at the age<br />

of 22 and that is when the rest of this story truly began<br />

to unfold. Nashville was a completely different<br />

experience for a young musician. Back in Ohio, he<br />

was respected as the finest player in town, but every<br />

small town had its own guitar prodigy. In Nashville,<br />

all those amazing players were pursuing the<br />

same goal in one town and the competition was<br />

intense. Brent muses “It was just like the John Sebastian<br />

song Nashville Cats. There were thousands<br />

of great players in Nashville. That is exactly what I<br />

experienced, but the competition just lit a fire in<br />

me and made me a better player. You have to go<br />

through a lot of rejection and everything is about<br />

timing, but the worst thing you could do was give<br />

up.”<br />

At that time, Brent was playing at the Stagecoach<br />

Lounge in Nashville with a band that he describes<br />

as “musician’s musicians.” Because of the<br />

talent of the band, the lounge constantly had important<br />

people coming to listen. Touring musicians<br />

would come off the road and come to hear them<br />

play. The audience included not just the touring<br />

musicians, but country music fans and Music Row<br />

executives alike. He describes the time period as<br />

being filled with nervousness because you had to<br />

play “phenomenal every night and that was a lot<br />

of pressure.” Among the important people who<br />

would frequent the Stagecoach Lounge to hear<br />

the band was Chet Atkins. Chet would often bring<br />

friends and associates such as Mark Knopfler and<br />

George Benson.<br />

Most careers have a turning or tipping point,<br />

and Brent’s career was no different. He was living in<br />

a small duplex when the telephone rang and it was<br />

Chet Atkins calling. It was around 1985 and Chet<br />

was recording his Stay Tuned album that would<br />

feature guitar legends George Benson, Larry Carlton,<br />

Earl Klugh, Mark Knopfler, Steve Lukather, and<br />

Dean Parks. Chet was inviting Brent to join him on a<br />

track with Mark Knopfler. Brent recalls Chet asking<br />

him if he could be available on Thursday; “So, trying<br />

to be cool, I said ‘let me check my schedule.’”<br />

Brent laughed as he told me “My schedule was a<br />

calendar thumbtacked to the wall and it looked like<br />

a snowstorm. I told Chet ‘yeah, I can do that. I think<br />

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it will be good.’”<br />

Brent recalled the recording experience -- “It<br />

was nerve-wracking to sit in front of Chet Atkins<br />

no more than an arm’s length away. My hands were<br />

shaking.” He went on to say working with Chet<br />

“put the word out and gave me a little prestige. I<br />

sort of parlayed my career from that experience.”<br />

From there his reputation flourished and grew. Respected<br />

producer Kyle Lehning, who was producing<br />

Dan Seals at the time, was another interesting<br />

connection in those early days. Kyle did not call<br />

Brent for the “tracking” dates because he was not<br />

sure that Brent was up to par just yet, but he often<br />

involved Brent in the final production recording.<br />

Brent ended up playing solos, fills, and harmony<br />

parts and that diversity showed the recording<br />

world that he was ready for the role of prominent<br />

session player.<br />

It was interesting to talk with Brent about the<br />

evolution or transformation of country music during<br />

the span of his career. It is his view that country<br />

music has always been a little in awe of pop music<br />

if only for its commercial popularity. Brent sees<br />

modern country music right now as nuanced with<br />

a pop sound and even hip-hop. Regardless, he<br />

refers to the traditional sound of Merle Haggard,<br />

George Jones, Hank Williams, and Loretta Lynn as<br />

representing a “pride and integrity” that is stronger<br />

than anything in music. At times, he feared that<br />

modern traditionalists like George Strait and Alan<br />

Jackson might be the “Last of the Mohicans.” He<br />

is convinced though that the audience is always<br />

going to drive the music, and so long as there is<br />

demand for the traditional music, it will remain. In<br />

his words, “I hope it never goes away…”<br />

Just as interesting was Brent’s contrasting the<br />

session player to the touring musician. Dating back<br />

to the 1960s, there has been some resentment between<br />

the two factions. Touring musicians would<br />

spend lengthy periods of time on the road playing<br />

the music but return home and not be considered<br />

good enough to record the music. Many touring<br />

musicians were clearly good enough for the studio,<br />

but some lacked the confidence to pursue<br />

work as a session player. After all, when you make<br />

a mistake on stage you just keep playing, but in the<br />

recording studio a mistake is captured and must<br />

be corrected. Other talented touring musicians<br />

were excluded from the recording process in favor<br />

of session players simply because that was how<br />

things were done. Brent acknowledged the hardship<br />

of touring for musicians who spend years on<br />

the road with long periods of separation from their<br />

families. He commented, “for a session player, often<br />

the biggest complaint of the work day is the<br />

traffic getting home to your family at night.”<br />

As with everything, technology has changed the<br />

music industry. In Brent’s words, “anyone with a<br />

pre-amp and Pro Tools can contribute to a recording<br />

now from home.” These days most artists have<br />

studios in their homes and that provides great<br />

opportunity for touring musicians to become studio<br />

players as well. Technology has also bridged<br />

the gap between the quality of studio and stage<br />

performances. Tuned vocals, playing to recorded<br />

loops, and presenting isolated recorded tracks<br />

during stage performance as though they are live<br />

have made the concert experience sound more<br />

polished, produced, and professional.<br />

Brent was quick to point out that technology<br />

has also helped to engage the audience in new or<br />

different ways. He mentioned documentaries that<br />

show music fans the overall scope and complexity<br />

of the recording process and how often people<br />

have commented on the interesting backstories.<br />

He also laughed about people who would say “I<br />

thought you played with Alan Jackson? I saw him<br />

at the fairgrounds and you weren’t in the band.”<br />

Even after Brent would explain the differences between<br />

the recording and touring aspects of the<br />

music industry, some well-meaning people would<br />

still reply “Just hang in there. I’m sure you’ll get to<br />

where you want to be.” Others would see Brent on<br />

awards shows and immediately understand that he<br />

is exactly where he wants to be.<br />

I asked Brent if there was a Nashville-based<br />

Wrecking Crew – a group of musicians that if all<br />

called together could make magic. He mentioned<br />

players such as keyboardist Matt Rollings, bassists<br />

Michael Rhodes and Glenn Worf, and drummers<br />

Eddie Bayers and Lonnie Wilson. He also commented<br />

that the session process can be very different<br />

now than in his early years. Now he is often<br />

called to a job with no indication of what music<br />

style he is going to be playing; that uncertainty requires<br />

bringing 30 guitars, amps, and the associated<br />

effects to a session just to be ready for what<br />

might come. Thankfully, cartage teams are there to<br />

provide the much-needed support.<br />

I asked Brent about his guitar collection and it<br />

contains 50-60 guitars with 5-6 of the instruments<br />

in frequent playing rotation. The focus of his collection<br />

is more on vintage instruments because<br />

they are what he loves. He also mentioned that<br />

the voice of each instrument serves a distinct purpose.<br />

We also discussed the possible barriers to<br />

using hand-crafted guitars in the studio. It seems<br />

that producers often have a specific sound in mind<br />

and experimentation with the voicing of one-of-akind<br />

instruments, regardless of how appropriate<br />

and beautiful they might be, just does not fit the<br />

often-strict schedules and budgets of the studio<br />

environment.<br />

Brent has been named one of the top ten session<br />

guitarists in the world along with players like<br />

Jimmy Page, Larry Carlton, Tommy Tedesco, and<br />

Steve Cropper. After years of approaching life with<br />

the mindset of a workaholic, like most of us, Brent<br />

is figuring out what really matters. Even more important,<br />

he is taking the time to enjoy those things.<br />

In his words, “We all sort through our lessons and<br />

mistakes and at 59 you would think I would have it<br />

figured out. To look across a rippling ocean in Hawaii<br />

or the calm of a lake here at home and see the<br />

majesty and magic is really not that hard.” Most<br />

important for Brent is simply appreciating and enjoying<br />

the ones he loves. To quote the Counting<br />

Crows, Brent Mason is “holding on to these moments<br />

as they pass…”<br />

A Special Tribute For Brent Mason<br />

Tim Bram knew from a very young age that he wanted to work<br />

with his hands. At the tender age of 14, he combined his love<br />

of music and a passion for woodworking to build his first guitar.<br />

From that day on, he has strived to make great guitars that are<br />

recognized for the fineness of the materials used and for precision<br />

craftsmanship.<br />

​Tim is a master craftsman with more than 30 years of woodworking<br />

experience. He is respected for creating one-of-a-kind<br />

furniture masterpieces quite often created simply from the vision<br />

and aesthetic wishes of his clientele.<br />

The guitar was never far from his mind<br />

during the years that he was building<br />

fine furniture. In Tim’s words, “Now, my<br />

focus is on building beautiful, playable<br />

and versatile great sounding guitars<br />

that I am proud to put my name on.”<br />

Although Tim Bram Guitars creates<br />

different styles of instruments including<br />

its KB2 16” Oval Hole Archtop, it<br />

is the hand-carved archtop inspired by<br />

the American Telecaster® that has the<br />

guitar world taking note. It is this very<br />

Telecaster®-inspired Tribute archtop<br />

that first caught the attention of the Artisan<br />

Guitar Show.<br />

Guitarists Tim Lerch describes his<br />

playing experience with the hand-carved archtop by saying “The<br />

craftsmanship, woodworking and designs are rather remarkable.<br />

A joy to play and a beauty to behold.” Guitarist Tom Lagana, another<br />

fan of hand-carved Bram archtops commented, “Tim Bram<br />

creates guitars for both the professional musician and the collector<br />

alike. Upon first glance, the physical beauty and craftsmanhip<br />

are apparent. It is only upon playing the instrument that the true<br />

beauty is revealed.”<br />

In conversation, Tim once said that if he could have just one<br />

guitar player in the world play his guitars that it would be Nashville-legend<br />

Brent Mason. After a<br />

few e-mails and telephone calls as<br />

well as a trip to Nashville by Tim<br />

Bram, Brent will now be receiving<br />

his very own Telecaster®-inspired,<br />

hand-carved Tim Bram Guitars archtop.<br />

On Friday evening, during<br />

the Brent Mason VIP concert performance,<br />

Tim will present Brent<br />

with his very own Tim Bram Guitars<br />

instrument. Please join us for<br />

this great moment in Artisan Guitar<br />

Show history.<br />

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Amplifying<br />

Quality<br />

Instruments<br />

by Peter Henriksen and<br />

Gerry Humphrey<br />

Amplifying Quality Instruments<br />

by Peter Henriksen<br />

and Gerry Humphrey<br />

You only need an<br />

amp for performing, so other people<br />

can hear you playing, right?<br />

Well, it’s certainly important in that<br />

regard, but amps are also popular<br />

with lone guitarists as they improve<br />

their skills and continue their quest for<br />

the ultimate tone. Playing a wonderful<br />

guitar through a high-quality amplifier is a great<br />

way to develop finesse and touch with your fingering<br />

style as you don’t need to lean into the instrument<br />

itself too hard. What sounds better than<br />

a sweet guitar? That same guitar, only louder,<br />

played through a really nice amp.<br />

No matter what kind of guitar you’re playing,<br />

and no matter what style, as soon as you plug a guitar<br />

into an amplifier, you’re technically an “electric<br />

guitar player”. This is particularly problematic with<br />

higher-end guitars, because you can plug a $500<br />

budget guitar into a great amplifier and make it<br />

sound<br />

great, but as soon as you<br />

plug an upper end instrument into a cheap amplifier,<br />

any nuanced qualities so painstakingly built<br />

into that guitar are completely lost. The key to<br />

building a great amplifier is to take into account<br />

that the greatest attributes of a quality instrument<br />

are subtle but are the most important and necessary,<br />

and the highest compliment is to have someone<br />

say that the amp “sounds like my guitar, only<br />

louder”.<br />

Luthiers can spend years working on a single<br />

instrument; they spend a lifetime mastering their<br />

craft and, like all great artists, pour their heart, soul<br />

and every fiber of their being into their work. Installing<br />

a pickup on an otherwise acoustic instrument<br />

with the intent of amplifying that signal through a<br />

variety of technologies manufactured by different<br />

companies in an attempt to replicate the acoustic<br />

sound of the instrument becomes a daunting proposition<br />

for the amplifier designer, player and the<br />

luthier alike. No one wants the sound of the instrument<br />

mis-represented. Building<br />

an amplifier to faithfully replicate<br />

the sound of a great variety of instruments<br />

is no simple task, and<br />

there are as many approaches as<br />

there are companies out there doing<br />

it, but they all share some basic<br />

principles and understanding<br />

these can help musicians choose<br />

which type of amplifier works best<br />

for their instruments.<br />

The first element in the signal<br />

chain is a pickup, microphone, or<br />

combination thereof. The difficulty<br />

with amplifiers is that you need<br />

to accommodate not only different<br />

takes on a pickup design, but<br />

completely different types of pickups.<br />

There are so many different<br />

Monteleone Stingray<br />

choices for generating a signal, but they basically<br />

boil down to three different common types: Electromagnetic<br />

pickups, piezo-electric pickups, and<br />

microphones. Most guitars use only one of these<br />

types, but in acoustic guitars a blended system of<br />

piezo-electric and microphones are not uncommon<br />

and adding a piezo-electric pickup to a guitar with<br />

an electromagnetic pickup has become a design<br />

choice to get a different type of response (the character<br />

of which depends on who you ask and how<br />

it’s implemented). In lay terms, an electromagnetic<br />

pickup translates the vibration of the string into a<br />

signal, whereas a piezo-electric pickup translates<br />

the vibration of the guitar’s top, and a microphone<br />

utilizes sound pressure from the instrument itself to<br />

create signal.<br />

Most archtop and solid-body electric guitars<br />

have the familiar electromagnetic type of pickups.<br />

These come in many different variations themselves,<br />

but are for the most part fairly standard<br />

outputs and impedances which have been used<br />

for a long time, so while these pickups can vary<br />

greatly in design and tone, amplifying the signal<br />

isn’t quite as tricky as with piezo-electric pickups<br />

or microphones. From the luthier’s perspective,<br />

however, these can be the least desirable choice<br />

because most types require drilling holes into the<br />

top of the guitar which changes the acoustic nature<br />

of the guitar itself. Consequently, many opt<br />

for a “floating” electromagnetic pickup, typically<br />

attached to the neck so that the top of the guitar<br />

is unmolested. This is best for the acoustic nature<br />

of the guitar, but for the most part floating pickups<br />

are more difficult to amplify because they aren’t<br />

anchored as well to the instrument and tend to<br />

output less fidelity and lower signal levels. Building<br />

an input gain control into an amplifier, or two separate<br />

inputs to accommodate lower output pickups<br />

can help alleviate this issue.<br />

Traditionally piezo-electric pickups have been<br />

the flattop acoustic guitar pickup of choice as they<br />

translate the vibration of the instrument into signal<br />

and so, properly designed, tend to be a much truer<br />

representation of the actual sound coming from<br />

the guitar. In the past these types of pickups were<br />

always best with a preamp before sending the signal<br />

to an amplifier; however Piezo-electric designs<br />

have come a very long way in recent years, and<br />

most no longer require an outboard preamp to<br />

work well with a guitar amplifier. As with electromagnetic<br />

pickups, designing an amplifier knowing<br />

that there will be a variable amount of input signal<br />

coming in is key.<br />

Microphones are perhaps the most difficult input<br />

device to handle from an amplifier perspective<br />

because microphones are most prone to feedback,<br />

may require phantom power and generally output<br />

a low impedance balanced signal which traditional<br />

guitar amplifiers are not equipped to deal with.<br />

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Most solid-state amplifiers with either an acoustic-focused<br />

design or multi-purpose, multi-channel<br />

design are going to have a special mic input and<br />

phantom power. Otherwise, it’s best to use a special<br />

mic preamp or, in cases where a combination<br />

of a pickup and a microphone are being used, a<br />

blending device will condition the signal. Many<br />

pickup/mic systems have this blend control built<br />

into the guitar, or are sold with the device.<br />

Once the signal is generated, it is now off to the<br />

amplifier. There are three basic components to<br />

an amplifier: the preamp, the power amp and the<br />

speaker.<br />

The preamp is where most of the character of<br />

an instrument amplifier is developed. The primary<br />

job of the preamp is to take the signal sent from<br />

the instrument and bring it up to the appropriate<br />

level for the power amp to do its job. It is in this<br />

stage where the tone controls are used along with<br />

the preamp gain to condition the instrument’s signal.<br />

It is also at this stage where a lot of unwelcome<br />

sounds and distortions can be introduced.<br />

Often acoustic instruments, because they use<br />

piezo-electric pickups, require or work better with<br />

an additional preamp because they don’t output<br />

enough signal that a traditional guitar amp can accommodate.<br />

Modern amplifiers and piezo electric<br />

pickups are high enough quality that an additional<br />

outboard preamp isn’t really necessary, but there<br />

are a lot of very high-quality devices designed to<br />

improve, enhance or just clean up the signal on its<br />

way to the amplifier.<br />

Most preamps have some type of tone controls.<br />

Musicians are universally familiar with a basic tone<br />

control, where you turn up or down the bass and/<br />

or treble of an instrument. These passive shunting<br />

circuits are standard in almost any kind of audio<br />

amplification because they are the most intuitive<br />

way to change a signal to suit personal preference.<br />

Beyond that, there are also active controls and<br />

equalization to further fine tune the signal. One<br />

reason it’s important to have an amplifier designed<br />

specifically with an acoustic guitar in mind, is that<br />

general market amplifiers are designed with a<br />

“scoop” built into their preamp, meaning the midrange<br />

frequencies are artificially turned down because<br />

when playing rock on an electric guitar those<br />

frequencies can become “muddy” and unpleasant.<br />

With acoustic guitars, or archtops and jazz music,<br />

you need those frequencies because you want a<br />

much more piano-like response.<br />

The preamp is really where there can be a real<br />

“art” to audio design. Different components can<br />

make a difference in whether something is dark<br />

or bright, even if they have the same specification.<br />

Just like choosing a type of wood, choosing<br />

a brand and type of capacitor can change the<br />

sound; for example going from a less expensive<br />

type of capacitor to a polypropelene capacitor will<br />

add brilliance to a sound, but the finer elements<br />

can even change greatly depending on the manufacturer<br />

and the individual components tolerances.<br />

Even something as simple as a different batch<br />

can make a difference in the sound and although<br />

subtle, not necessarily insignificant. This is typically<br />

where math and engineering take a backseat to using<br />

one’s ears to make design decisions.<br />

The next stage in amplification is the power amp.<br />

Power amplifier designs are a little more straight<br />

forward and have traditionally been broken into<br />

classes (A, A/B, etc…) but in the simplest terms,<br />

these days there are three basic types of power<br />

amplifiers on the market: Tube amps, traditional<br />

transistor solid-state amps, and class D (switching)<br />

amplifiers.<br />

Tube amplifiers are the oldest of the technologies,<br />

and their design is an art unto itself -- every<br />

little thing matters including where wires are<br />

placed when connecting components together.<br />

Solid state power amplifier architecture uses a<br />

transistor as opposed to a vacuum tube, reducing<br />

weight, size, cost and maintenance, but requiring<br />

more complex circuits. Most recently, class D amplifiers<br />

have become more available and are the<br />

predominant amplifier on the market for acoustic<br />

instruments as they put out the most efficient power.<br />

In the beginning, class D amplifiers had both<br />

quality and fidelity issues as well as noise problems<br />

when applied to instrument amplifiers (as opposed<br />

to consumer audio applications), but those problems<br />

are largely a thing of the past.<br />

When designing an amplifier for acoustic instruments,<br />

or any instrument where you do not want<br />

the signal to contain any distortion, you want as<br />

much power as is practical. The more power you<br />

have, the more volume and dynamic control you<br />

can get from the instrument without mud or distortion;<br />

however that brings with it size and weight.<br />

Class D amps are the most economical way to do<br />

this, but can be missing the analog warmth you get<br />

from a tube amp design. As with the preamp, this<br />

is where designs need the attention of the designer’s<br />

ears as much as anything.<br />

If weight is not so much of a concern, then a<br />

well-designed tube amp can deliver a few things<br />

that aren’t possible with even the most sophisticated<br />

digital circuitry. One of the unique characteristics<br />

of vacuum tube technology is that tubes can<br />

produce harmonics naturally. Why might this be<br />

important, and doesn’t this constitute some type<br />

of distortion of the input signal? A purist would say<br />

yes – it’s harmonic distortion, but when you take<br />

into consideration the loss of the “total” sound and<br />

nuances that a single-point pickup system doesn’t<br />

deliver to the amp, then it’s a reasonable trade-off.<br />

When playing your favorite acoustic guitar,<br />

you’re hearing all kinds of sounds coming not just<br />

from the sound hole, but from the sides, the back,<br />

the neck and the strings themselves. A lot of the<br />

complexity of that sound is lost when you use a<br />

single-point, or even a dual, pickup system that<br />

samples the sound from a very narrow space on<br />

the guitar.<br />

Vacuum tubes help by reintroducing some of the<br />

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harmonics that are lost, giving a very natural sound<br />

that has a certain sparkle to it.<br />

Designing a tube amp from the ground up, specifically<br />

for an acoustic instrument, is a much different<br />

animal than a traditional tube amp for an electric<br />

guitar. Maximum headroom at every point in<br />

the signal chain is key, as is using very high quality<br />

components, thoughtful cabinet design and the<br />

best speaker/tweeter combination available.<br />

Choosing the right speakers for an amp is an<br />

area where there truly are no wrong answers. Some<br />

are just better than others, and sometimes it can<br />

be fairly subjective . Speakers can be cheap, expensive,<br />

bright, dark, fast or slow in response, and<br />

as long as they are within the specs of the amplifier<br />

and cabinet design, it’s all a matter of taste. Typically<br />

for acoustic and archtop guitars, the idea is to<br />

use a speaker that has a full range and flat response<br />

so as not to introduce too much of the speaker’s<br />

own character into the sound. Often times speakers<br />

used in these amps weren’t originally intended<br />

for guitar amplifiers, but rather PA systems.<br />

For an acoustic guitar, it’s best to use a hi-fi quality<br />

speaker, overrated in terms of power so there’s<br />

no possibility of breakup, and match it with a<br />

high-power tweeter to fill out those high frequencies.<br />

Like our luthier brethren, whose hard earned<br />

skills and carefully chosen materials set them apart<br />

from mass-market manufacturers, there are very<br />

few amplifier builders that recognize the need for<br />

an amp to rise to the quality of sound produced<br />

by a custom hand-built guitar. Playing acoustic<br />

doesn’t mean playing unplugged. If you love the<br />

sound of your guitar, you’ll love it even more with<br />

the right amplifier. playing unplugged. If you love<br />

the sound of your guitar, you’ll love it even more<br />

with the right amplifier.<br />

Your fine guitar deserves<br />

a fine stand.<br />

www. sgstands.com<br />

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Illustration credits:<br />

Laura-Chanel Lesperance<br />

The Invisible Guitar-<br />

Beyond the Wooden Box<br />

by Michael Greenfield<br />

The following is meant as<br />

information that will afford<br />

the player a deeper<br />

understanding of the<br />

instrument and help<br />

them make informed decisions when purchasing<br />

an instrument.<br />

Where does the object end and the musical instrument<br />

begin? The following is a look into the<br />

world of the invisible guitar – the guitar we cannot<br />

see.<br />

The handmade acoustic guitar and its culture<br />

have become very fashionable. Consequently,<br />

we are being bombarded with information. Social<br />

media, internet discussion forums and boutique<br />

guitar galleries are all contributing to the cacophony.<br />

I did a Google search for “what makes a great<br />

acoustic guitar” and got 5,980,000 results!! What<br />

are the elements that influence a guitar’s voice?<br />

Rosettes? Peghead overlays? End grafts? Sound<br />

Ports? What about “tonewood”?<br />

There are more guitars being made today, by<br />

more people, than at any time before in history.<br />

The reality is that many who are making guitars today<br />

have made fewer than 50 instruments. They<br />

are blindly executing woodworking techniques to<br />

reproduce the options and features found on popular<br />

instruments. Yet they have no understanding<br />

of the mechanics of the instrument nor the physics<br />

that make the guitar work. In short: they may not<br />

be crafting guitars that sound good and are inspiring<br />

to play.<br />

Were the great instruments that came before us<br />

an accident? Or the result of purposeful, careful<br />

acoustic design?<br />

My mantra is and has alwaysbeen: if you<br />

want to build something new, go study at a museum<br />

first… so let’s do that!<br />

Classic Masters<br />

Antonio Stradivari (1644 – 1737)<br />

- The myth, the man, the reality:<br />

Antonio Stradivari apprenticed under<br />

and worked for Nicola Amati for<br />

some 20 years. The story goes that<br />

for Stradivari to keep his job, he had<br />

to produce, in part, two instruments per<br />

week. This means he had carved plates<br />

and closed boxes for some 2,000 instruments<br />

in the white, before even opening his<br />

own workshop.<br />

C.F. Martin Co. (Golden Era, 1929 – 1936) - It<br />

was the Great Depression and the famous Pennsylvania<br />

guitar manufacturing company was experiencing<br />

decreasing sales. Guitars were being built<br />

by journeyman instrument makers, and of course,<br />

the company only kept the very best of them.Had<br />

stockpiles of wood to choose from, so their very<br />

experienced guitar makers only chose the finest<br />

materials available. By the Golden Era, C.F. Martin<br />

had accrued a century of empirical instrument<br />

making, tweaking, refining, adjusting…<br />

Lloyd Loar (1886 - 1943) - Loar was a renowned<br />

Chicago musician and luthier. Very interested in<br />

physics as a teenager.Fan and student of Stradivari<br />

and the Cremonese violin makers. Dissatisfied with<br />

the commercially available instruments to him at<br />

the time, he began looking at how to improve them<br />

through physics. Employed and applied acoustic<br />

principles from the viol world to the instruments he<br />

was designing at Gibson. Responsible for incorporating<br />

F-holes, tuning the air chamber, tuning the<br />

top and back plates and tuning of the tone bars<br />

on the mandolins and guitars he designed at Gibson.<br />

Ultimately became a professor of acoustics at<br />

Northwestern University and taught courses on the<br />

physics of music.<br />

Modern Masters<br />

Sam Zygmuntowicz (who has generously given<br />

me permission to adapt his title: “The Invisible<br />

Violin”). Zygmuntowicz is the creative director of<br />

the Strad3D project, which The Strad Open Music<br />

Library called “one of the most ground-breaking<br />

and comprehensive studies of the violin form ever<br />

conceived.” It involved the first 3D laser vibration<br />

scanning of Stradivari and Guarneri violins, and included<br />

acoustic testing and CT scanning. He worked<br />

with Dr. George Bissinger, a long-time leader in violin<br />

acoustics research. Among others, Sam’s clients have<br />

included Joshua Bell and Isaac Stern, who owned two<br />

of his violins.<br />

After Stern died in 2001, both violins were sold at<br />

a Tarisio auction in 2003. Each violin surpassed the<br />

previous record for the highest price paid for a string<br />

instrument by a living maker at auction. One of the<br />

instruments sold was a Guarneri-model violin made<br />

in 1994 for Stern. That 1994 violin held the record for<br />

the highest price paid for a string instrument by a living<br />

maker at auction until the record was broken in<br />

October 2013.<br />

Joseph Curtin - Curtin is the 2005 recipient of a<br />

MacArthur Fellows Program. a.k.a. the “genius grant”.<br />

Known for using technology such as MRIs, lasers and<br />

other scanning devices to measure the acoustics of violins,<br />

to aid in his designs. He was part of the Strad3D<br />

Project team as well. Uses the information gathered<br />

to create replicas of famous antique violins, as well<br />

as research for more avant-garde designs including<br />

instruments made from carbon fiber.<br />

Also worked to create a digital model of the violin<br />

that, when played next to “the real thing”, fooled expert<br />

listeners in a blind test. In 2013, the most expensive<br />

new instrument to ever sell at auction was one of<br />

Curtin’s. He’s the guy who beat Sam Zygmuntowicz’s<br />

earlier record!<br />

Stefan-Peter Greiner - Greiner worked with physicist<br />

Dr. Heinrich Dünnwald between 1992 and 2010. Dünnwald,<br />

who was a renowned scientist in violin acoustics,<br />

closely analyzed over 1,300 violins. As part of this<br />

research, the two conducted the first tomographic<br />

study of a Stradivari and analyzed the components of<br />

the old Cremonese varnish, applying advanced scientific<br />

methods. Greiner’s ongoing research includes<br />

continued analyses of the sound of string instruments,<br />

CAT and 3D technology, dendrochronology<br />

of spruce, and UV-laser and infrared spectroscopy of<br />

historic violin varnish.<br />

James Ham - Ham began repairing and restoring instruments<br />

of the viol family in 1972. He had access<br />

to and repaired several thousand instruments. Began<br />

building new instruments incorporating carbon fiber,<br />

laminated ribs (balsa core), using balsa for violin and<br />

cello tops (some balsa exhibits low density with favorable<br />

damping properties for a bowed instrument).<br />

Creator of the “ultra-light” cello, which uses a bolt-on<br />

neck, laminated composite tops, carbon tube reinforced<br />

neck and heel and a more ergonomic body<br />

design.<br />

Of course, back in the world of the guitar, there are<br />

masters like Ervin Somogyi, Ken Parker, Daniel Friedrich,<br />

Jose Romanillos, Robert Ruck, Greg Smallman<br />

and many others, who take a decidedly scientific approach<br />

to the craft and have also examined, repaired<br />

and restored countless contemporary and historic instruments.<br />

“The adjuster”<br />

In the viol world, a skilled adjuster can make very<br />

good instruments into great instruments by adding<br />

mass, stiffening or removing wood from specific areas<br />

of the instrument or adjusting its geometry or<br />

sound post. A skilled adjuster can manipulate the<br />

instrument’s voice, subtly changing the presentation<br />

of a single string. Their importance in maintaining<br />

instruments for artists is arguably greater<br />

than that of the maker.<br />

In the world of the guitar, the adjuster (a great<br />

repairer/tech) can:<br />

•Maintain or improve intonation.<br />

•Correct fingerboard geometry and maintain<br />

fretwork (the interface between player and instrument).<br />

•Remove and reset a guitar’s neck angle for optimal<br />

geometry, which is critical to a guitar’s ultimate<br />

voice and proper playability, according to<br />

the musical style (bluegrass, jazz, fingerstyle, etc.).<br />

•Perform an exceptional setup, including the fabrication,<br />

installation and adjustment of nuts and<br />

saddles, which have a profound influence on the<br />

tone of a guitar.<br />

All the above share a common thread: the careful<br />

examination, measurement and maintenance<br />

of hundreds or thousands of instruments leads to<br />

a profound understanding of great sounding and<br />

playing instruments and what qualities exceptional<br />

musicians appreciate in them. Furthermore, taking<br />

a scientific approach to that measurement, learning<br />

to manipulate the voice and performance of<br />

the instrument to address players’ specific needs,<br />

are the elements that can contribute to the crafting<br />

of exceptional musical instruments. There is no<br />

magical unicorn dust for making world-class guitars<br />

or other instruments. You have to do the work.<br />

The guitar<br />

I view the guitar as a drum. Ervin Somogyi refers<br />

to it as an air pump, which it is. The drum, or guitar-shaped<br />

air pump, is a rigid rim with two thin,<br />

vibrating membranes on either side. Simply excite<br />

the membrane and the molecules stimulated by<br />

the vibrations carries the sound through the air.<br />

The more efficient the system, the better the amplified<br />

sound. Simple!<br />

Objet d’art or musical instrument?<br />

Sadly, I believe the musical instrument has become<br />

lost in the object. Many modern guitars are<br />

little more than bedazzled wooden boxes. At what<br />

point does the wooden box become a “guitar”? I<br />

suggest it becomes a guitar when a musician picks<br />

it up to play music and then it must perform as a<br />

conduit for the player to express themselves.<br />

The chain of purposeful, conscious thought (as<br />

described by Sam Zygmuntowicz)<br />

Unlike a singer, who can open their mouth and<br />

sounds come out, a guitarist is dependent on this<br />

“box of wood” in order to express themselves.<br />

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The musician stands on stage. Their brain sends<br />

an impulse though their nervous system, which<br />

stimulates muscles to move their fingers, which<br />

manipulate the strings on their instrument, at their<br />

point of contact. The string energy animates the<br />

instrument’s soundboard, which moves the air inside<br />

the instrument through compression and refraction.<br />

The moving air inside and around the instrument<br />

travels through the air in the concert hall,<br />

arriving at the ear drum of the listener. The moving<br />

air (sound wave) exciting the listener’s ear drum<br />

creates an impulse, which travels to their brain and<br />

they hear the music!<br />

That which we cannot see - but can measure!<br />

I ask you to please think carefully about the following<br />

definitions in how they relate to music in<br />

general and the guitar specifically:<br />

Sound<br />

A sound wave is a vibration of molecules that<br />

travels through some medium (air) to the ear.<br />

Response<br />

A reaction of an organism or any of its parts to a<br />

specific stimulus.<br />

Resonance<br />

A phenomenon in which a vibrating system or<br />

external force drives another system to oscillate<br />

with greater amplitude at specific frequencies.<br />

What are resonant frequencies and why are they<br />

important in musical instruments? Why measure or<br />

control them in the first place?<br />

A resonant frequency is the natural vibrating<br />

frequency of an object. EVERYTHING has a resonant<br />

frequency (Fig. 1). When you play a note on<br />

an instrument that corresponds to the resonant frequency<br />

of one of its parts, be it the top, back or the<br />

air resonance (even the neck), that corresponding<br />

note you have played is noticeably affected. You<br />

can hear it. Read the definition of resonance again<br />

and think about this….<br />

In some instances, when the note corresponding<br />

to the body’s air resonance is plucked (for a guitar,<br />

typically on the low E string between low F and<br />

A), it is reinforced and heard as a “stronger” note.<br />

Sometimes when the note is plucked, the note<br />

begins with an attack transient and a brief stronger-than-normal<br />

fundamental. Then the overtone<br />

series blooms, losing the note fundamental within<br />

the context of a chord. When a note fundamental<br />

does not sustain as long as its harmonic counterparts<br />

within a chord, the player often perceives it<br />

as a weaker note, or a “wolf-note”.<br />

Resonant frequencies are inherent in every musical<br />

instrument and the player can hear the slightly<br />

uneven response even if they do not know the<br />

cause. One of the challenges for a guitarmaker<br />

(or any instrument maker) is to produce as even a<br />

response as possible, everywhere on the fingerboard.<br />

When a guitar is handmade, there is an opportunity<br />

to either manipulate these resonant frequencies<br />

or keep track of the resonant frequencies<br />

of their instruments and make note of which ones<br />

produce the most even and musical response in<br />

their instruments.<br />

Response<br />

To maximize the guitar body’s efficiency and realize<br />

an even response throughout the frequency<br />

range, I track and manipulate the deflection, resonant<br />

frequency, weight and several other characteristics<br />

of the top, back and bridge throughout<br />

the build process:<br />

•When selecting and preparing materials.<br />

•After bracing the plates and carving their braces.<br />

•After closing the body.<br />

This is a simplified explanation of resonant frequencies<br />

and their relationship to the guitar. Many<br />

other factors are involved: soundhole size, the<br />

coupling between two or more different resonant<br />

frequencies, damping within the system and materials,<br />

the effect of the instrument’s maturing on<br />

evenness of response, etc.<br />

Wood<br />

Species does not equate to quality (despite what<br />

the internet says). It simply does not work that way.<br />

Density<br />

All wood has a specific gravity (density), be it<br />

soundboard material or tropical hardwoods for<br />

back plates and rim assemblies. Qualities like bass<br />

and treble are not found in a species of wood. They<br />

are a function of the design of the instrument and<br />

how it is built. For example, many people think maple<br />

is crisp and thin or trebly sounding. I submit for<br />

your listening consideration… the cello! It is made<br />

of maple (and spruce). If well-made, it is a beautiful<br />

sounding instrument – anything but thin or trebly.<br />

Contrarily, many people look to Brazilian rosewood<br />

as the holy grail tonewood for guitars. It can<br />

make wonderful sounding guitars. So will maple…<br />

or many other wood choices. And we have all heard<br />

underwhelming guitars made of Brazilian rosewood.<br />

So there is something more to a successful<br />

instrument than merely the species of wood.<br />

For consideration when selecting wood for a<br />

guitar: is the musical goal to accompany a vocalist,<br />

reproduce complex chords, quick passages, adagio<br />

passages with open voicings? Is the instrument<br />

to be used for recording, layering parts, sitting in<br />

a mix, playing a part in a large ensemble? Ideally<br />

you are selecting wood to realize a musical goal;<br />

through careful design, we can configure instruments<br />

to address specific needs.<br />

Rather than species, I consider wood density<br />

when making decisions about voicing and configuring<br />

an instrument (“families” of wood are considered,<br />

i.e. rosewood, mahogany, maple). Even<br />

within a given species there can be significant differences.<br />

I have sets of Brazilian rosewood with a<br />

density close to that of some mahoganies and other<br />

sets that approach the density of ebony. These<br />

will make very different sounding guitars.<br />

In brief, this is how I see the contribution of<br />

density to a guitar’s voice: when a string is excited<br />

(plucked), it initiates a complex sequence of<br />

events. Two of the responses generated by the<br />

system are perceived as attack and decay. While<br />

measured in milliseconds, these are easily heard.<br />

In general, high density woods will present with a<br />

slow attack and a long decay. This will yield guitars<br />

that have a very “wet”, lush, reverby voice. On the<br />

other end of the spectrum, low density woods (maple,<br />

cypress, etc.) present with a very quick attack<br />

and short decay. These woods produce guitars<br />

with a very immediate voice with clarity and separation<br />

between notes. With this in mind, I submit<br />

that rather than bass and treble, the back and side<br />

material “color” and influence the overtone series<br />

of the guitar’s voice.<br />

Other factors like internal damping (see question<br />

below) can impart tonal characteristics often<br />

described as dark or bright, vitreous or rich. Again,<br />

these factors are not necessarily species specific<br />

but rather vary from board to board.<br />

Soundboard material is much the same as<br />

above, with western red cedar on the low-density<br />

end and Adirondack spruce on the high-density<br />

end. (These are, as above, generalizations.)<br />

Considering wood density and musical goal of<br />

the instrument helps me make decisions when<br />

selecting materials to pair for a specific result.<br />

What is “master grade” wood anyway?<br />

Currently, wood is graded and sold for its aesthetic.<br />

While that is a consideration, I evaluate<br />

soundboard material by its physical metrics. The<br />

quality of a piece of wood is ALWAYS the most important<br />

factor in my selection of wood for an instrument,<br />

much more so than species or aesthetics.<br />

Bryan Galloup has been studying wood properties<br />

for over a decade and is developing a new system<br />

for grading wood. A few suppliers are beginning to<br />

grade their wood in new ways as well. That seems<br />

to still be a few years away.<br />

I have been doing my own measurements and<br />

research for the past few years as well. Here is a<br />

look at some of the metrics I consider when selecting<br />

wood (Fig. 2):<br />

Grains per inch<br />

Grains per inch are the result of the growing conditions<br />

of the tree. These manifest themselves in<br />

a number of ways, most visibly in early and late<br />

growth grain lines in the wood (the light and dark<br />

lines on a soundboard). Many people believe<br />

that very tight grained spruce is somehow better.<br />

I disagree. Furthermore, in 2012, Pacific Rim<br />

Tonewood (one of the world’s largest suppliers of<br />

Sitka spruce) had a scientific study conducted by<br />

Les Jozsa (Research Scientist Emeritus, FP Innovations),<br />

who measured the metrics of coarse, medium<br />

and fine-grained Sitka spruce. The findings<br />

were that 12 – 14 grains per inch (in the stand of<br />

trees examined) exhibited the best characteristics<br />

for building guitars. My preference is somewhere<br />

between16 – 20 grains per inch, depending on the<br />

species, certainly not 30 or even 40 grains per inch<br />

as is sometimes seen as desirable.<br />

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Grains per inch can have a profound effect on:<br />

Density<br />

Density is defined as mass/volume. Think about<br />

this and how that might affect a note’s attack and<br />

decay (see above).<br />

Stiffness<br />

Stiffness is how much something resists bending<br />

or moving under a set load. This is also known as<br />

modulus of elasticity (simplified definition).<br />

Your guitar’s soundboard is like a trampoline: if<br />

the surface is too stiff and the person jumping is<br />

very light, you don’t get much bounce. On the other<br />

hand, if the trampoline is tensioned loosely and<br />

a heavy person jumps, you still don’t experience<br />

the optimum bounce. In this analogy, the weight<br />

of the person represents the pull of the strings (a<br />

known quantity). One of the tasks of the luthier is<br />

to create a trampoline that is tensioned perfectly<br />

for the weight of the person jumping: a soundboard<br />

that has the perfect stiffness to maximize the<br />

energy transfer of the strings.<br />

A tiny reduction in soundboard thickness or<br />

shaving a small amount of wood from a brace can<br />

dramatically affect the stiffness of the component<br />

involved and therefore affect the response and<br />

voice of the guitar (more about this coming up).<br />

This is a phenomenon that can be realized intuitively<br />

over decades of guitar building. The more<br />

guitars I build, the more this instinct of optimum<br />

stiffness is fine tuned.<br />

Ability to Resonate<br />

This is sometimes referred to as the Radiation<br />

Ratio, or Radiation Coefficient. It is the relationship<br />

between stiffness and density and is the key factor<br />

in crafting a responsive guitar.<br />

Resonance Quality (Q)<br />

This is the relationship between velocity (speed<br />

of sound) and density. In its most basic iteration, it<br />

is the sound the board makes when you tap it.<br />

But back to Stradivari…<br />

“The science explains what we know intuitively<br />

as makers.” -Judy Threet<br />

Looking away from the science for a moment,<br />

a guitarmaker who has examined, flexed, held,<br />

tapped, listened to and selected thousands of<br />

soundboards and subsequently built instruments<br />

with those materials can make determinations of<br />

the above metrics empirically.<br />

So how does all this work? One of the basic<br />

principles of engineering (physics) we use in instrument<br />

making is the Cube Rule of Stiffness. This<br />

rule states that the stiffness of a component is the<br />

cubed function of its height or thickness. What this<br />

means is that if you double the height of the brace<br />

(top plate, neck, etc.), the stiffness goes WAY up.<br />

Imagine a top brace with a stiffness coefficient of<br />

2; if you double the height of the brace, its stiffness<br />

coefficient is not 4, it is now 8 (2 x 2 x 2)! Look at it<br />

another way: steel string guitar top plates are typically<br />

between 2.6mm to 3.0mm thick, the differential<br />

between these two extremities being a mere<br />

0.4mm (0.0157 inches). All other properties being<br />

equal, the difference in the stiffness coefficient between<br />

these two dimensions is more dramatic than<br />

some would initially think. The thinner plate has a<br />

stiffness coefficient of 2.6 = 17.57 while the thicker<br />

top works out to be 3.0 = 27, an increase in stiffness<br />

of over 150%!<br />

Do you need to know this? No – not that there is<br />

anything wrong with having a deeper understanding<br />

of the inner workings of things. But now consider<br />

this: many factories and even small builders<br />

find and establish the dimensions of plate thickness<br />

and bracing that will yield a competent instrument.<br />

They establish an average of parameter<br />

specifications and build all their guitars to these<br />

numbers. However, two pieces of wood never exhibit<br />

the same characteristics (even the same piece<br />

of wood). Every top plate and brace made from<br />

wood can and does vary in stiffness and density.<br />

The advantage that an experienced guitarmaker<br />

has is that we can individually evaluate each component<br />

to fine tune its dimensions and realize the<br />

perfect stiffness to weight for the load that will be<br />

applied, thereby realizing a consistently maximized<br />

transfer of energy from the strings to the soundboard.<br />

Helmholtz resonance – The air column<br />

One of the elements that a guitarmaker should<br />

think about a lot when designing a guitar is the<br />

soundhole: its size, its position and the reinforcement<br />

around it. The soundhole affects the main air<br />

resonance of the instrument and, ultimately, how<br />

efficiently it allows the internal sound waves to<br />

project from the guitar body.<br />

The size of a soundhole is one of the principal<br />

factors that determines the main air resonance,<br />

known as the Helmholtz resonance. The general<br />

rule is that for a body with a given internal air<br />

volume, the larger the soundhole (or soundholes),<br />

the higher the air resonance. There are optimum<br />

soundhole sizes that maximize the efficiency of various<br />

sized guitar bodies.<br />

Side ports have become popular in guitars. One<br />

of the reasons I am not enthusiastic about side<br />

ports is that, like the front soundhole, they enlarge<br />

the overall aperture of the guitar body, raising the<br />

Helmholtz resonance of the guitar. For instance, a<br />

guitar with no side port and the same instrument<br />

with multiple or a large side port can affect a difference<br />

in the main air resonance of two full tones.<br />

Since all the main resonances on the guitar are affected<br />

by each other, this must be carefully calcu-<br />

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lated to result in a successful instrument. Just cutting<br />

an extra random hole, anywhere in a box, will<br />

not net a tuned and coupled system.<br />

The Neck – Controlling the wiggle!<br />

Few consider this, but if carefully designed and<br />

crafted, the neck of a guitar can minimize unwanted<br />

oscillation, or wiggle, in the system, and will transmit<br />

more string energy directly to the soundboard,<br />

making for a more efficient and better sounding<br />

guitar. Another bi-product of good neck design<br />

can be stability. The opposite is also true, and a<br />

neck lacking stiffness can detract from the guitar’s<br />

efficiency and introduce chaos into the system.<br />

The thickness of the neck will exponentially increase<br />

its stiffness (the cubed rule revisited). Slight<br />

changes in thickness can dramatically reduce movement<br />

in the neck and increase overall response.<br />

Often overlooked and equally important is the<br />

peghead. Its design and stiffness is as important in<br />

making a responsive guitar. In addition to not making<br />

the neck too thin and reinforcing the peghead,<br />

the use of carbon rods, carbon fiber, engineered<br />

composite reinforcements and other means of stiffening<br />

the neck all improve the guitar’s response.<br />

Additionally, fabrication of the fingerboard, the<br />

cutting of its slots and proper fretting all increase<br />

the overall stiffness of the neck as an assembly.<br />

Conclusion<br />

Where does the object end and the musical instrument<br />

begin? With exquisite SOUND and inspiring<br />

playability.<br />

Great instruments are the result of purposeful,<br />

acoustic design. This is realized through decades<br />

(or even centuries) of empirical experience and/or<br />

research, the careful examination, measurement<br />

and maintenance of hundreds or thousands of instruments,<br />

as well as a profound understanding of<br />

what qualities musicians appreciate in exceptional<br />

instruments.<br />

Finally, crafting the instrument with an understanding<br />

of and sensitivity to the physical properties<br />

of the materials used, how they behave within<br />

a coupled system and how to manipulate them to<br />

achieve specific, musical goals – this is how I see<br />

the guitar.<br />

THE INVISIBLE GUITAR!<br />

30 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 31


Artisan Guitar Show: The modern<br />

guitar is often a visual aesthetic masterpiece.<br />

The guitar, regardless of its<br />

physical beauty, is the perfect example<br />

of form needing to follow function.<br />

How difficult is it to find that perfect<br />

balance between aesthetic style and tonal substance?<br />

Kathy Wingert: I find it very difficult to find the perfect balance<br />

because design is not my strong suit. All my designs<br />

are following function. I don’t visualize well, but I adjust well,<br />

so I’m better with clay than with a pencil. I think that willingness<br />

to just follow function has allowed me to be a little<br />

more flexible with client requests because it’s okay with me<br />

if lines get moved around.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You were once quoted as saying that<br />

some of your earliest guitars ended up being used to roast<br />

marshmallows. How important do you think it is to encourage<br />

young guitar makers to explore creative experimentation<br />

and especially not to fear failure?<br />

Kathy Wingert: I can be such a great devil’s advocate, if a<br />

young builder seems hung up on getting everything perfect,<br />

I really try to push to just get that first guitar going,<br />

strung, beat up, played, enjoyed. On the other hand, if they<br />

are not giving the wood the respect it deserves, if they give<br />

the impression that they think details aren’t important, I try<br />

to instill a strong sense of consequence. I might have gotten<br />

that from my mentor. One of my first days at his shop he had<br />

me draw out some parts for cutting. I brought the wood to<br />

him with my carefully mapped cutting lines and he asked<br />

me where the line was. I was dumbfounded, as the line was<br />

right there in thick pencil. He showed me how to use a lead<br />

holder and get really fine lines. Lesson learned. The next<br />

day I heard him tell a coworker who had come from aerospace<br />

“if it’s less than five thousandths, I don’t even want to<br />

hear about it.”<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Creating a guitar is a process that<br />

begins with an idea or vision, progresses through construction,<br />

and concludes with the proper set-up of the instrument.<br />

When you as a builder decide on a design and determine<br />

the overall scope of the finished product, does the<br />

process become strictly defined or is it always a little fluid<br />

or dynamic?<br />

Kathy Wingert: That’s a really good<br />

question, but I think my style of<br />

building makes fluidity a necessity. I<br />

try to keep fixtures to a bare minimum<br />

because of my limited space,<br />

and I’m always chasing the best use<br />

of the wood, so where I know there<br />

is some builder somewhere who can<br />

build a neck joint and a guitar body<br />

separately in a precise jig and it will<br />

fit perfectly, that’s not my experience.<br />

And some things I just do that<br />

hard way because the outcome is<br />

worth it to me. One of those things<br />

32 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

5<br />

Minutes<br />

with<br />

Kathy Wingert<br />

is setting the neck and fretwork. I don’t dress the fretboard<br />

until the neck is on the body. It risks the brand new finish<br />

and makes for lots of little struggles at the end, but I don’t<br />

have to deal with guitars coming back to me from across<br />

the county (or world) for a flip at the end of the board or<br />

a super light, buzz free set up thatcan’t be achieved with a<br />

lower saddle.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: The spirit of giving in the guitar community<br />

is awesome and the relationships established between<br />

generations of guitar makers is inspiring. In your own<br />

life, you have enjoyed the remarkable good fortune of training<br />

the talented Isaac Jang, and your daughter Jimmi Wingert<br />

is an extremely accomplished inlay artist whose work<br />

adorns your instruments. Do you feel there is something<br />

unique and even “old world” about the way guitar makers<br />

prepare the next generations to carry on the craft?<br />

Kathy Wingert: I was surprised to learn that the solo builder<br />

workshop with a small number or helpers is actually a later<br />

development in the history of instrument making. I’m short<br />

on details or a source, but I read somewhere that once upon<br />

a time it took a very large shop to turn out instruments because<br />

a cadre of apprentices and journeymen were required<br />

to power the large tools. Then a group of enterprising guys<br />

decided to subcontract for the violin makers in Cremona.<br />

They would show up in the morning, do the heavy cutting,<br />

and head out to the beach in time to dig clams. But back<br />

to the question, I don’t know whether it’s old world or just<br />

good Karma, but people helped me. I don’t just give it away,<br />

I don’t have a set standard for what it takes to get in the<br />

door, but I can tell you this, they have to knock more than<br />

once. With Jimmi, on the other hand, I had to work on her<br />

for a long time. She finally admitted she didn’t want a guitar<br />

maker’s life. She had seen behind the curtain for enough<br />

years to know that it wasn’t very pretty, and she wanted a<br />

more normal life. Larry Robinson was able to convince her<br />

that the life of an inlay artist allowed for a shorter work day.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Please name three recordings that<br />

you think would be a great addition to any music library or<br />

collection.<br />

Kathy Wingert: Emil Gilels playing the Beethoven piano<br />

sonatas. If you’re a fan of the Pathetique Sonata, he has a<br />

particular way of playing the dramatic, chordal opening in<br />

a way that sounds like a wail.<br />

I have never understood how<br />

great pianists can make the<br />

piano appear to do things we<br />

know it cannot.<br />

Kate Rusby: Underneath the<br />

Stars. Brilliant arrangements of<br />

folk ballads. Her band is a text<br />

book on how to play just the<br />

one right note.<br />

Any of the Claude Bolling<br />

suites because they are just<br />

cheesy good fun and impeccable<br />

playing.<br />

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artisanguitarshow.com | 33


The story of a hand pearl inlay<br />

engraver in a modern builder’s world<br />

By Glenn Carson<br />

of pearl and sea snail still requires just three basic<br />

tools; a fine pen, scribe, and a single onglette or<br />

square hand graver. With those, and with a “little”<br />

practice, you can bring a plain mother of pearl inlay<br />

to life. A few of my attempts are shown here.<br />

The process is fairly simple, but like playing music,<br />

getting the execution down will take a serious<br />

time investment. First develop an eye for design<br />

by studying the natural world and all of the best<br />

In 1975, I bought a copy of Foxfire Book 3,<br />

heard my first good acoustic music close<br />

up and personal, and decided to make a<br />

fretless banjo based on simple plans in the<br />

book with the most basic of hand tools. When I<br />

went to the Home of Bluegrass music shop in<br />

Harrisburg, PA to purchase the first set of strings<br />

for it, I made an instant connection with a great<br />

player there (Bob Buckingham) who inspired me to<br />

make more banjos and became one of my lifelong<br />

music pals. By late 1979, I was deep into building<br />

acoustic instruments, and pushing myself to learn<br />

everything I could about building banjos, including<br />

the ornamental aspects from the best instruments<br />

of the late 1890’s, which found me struggling to<br />

learn pearl inlay and engraving, metal engraving,<br />

and heel carving. I was fascinated by the design,<br />

handwork and craftsmanship of those instruments,<br />

especially the best early Fairbanks banjos, and the<br />

fact that they combined wood, metal, inlay, carving<br />

and engraving and could also make the music that<br />

drew me (I mostly play old time fiddle and banjo)<br />

made them irresistible to me.<br />

Living near Harrisburg, the first twenty years or<br />

so of my luthier journey back in the dark ages (pre<br />

internet…) was a very isolated and often frustrating<br />

time, as I couldn’t find anyone to show me how to<br />

do the things I was so interested in. As a result,<br />

I made lots of mistakes (like inlaying every other<br />

fret on my first fretted banjo), but still found the<br />

rewards and people I met through building and<br />

playing music enough to make me want to continue<br />

to improve and learn more. Somewhere in the<br />

late 1990’s, I finally got online while seeking parts<br />

for a banjo I was making for my son and my luthier<br />

universe expanded greatly in short order. Suddenly,<br />

I had luthier and music friends from all over, and<br />

Banjo by Glenn Carson for Reed Martin, 2008<br />

soon I found myself working in collaboration with<br />

some of them, eventually including OME & Fielding<br />

banjos and Froggy Bottom Guitars. It is ironic<br />

that the Artisans Guitar show is held in Harrisburg<br />

within a mile of that first music store, where I first<br />

connected with this world, and is filled with world<br />

class guitars made by some of the planet’s finest<br />

luthier’s helps to illustrate that change that the digital<br />

world has had on many of us. We are now very<br />

connected, and I believe that having the ability to<br />

see high quality craftsmanship and also interact,<br />

learn and share techniques has resulted in an explosion<br />

of some of the best musical instruments<br />

that have ever been constructed. We are living in<br />

a renaissance time. Even though we small builders<br />

have the option, and sometimes necessity of<br />

precise power assists, computers, CNC, and other<br />

improvements, the really great thing about hand<br />

building instruments is that there is still a major<br />

role for hand craftsmanship and personal expression.<br />

This type of builders show defines that well.<br />

The definition of artisan is “a worker in a skilled<br />

trade, especially one that involves making things<br />

by hand”. A quick walk through the show is all it<br />

requires to know that the builders exhibiting instruments<br />

at this show are all driven by that intangible<br />

something that drives them to push their skills to<br />

the utmost.<br />

There are many forms of expression in the field<br />

of instrument inlay, such as some of the incredible<br />

inlay “picture inlays” being created by inlay artists<br />

out of all kinds of materials, but my personal<br />

obsession/passion is still stuck back in that 1890’s<br />

world of Italian, German and English born European<br />

trained craftsmen who came to the states and<br />

made those fancy Boston banjos back in 1895.<br />

That form of engraved black filled cuts on mother<br />

Froggy Bottom inlay engraving – Inlay and inlay design<br />

by Andy Mueller, engraving by G. Carson<br />

work you can find, in all kinds of mediums, and<br />

you can find inspiration in old instruments, stone<br />

and wood carvings, antique firearms engravings,<br />

antique cash register castings, vintage wall paper<br />

patterns, and every Dover design book you can<br />

get your hands on. Draw and sketch during your<br />

free time. I am a life-long “doodler” who draws<br />

while on the phone, during meetings,<br />

while watching tv or movies,<br />

and have filled many notebooks full<br />

of ideas. When designing, don’t<br />

copy anyone else, and take pride in<br />

letting your own ideas come to light.<br />

Second, procure a few of the best<br />

hand gravers you can, keep the overall<br />

length as short as you can, and<br />

invest in the absolute best graver<br />

sharpening set up you can afford.<br />

Plan to spend more time on the design<br />

than actual engraving, and sometimes<br />

much more. Lightly scribe the<br />

major layout lines, and engrave the inlays,<br />

using light cuts to establish the lines<br />

and going back over to add definition. I<br />

don’t obsess over symmetry, but tend to free<br />

34 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 35


hand my guide lines and allow slight variations to occur, as I<br />

think they add life to the designs.<br />

Glenn Carson has been building banjos since 1975 and<br />

struggling to learn the art of design and engraving since<br />

1977. When not working on banjos or engraving, he manages<br />

several large RCRA groundwater remediation projects<br />

or is in a river somewhere with a fly rod. He lives in Mt. Holly<br />

Springs, PA.<br />

Froggy Bottom guitars – Inlays by<br />

Andy Mueller, engraving by G. Carson<br />

Banjo and inlay by Dan Drabek,<br />

engraving by G. Carson<br />

Thoughts on the fine work<br />

of Glenn Carson<br />

As a luthier working on instruments since the early ‘60s<br />

and seeing many examples of fine carving and engraving<br />

on the earlier Fairbank’s as well as other engraved banjos,<br />

I have never seen any work that surpasses that of Glenn<br />

Carson. Another bad habit I have is owning and shooting<br />

fine English Shotguns. There is another place to see beautiful<br />

engraving although in metal. This makes me comfortable<br />

in expressing and opinion on the amazing work on<br />

mother of pearl and abalone by Glenn Carson.<br />

Harry M. Sparks, Architect<br />

In an age when mechanical reproduction is readily available<br />

and widely employed, Glenn’s work is a rare treat.<br />

Working within the constraints imposed by the shape and<br />

material of an inlay piece, Glenn strives and succeeds at<br />

keeping his work fresh and inventive. As a result, each<br />

headstock logo or set of fingerboard inlays he engraves is<br />

different from the last. By now I’ve seen maybe a hundred<br />

examples of his work on our guitars, all unique. And his<br />

execution boggles the mind!<br />

Andy Mueller, Froggy Bottom Guitars<br />

We 1st met Glenn at Clifftop old time music festival in<br />

West Virginia years ago where we were vending our claw<br />

hammer banjos that my husband Will Fielding built using<br />

native hardwood primarily from Vermont, where we lived.<br />

We immediately had a rapport for each other’s work and<br />

decided to collaborate, with Glenn engraving a design on<br />

a banjo in progress. It was a match made in banjo heaven<br />

and they worked on many more after that!<br />

Will and Glenn had the same sensibilities and love for<br />

elegant yet understated designs that only enhanced the<br />

beauty of Glenn’s engraving, contrasting with the wood<br />

using a minimum of finishes so as to honor the trees.<br />

Poetry in motion!<br />

Paula Fielding, Fielding Banjos<br />

“OME Banjos has offered hand-engraved Motherof-Pearl<br />

inlays on it’s banjos since early 1971 and Glenn<br />

Carson’s engraving is simply the finest we have ever seen!”<br />

Tanya Ogsbury<br />

Experience the culture of fascinating destinations in small group<br />

settings with expert guides, always with the focus on music.<br />

EXPERIENCE IRELAND AND ITS MUSIC AS THE LOCALS DO<br />

EXPLORE THE SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF SPAIN<br />

JOIN US FOR A MUSICAL JOURNEY THROUGH CUBA<br />

“I have traveled a lot,<br />

but never before with<br />

a focus on music.<br />

That focus made this<br />

particular trip into one I<br />

will never forget. Just go!”<br />

—MONICA<br />

JANUARY 2018 PARTICIPANT<br />

WWW.WINGERTGUITARS.COM • (310) 522-9596<br />

Colin Vance banjo/inlays – engraving by G. Carson<br />

LEARN MORE AT STRINGLETTER.COM/TRAVEL<br />

36 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 37


38 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

Jimmy Webb – A Conversation<br />

The shaping of a person is accomplished in many ways. Many factors influence how we develop<br />

and who we become as a person. There are of course the natural forces dictated by<br />

nature. Just as certain is the profound impact of nurture on the soul. We are nurtured in many<br />

ways beginning with family influences and then finished by our direct experiences with the<br />

outside world. For many people, music is a profound source of both identity and joy. The<br />

music of Jimmy Webb has indelibly left its mark on the soul of the world.<br />

The shaping of Jimmy Webb began in rural Oklahoma. His father was a Baptist minister who played<br />

guitar and his mother was an accordionist. Jimmy described his father as a “charming guy and good evangelist”<br />

and said that it was “wonderful to see him play his guitar and sing a hymn” during church services.<br />

The Webb family members were all singers and sang collectively in church. Jimmy started playing piano at<br />

the age of six and as he grew older and more proficient, he became the church pianist. It was this church<br />

environment that played a key role in the development of Jimmy Webb the musician that we know and<br />

love today.<br />

Jimmy was greatly influenced by being so deeply<br />

involved in the church community. He recalls<br />

that “life, death, salvation, and damnation were<br />

constant themes and people were in great emotional<br />

need.” In his view, the “emotional surround<br />

of organized religion cultivates the ability to feel<br />

and empathize and even be truly joyful.” This highly-emotional<br />

church experience provided the basis<br />

for the heartfelt music which was later created by<br />

Jimmy Webb. Practically speaking, in respect to his<br />

professional career, he also mentioned that “religion<br />

is the oldest show business there is.”<br />

Religion also proved to be a barrier to growth for<br />

Jimmy. The Webb children were not allowed to listen<br />

to or play rock and roll music or even to dance.<br />

Rock and roll music was considered the “devil’s<br />

instrument” and was believed to be designed to<br />

take over the lives of young people. Those were<br />

simply the religiously conservative views of the<br />

household. Still, like many other teenagers at that<br />

time, Jimmy would hide his radio in bed at night<br />

after his parents were sleeping and listen to the<br />

music that he loved. He also mentioned that he<br />

would “sneak into dances, hide in the back, and<br />

By John Detrick<br />

make myself as small as possible” just to experience<br />

the music.<br />

For as important as family was in the shaping of<br />

Jimmy Webb, it was perhaps the collapse of the<br />

family unit through tragedy that was just as significant.<br />

The Webb family had been living in southern<br />

California barely a year when his mother became<br />

ill. She was diagnosed with cancer and buried all<br />

within a five-week time period. In Jimmy’s words,<br />

her death “completely fractured the family.” Filled<br />

with despair and sadness, Jimmy’s father went<br />

home to Oklahoma with a couple of the Webb children.<br />

Jimmy and his sister Janice stayed in California.<br />

The father-son relationship was already quite<br />

strained for many reasons. Their goodbye was very<br />

emotional as Jimmy’s father cautioned him “Son,<br />

this songwriting thing is only going to break your<br />

heart.” This is where the story of Jimmy Webb the<br />

songwriter truly begins.<br />

At 17 years of age, Jimmy hit the streets of Hollywood<br />

with his portfolio in hand. If asked what<br />

he did professionally, he would reply that he was<br />

a songwriter even though he did not really have<br />

a songwriting credit at the time. In the blink of an<br />

eye, when he was approximately<br />

20, Jimmy Webb was<br />

a respected hit machine. By<br />

1967, he had By the Time<br />

I Get to Phoenix by Glenn<br />

Campbell and Up, Up and<br />

Away by the 5TH Dimension<br />

on the charts together. The<br />

competition for Record of the<br />

Year at the Grammy Awards<br />

was intense in 1967. As Jimmy<br />

explains it, he was up against<br />

Gentle on my Mind by John<br />

Hartford and Ode to Billie Joe<br />

by Bobbie Gentry – tracks he describes as “pretty<br />

fantastic records and great songs.” Ultimately, Jimmy’s<br />

Up, Up and Away won the prestigious award.<br />

To Jimmy, this time in his life “was a blur.” He<br />

was working as a contract writer for Johnny Rivers<br />

Music making $100.00 per week and driving a Camaro<br />

convertible as a company car – in his words<br />

“it was a groovy little niche.” He remembers going<br />

to the company accountant because he was worried<br />

about his taxes. He was told that he had not<br />

met the minimum filing threshold so he would not<br />

have to file a return or pay taxes. About a year later,<br />

after the success of By the Time I Get to Phoenix<br />

and Up, Up and Away, he went back to the accountant<br />

again to inquire about paying his taxes.<br />

Jimmy learned that he had gone from making<br />

essentially nothing to $60,000.00 in approximately<br />

one year. He commented “$60,000.00 wasn’t a<br />

bad living – especially at that time when money<br />

was worth a lot more. I was from Oklahoma and<br />

west Texas and we lived in places where we didn’t<br />

have two sticks to rub together. I didn’t even understand<br />

the words ‘sixty-thousand’ and I had<br />

never even heard anyone<br />

say ‘sixty-thousand dollars’<br />

before. I didn’t know there<br />

could be that much money in<br />

one place.” He continued “I<br />

was having a great time just<br />

writing songs, but I had to sit<br />

back and ask myself ‘what is<br />

this? This is something else.<br />

This was something entirely<br />

different – there was money.’<br />

And I have to say, me and<br />

money were a volatile combination.”<br />

The singer/songwriter model was never a particularly<br />

unusual approach in the music industry, but<br />

the listening world was also somewhat accustomed<br />

to the disciplines being separated. Singers such as<br />

Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, and Elvis Presley sang<br />

the songs, and songwriters such as Hal Arlen, Jerome<br />

Kern, and Johnny Mercer wrote the songs.<br />

There was a time though, in American music history<br />

when the singer/songwriter became the driving<br />

force in popular music. Jimmy describes that time<br />

of transition as having largely shaped his career. He<br />

summarizes the transition by saying “There have<br />

always been singer/songwriters. The Beatles, Neil<br />

Sedaka, and Paul Anka are all examples. What<br />

made it different was now you could only be a singer/songwriter.”<br />

Jimmy was primarily a songwriter, but he did<br />

perform his music as well. His idols were Burt<br />

Bacharach and Hal David. In his view, when Carole<br />

King released Tapestry, the world changed. “Tapestry<br />

was the catalyst for the singer/songwriter<br />

movement, and it was not just a singer/songwriter<br />

movement, but a movement of social change and<br />

cultural change. The pool of old songwriters was<br />

really alarmed. The old formula of getting a great<br />

song to a great singer was gone.” In his opinion,<br />

the singer/songwriter movement was very much<br />

a minimalist movement. “Artists like James Taylor<br />

and Simon and Garfunkel could load just their guitar<br />

cases and hit the road. It was almost anti-show<br />

business.” As Jimmy views it, “the economic model<br />

was at the heart of the movement” if only because<br />

it was very inexpensive to tour.<br />

When asked if the singer/songwriter movement<br />

still drives the industry today, his answer was no.<br />

“The music might be similar, but the touring model<br />

is not. All those guys, the hotel rooms, airfares,<br />

friends and families, the followers -- the whole traveling<br />

village that moves as one and manages to<br />

traverse the entire country and come down in some<br />

city and put on a show that night – a huge show –<br />

a broadway show. That’s today’s business model.<br />

The money is all at the top.” He continued to say<br />

“The singer/songwriter was pretty much a self-contained<br />

act. They didn’t require any special M&Ms in<br />

the dressing room. He usually wouldn’t need much<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 39


of a soundcheck and after the show he would head<br />

back to the Holiday Inn and then out of town. The<br />

beauty was that he got to keep much of the money.”<br />

Jimmy lamented that so many of the venues<br />

that supported the touring singer/songwriter, like<br />

The Bottom Line in New York, are simply gone. It<br />

seems that for some executives in the industry the<br />

music continues to be as much about the money as<br />

it does the art.<br />

The music and lifestyle of Laurel Canyon in the<br />

late 1960s and 1970s changed the world. Jimmy<br />

spent time in Laurel Canyon, but he was never really<br />

a part of the canyon scene. At the time, he was<br />

no longer working for Johnny Rivers Music. He was<br />

living with two college roommates, a small fireplace,<br />

and of course, his grand piano. He recalls<br />

being “only peripherally aware of the scene. I knew<br />

Joni Mitchell lived up the hill, but I did not know<br />

her. I knew there were other similar people living<br />

there, but I never went over and hung out. I was<br />

insulated and my life was always so booked up.”<br />

The peace and love hippie days were fading,<br />

and for Jimmy Webb, that rarified air was also<br />

mixed with judgement. He recalls “I was never<br />

considered to be a proper anti-government force.<br />

The truth is that I was a liberal. I was a pacifist. I was<br />

against the war in Viet Nam, but I was viewed as a<br />

smug little kid who had it made -- hanging out with<br />

really-rich people. I was viewed as someone who<br />

didn’t care about the issues of the day -- I was too<br />

rich to care.” The truth was that Jimmy’s personal<br />

commitment to liberalism, pacificism, and his antiwar<br />

stance came at great personal cost. Jimmy’s<br />

refusal to support the war in Viet Nam shattered his<br />

relationship with his father who was a former member<br />

of the United States Marine Corps and held<br />

deeply religious conservative views.<br />

The judgement that Jimmy experienced would<br />

have weighed heavily on the shoulders of any<br />

feeling person. He specifically recalls playing at<br />

the now-famous Troubadour one night when the<br />

resentment over his success could not have been<br />

more evident. It was a simple snub, but a nonetheless<br />

powerful rejection when an anonymous critic<br />

wrote on the dressing room wall “Jimmy Webb<br />

plays good cash register.” Being rejected as an<br />

outsider by supposedly like-minded people was<br />

difficult for Jimmy. I suppose the reality is that success<br />

quite often breeds resentment.<br />

As we talked, Jimmy contemplated the possibility<br />

that he had developed a complex of sorts from<br />

the rejection of those times. “I spent a good many<br />

years trying to prove I was one of the guys.” The<br />

cultural, social, and political reality of Jimmy’s life<br />

was quite different than what was perceived by<br />

many. “I was at the Monterey Pop Festival. I was on<br />

the stage at the birth of the relationship between<br />

rock and roll and left-wing politics. I was there<br />

when it was born. I was playing. I was in my hippie<br />

garb -- I had my uniform on. So, it’s very hard<br />

for me to have people who don’t know me and<br />

don’t understand that side of me just dismiss me<br />

as a flash-in-the pan, middle-of-the-road songwriter<br />

from the sixties.” It seems that when we judge<br />

another person it reveals more about who we are<br />

than the person being judged.<br />

Discussing that time in music history with Jimmy<br />

is both enlightening and entertaining. I asked if he<br />

thought the 1960s and 1970s time period was being<br />

represented well and accurately by both the<br />

media and in documentaries. He commented “I<br />

know this -- nostalgia is alive and well. People tend<br />

to love that music. I notice that a lot of advertisers<br />

are using that music -- The Beatles and The Rolling<br />

Stones – it would not surprise me to see Joe Cocker<br />

advertising socks.” The reflections and insights<br />

of Jimmy Webb on that time in American history<br />

come from someone who is eminently qualified to<br />

speak on the subject.<br />

It is easy to agree when Jimmy states “Nothing<br />

has come close to that time in music. I am going to<br />

make one of those statements that I am famous for<br />

-- I don’t think there is any music since the 1960s<br />

and 1970s that has been any better.” Jimmy is a<br />

master craftsman, so “melody, chord structure,<br />

construction, the architecture of the way these<br />

things were put together” are all very important to<br />

him. “To me, that all seemed to have peaked with<br />

The Beach Boys and Pet Sounds.” Respected record<br />

producer George Martin, who produced The<br />

Beatles, was like a second father to Jimmy. Martin’s<br />

view of the seminal work created by Brian Wilson in<br />

the Pet Sounds recording supports Jimmy Webb’s<br />

opinion. Jimmy quoted George Martin from a<br />

conversation they shared, “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely<br />

Hearts Club Band was only an attempt to equal<br />

Pet Sounds.” The meaning of Martin’s comment<br />

was quite simply that The Beatles had created a<br />

masterpiece that was not the artistic equal to Pet<br />

Sounds. Jimmy believes that those two albums<br />

together “created one of the most fertile and experimental<br />

audio scenes” in history. For those of<br />

us who lived through those musical times, those<br />

moments can only be remembered as magical.<br />

As the years have unfolded, the impact of Jimmy’s<br />

own body of work on musicians has been profound.<br />

It is dangerous to begin listing those with<br />

whom he has worked because of the risk of missing<br />

someone significant. As examples of his collaborative<br />

efforts, his album releases Still Within the<br />

Sound of My Voice (2013) and Just Across the River<br />

(2010) show clearly the appreciation his work commands.<br />

These fine recordings include performance<br />

partnerships with Mark Knopfler, Jackson Browne,<br />

Linda Ronstadt, Keith Urban, David Crosby and<br />

Graham Nash, Brian Wilson, Vince Gill, Billy Joel,<br />

40 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 41


J.D. Souther, Kris Kristofferson, and Michael Mc-<br />

Donald. Just as significant are the respected artists<br />

who have performed his work. A small sampling<br />

of those performers includes Art Garfunkel, Frank<br />

Sinatra, The 5TH Dimension, Glen Campbell, Linda<br />

Ronstadt, Waylon Jennings, and Richard Harris.<br />

Jimmy may be a piano player, but he has a great<br />

appreciation of the guitar. His father was a guitar<br />

player who played an old Silvertone and his memories<br />

of that instrument are fond. To Jimmy, the<br />

guitar is a more technically difficult instrument to<br />

master. He is a collector of many things, and his<br />

collection includes an Ovation Bluebird that was<br />

the last guitar autographed by Glen Campbell. He<br />

is also fascinated by the Concorde SST and has collected<br />

nearly everything that flew on that magnificent<br />

machine. Among his other passions is flying<br />

radio-controlled planes.<br />

When asked about his most significant life lessons,<br />

he says that simply telling the truth and being<br />

honest is most important. As his father often told<br />

him, “when you tell the truth you don’t have to remember<br />

what you said...” Recalling his life, he said<br />

“I did a lot of things right. I took a lot of chances.<br />

I’m glad I was foolhardy at times and I’m glad I<br />

took chances. There is a lot of debatable behavior<br />

that I embrace as healthy. The willingness to hang<br />

it out there and go for something that seems impossible<br />

is a quality. I see a certain kind of recklessness<br />

as an attribute.”<br />

It was hard for a young person to grow up during<br />

the 1960s and 1970s and not be impacted by the<br />

work of Jimmy Webb. For many of us, his songwriting<br />

provided comfort and let us know that we were<br />

not alone in our youthful heartache and our quests<br />

for love. For all of its technical quality and artistic<br />

mastery, perhaps the most important aspect of the<br />

music of Jimmy Webb is its emotional honesty -- it<br />

clearly comes from the heart. We are older now<br />

and the hearts of the young romantics we once<br />

were have tempered with age. Jimmy Webb is no<br />

different. We all experience heartache and sadness<br />

and pure joy. Through it all, Jimmy acknowledges<br />

softly that a “young heart still beats in my chest.”<br />

The mark that Jimmy Webb has left on our lives<br />

through his creative efforts is both profound and<br />

heart-warming. When asked about his impact<br />

on the music world, Jimmy humbly commented<br />

“There are places where you realize you made perhaps<br />

a little indentation on the world – left a place<br />

where some other bird has perched on their own<br />

flight. It’s flattering. It’s a nice thing to know when<br />

you are an old man -- however ephemeral it may<br />

have been – it may have been just a watermark, but<br />

that you left a kind of likeness on the face of music<br />

itself.” There can be no greater appreciation of a<br />

man’s work than the simple recognition of the souls<br />

that he has touched along the way. The work of<br />

Jimmy Webb has provided solace, joy, enjoyment,<br />

and a sense of belonging to millions of music lovers.<br />

Jimmy Webb has created a body of work that<br />

is truly historic in quality and will be appreciated for<br />

generations to come.<br />

Experience<br />

McKnight<br />

Guitars<br />

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SM Guitar and Music Stand<br />

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www.mcknightguitars.com<br />

42 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 43


44 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

5<br />

Minutes<br />

with<br />

Kent “Carlos” Everett<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Personal sacrifice<br />

seems to be quite common in<br />

the career of guitar-making as young<br />

craftspeople strive to find their place in the community and<br />

world. Legend has it that you personally worked many other<br />

jobs in the early days to support your guitar-making career.<br />

What do you suppose generates such a level of passion<br />

in the craft that guitar makers are willing to endure such<br />

personal sacrifice for just the opportunity to create a fine<br />

instrument?<br />

Kent “Carlos” Everett: I got my first job at 15, built my first<br />

guitar at 20, and after 5 years of searching found a job working<br />

on guitars full time at 25. So my work career has been<br />

primarily guitars. Even so I still draw on the carpentry / cabinet<br />

shop work I did and those crusty old guys I worked with.<br />

What drove me personally? My love of the craft. Period.<br />

Almost every student will talk about how much they love<br />

building guitars. Well , we will see won’t we? Enjoying<br />

building a guitar for your friend and taking that huge step<br />

to career are two different things.<br />

I am in the position I am now, because of making stupid<br />

business decisions when I was young. I was hell bent on<br />

making a career at luthiery from day one. That was stupid.<br />

Especially in 1977. Youthful exuberance saw me through.<br />

I can tell you this, it is hard to “make it” in any ‘off the<br />

path’ career. Those who figure out how, are the truly<br />

inspirational ones. (or exceptionally crazy)<br />

I am not saying to simply hang on while the<br />

bank account spirals down. What I am saying is<br />

figuring out how to make a living with the skills<br />

you yourself have – be honest with yourself – in<br />

the market that you find yourself. These different<br />

career paths are fields that society has no norms<br />

for… , so you are on your own.<br />

Well, when you can pull that off, you have<br />

really done something. It will not happen overnight.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You have enjoyed prominent<br />

musicians such as Brad Paisley, Amy Ray<br />

of the Indigo Girls, and the legendary Gregg<br />

Allman who have all played your<br />

instruments. For many guitar makers,<br />

having a famous and influential<br />

musician embrace their instrument<br />

is a career changing event. Do<br />

you have any advice for how a<br />

builder might nurture those<br />

relationships or an opinion<br />

of just how important they<br />

truly are?<br />

Kent “Carlos” Everett: I<br />

am not sure if it makes a difference.<br />

Have I ever had anyone come up<br />

and say I want a guitar because Brad Paisley has one? No.<br />

Have I had people buy guitars because Don Cognoscenti<br />

or Bebo Norman have one? Lots and lots. Chasing down<br />

top famous people might not be worth the effort. Sometimes<br />

the unexpected regional talent might have a large<br />

loyal following too.<br />

Two examples to back this up. I remember the time a car<br />

load of guys from Mississippi came to my shop in Atlanta. 4<br />

out of the 5 bought a guitar. They were Bebo Norman fans.<br />

Who? Right; that I what I’m saying.<br />

Here is a little story that might explain it better.<br />

I did some work for the guitar player with Jimmy Buffett.<br />

He loved my guitars and took one to Jimmy to use in the<br />

studio during a recording session in the Bahamas. After<br />

some positive comments about the guitar, my friend said<br />

to Jimmy, “Here’s the deal. Carlos will sell you the guitar for<br />

$x. But if you feel like promoting it, the cost would be $x-y.<br />

And Jimmy said, ”Here’s the deal. I have a house full of<br />

guitars. I don’t want it. I don’t need it.” That was a lesson for<br />

me. Of course every town Buffett goes to someone wants to<br />

give him a guitar. Martin gives him whatever pearl encrusted<br />

thing he wants. And I was not giving mine away. Buffett<br />

playing an Everett would really be a huge uphill battle.<br />

As Brad Paisley got larger, his producer asked if I could<br />

supply the entire band with Everetts. (Allegedly for free for<br />

the promotional aspect of things.) Now, that was a real gift<br />

and opportunity. But little ol’ me cannot do that. As a small<br />

pimple on the underbelly of the music industry, it is impossible<br />

to keep up with the big boys. So why try? I tend to meet<br />

the famous ones in two ways : either as they are heading up<br />

the ladder of their own careers or through word of mouth.<br />

They heard of me. Now that is a flip. I would suggest not<br />

chasing down the big boys, but find your own route.<br />

Also as a side to this , I have been really bad about waving<br />

the ‘famous customer ‘ flag around. I want the player<br />

to buy my guitar because they love it. Love it!<br />

Not because Amy, Gregg, Brad, David, etc… love theirs.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You have mentioned having a passion<br />

for art and especially sculpture. Your love of the automobile<br />

cont’d on page 47<br />

5<br />

Minutes<br />

with<br />

Bruce Sexauer<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You’ve written<br />

about a long-standing disciplined<br />

approach to practicing the<br />

guitar with some of your practice sessions lasting as long<br />

as six hours. With a musical instrument, practice can be<br />

achieved by running scales and going over chord progressions.<br />

Woodworking seems very different. Does this same<br />

disciplined approach apply to learning woodworking?<br />

Bruce Sexauer: I have been playing guitar for 55 years,<br />

only slightly longer than I have been making them. My 6<br />

hour practice sessions were early in my playing life, when I<br />

thought music was my calling. By the age of 30 I knew my<br />

greater talent is lutherie.<br />

I have never “practiced” woodworking, instead taking<br />

what I learn from both success and failure on to the next<br />

project. With over 500 unique instruments behind me, that<br />

makes a lot of conceptual knowledge to bring to bear. Tool<br />

skills are another thing, and 52 years of learning what sharp<br />

means, means that the realization of the current concept<br />

happens increasingly quickly and with greater precision.<br />

In both Lutherie and music my goals are about personal<br />

mastery. In music this means developing my skill to the<br />

point where I am able to speak the language of music fluently,<br />

and not to simply mimic what others have “said”. In<br />

lutherie this means building each instrument to speak to its<br />

fullest potential, without particular regard for its size, shape,<br />

or material choices. Not only to have volume and tone, but<br />

to have these qualities in equal proportion in all registers<br />

and at all pitches, making the instrument a level playing<br />

field from the player’s POV, and<br />

at the highest level possible.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Your philosophy<br />

on guitar making is focused<br />

on improving the quality<br />

of each guitar rather than on<br />

efficiency and increased production.<br />

The guitar seems to<br />

be a fairly well-defined object<br />

with not a lot of opportunity for<br />

radical change. Do you feel that<br />

personal innovation is still very<br />

much a part of the process of<br />

guitar making?<br />

Bruce Sexauer: I have been using<br />

the tag line “Cutting Edge<br />

Traditional” for a few years.<br />

Many builders are pursuing<br />

“modern” ideas in construction<br />

and aesthetics, but I see much<br />

of this as merely trendy. Instead,<br />

I feel that the traditional guitar<br />

has not yet been fully developed,<br />

and put most of my effort<br />

into further refinement. The<br />

true magic of the guitar is in the<br />

incredibly subtle balance found in the relative proportion of<br />

its components. My acoustic guitars are rooted in Martin’s<br />

Golden Era, and it is clear to me that there are several areas<br />

that can be improved on that model without having a design<br />

revolution, instead I am favoring evolution.<br />

What might be called innovation in my work is mostly just<br />

a rearrangement of old ideas. I “wedge” almost every guitar<br />

I make. There is no cost to the guitar or the customer that<br />

I can see, and it makes the instrument much more friendly.<br />

MultiScale has been around for hundreds of years, and<br />

adapting the guitar shape to the twisted bridge was an evolution.<br />

Because I work without fixed jigs and fixtures, each<br />

guitar is essentially created new, and incremental change<br />

will continue to be my style.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You have an interest and passion in<br />

European design and engineering as evidenced in your appreciation<br />

of Ducati motorcycles. The Italians, Enzo Ferrari<br />

for example, sure do understand physical beauty. Is your<br />

work making guitars inspired by totally unrelated design<br />

marvels?<br />

Bruce Sexauer: Many people know of the work of violin luthier<br />

Antonio Stradivari. They like to suggest that I am the<br />

guitar Stradivari of our time. They know about Tony because<br />

he was incredibly prolific, making some 1500 violins in his<br />

long working life. He had help, keeping a 5 person shop<br />

busy,making essentially the same instrument repeatedly.<br />

Many think Guarneri, a contemporary of Stradivari, made the<br />

better violin, but he made a lot less of them, perhaps 300.<br />

He used paper templates which had a limited life and so had<br />

to constantly recreate his designs.<br />

He also had a life outside<br />

of lutherie. This is me, I hope.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: The never-ending<br />

search for the ideal<br />

wood is surely a big part of<br />

the process of making a guitar.<br />

How much time do you actually<br />

spend sourcing tonewoods?<br />

Do you typically rely on proven<br />

sources within the industry,<br />

or is there a component of the<br />

search that is based on finding<br />

an unusual or rare piece of<br />

wood in a surprising location?<br />

Bruce Sexauer: Early in my career<br />

I spent time sourcing tonewoods.<br />

I have made a trip to<br />

South America for rosewood,<br />

and to Canada for spruce. I<br />

have a pair of chainsaws and<br />

a pickup truck. There are great<br />

trees all around us, and cruising<br />

the suburbs after a windstorm<br />

has been very fruitful.<br />

cont’d on page 47<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 45


Kent “Carlos” Everett cont’d from page 44<br />

is also well-known. How do other art forms influence or inform<br />

your guitar making work?<br />

Kent “Carlos” Everett: Honestly for me at this point, the<br />

guitar building influences the other stuff. Not the other way<br />

around. My attention to detail really comes in handy when<br />

rebuilding a weber idf 40 downdraft carburetor.<br />

The guitar is my life. The other stuff is what I do for fun.<br />

But I have always enjoyed art and been inspired by it. I remember<br />

even in high school taking the bus to the Atlanta<br />

art museums to walk around and see how they did it. And<br />

now that I am semi-retired, I get to explore the other stuff<br />

more. But not to dodge the question – design does move<br />

me. Not just the curve or shape, but the thought behind<br />

that curve. That is where the magic is. I still love looking at<br />

art, sculpture, antique cars, etc… In fact our vacations tend<br />

to rotate around it.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: A spirit of generosity dominates the<br />

guitar making community. It seems as though there is always<br />

a willingness by guitar makers to share everything from<br />

evolving techniques to even the finest guitar making materials<br />

such as rare exotic woods. You have personally chosen<br />

to educate aspiring guitar makers. In a career where time<br />

must be so very valuable and scarce, why have you chosen<br />

to share your unique knowledge and techniques in an educational<br />

setting?<br />

Kent “Carlos” Everett: I enjoyed it. That simple. Guitar<br />

building is a solitary career - being alone in the shop. It is<br />

very meditative and encompassing. Often I look up and say,<br />

“Oops, it’s dark outside. I wonder how late it is?” Time just<br />

got away - again.<br />

On the other hand, teaching is a sharing experience. In<br />

my teaching I work hard at not dis-crediting other approaches<br />

and not self-aggrandizing. The work will speak for itself<br />

and much louder anyway. Teaching is a communication<br />

exercise and learning to speak in a language that the particular<br />

student can understand is the teacher’s goal. I have<br />

had many students come back during their development as<br />

builders to take classes again. They can absorb more when<br />

they know more.<br />

Here it is important to say, I am no longer teaching. I did<br />

it as a fun side activity for 30 years and now the antique cars<br />

that need restoration in my garage are calling me. I think part<br />

of being a good teacher is knowing when to quit. I’ll miss it.<br />

I certainly met some really great folks through teaching and<br />

now enjoy watching many of them build great guitars.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Please name three recordings that<br />

you think would be a great addition to any music library or<br />

collection.<br />

Kent “Carlos” Everett: Three eh?<br />

Nick Drake - 5 Leaves left<br />

Michael Hedges - Breakfast in the Field<br />

Otis Redding – Got to get Back<br />

But that is just off the top of my head.<br />

I feel I am being unfair to Al Petteway, Adam Rafferty, Augusto<br />

Barrios, Paco de Lucia, Russell Malone, Sister Tharpe,<br />

Albert King, Albert Collins, Barry Richman, Bonnie Raitt, …<br />

Gee … there are really lots. Isn’t it great to have a life with<br />

so much good music in it!<br />

Bruce Sexauer cont’d from page 45<br />

For many years people with interesting wood have offered<br />

it to me at fair prices. Because I have honed my skill at assessing<br />

wood, I often decide to buy. This despite the fact<br />

that I have at least 500 guitar sets in my wood locker, and a<br />

reasonable expectation that I will build less than 100 more<br />

in the time I have left.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Please name three recordings that<br />

you think would be a great addition to any music library or<br />

collection.<br />

Bruce Sexauer: I am not competent to answer this question.<br />

I cannot listen to music while I am working as I cannot<br />

work while I am listening to music. I spend 10 hours a day in<br />

the shop, and I play guitar or violin for 1 to 2 hours of that<br />

time most days. I have a stack of unopened CDs recorded<br />

by people I know. It is embarrassing.<br />

46 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 47


y John DetrickWhat a<br />

by Dana Bourgeois<br />

truly amazing<br />

time to build guitars.<br />

In January of 1964, I saw The Beatles on the Ed<br />

Sullivan Show and had to have a guitar. Fortunately<br />

for my future profession, I wasn’t alone. In my<br />

hometown and across the nation, platoons of kids<br />

persuaded parents to bring home all varieties of<br />

no-name electrics and acoustics: Silvertones, Teisco<br />

Del Ray’s, Guilds, and even a few Martins and<br />

Gibsons. The movement was on. Offspring of the<br />

Greatest Generation set about learning chords<br />

and riffs, blistering fingers, trading songs, forming<br />

garage bands and consuming all forms of popular<br />

music. The guitar became my video game, at<br />

times forcing my parents to stage interventions<br />

just to get me outdoors. Looking back, I was never<br />

an accomplished player. But I was always a serious<br />

player. Guitar was fun, and it allowed me to occasionally<br />

hang with the cool kids.<br />

My first attempts at lutherie consisted of drawing<br />

miniature Fenders, Gibsons, Rickenbackers, Hoffner<br />

basses, etc., on little plywood paddle boards,<br />

cutting the outlines on my dad’s bandsaw and<br />

painting relatively accurate details with model airplane<br />

enamels. My dad removed and hid electrical<br />

fuses to prevent us kids from using his power tools.<br />

I figured out how to hack the bandsaw by removing<br />

the guards and persuading my brother to turn<br />

the wheels by hand. He’d get up a head of steam<br />

while I steered the cuts, one-eighth of an inch at a<br />

time, until the blade literally ground to a halt.<br />

When I started building real guitars, there were<br />

no guitar schools and certainly no Google and You-<br />

Tube. I knew of only one practicing luthier, Nick<br />

Apollonio, who lived a couple hours away (and,<br />

btw, is still going strong). I had access to a couple<br />

books on the subject, but the methods they revealed<br />

were either hopelessly unreliable (“boil the<br />

sides in a tub of water, tie them to the mold with<br />

string”), or hopelessly unachievable (“your milling<br />

machine is the best tool for cutting saddle slots”).<br />

Somehow I persevered, making and even selling<br />

a guitar here and there. In retrospect, it’s amazing<br />

what a little passion and determination can accomplish.<br />

In the mid-seventies popular music roared to a<br />

crescendo. Local bands played everywhere, and<br />

the guitar was more popular than ever. Handmade<br />

guitars didn’t yet pay the bills. All those Guilds,<br />

Hummingbirds and D-35s that kids my age took<br />

to college eventually needed maintenance, and<br />

at one point or another many found their way to<br />

my workbench. Having no local competition, I<br />

could make a pretty good living producing what<br />

I now know to be mediocre work. Back then, decent<br />

apartments went for $300/month and a re-fret<br />

brought in $75. So glad I’m not starting out now.<br />

Along the way I began to meet a few pros whose<br />

work, depth of experience and business models<br />

rocked my little world. Through the Whole Earth<br />

Catalogue I learned that Michael Gurian ran what<br />

would now be called a boutique production shop,<br />

in Hinsdale, NH. I made quite a few round trip,<br />

eight-hour drives to Hinsdale for the privilege of<br />

selecting and purchasing tonewoods, getting my<br />

first peeks at a real guitar operation, and receiving<br />

occasional words of wisdom from someone who<br />

knew a lot more than I did. Walter Lipton built steel<br />

string and classical guitars in Orford, NH, and also<br />

sold wood. And Michael Cone built world class<br />

classical guitars, using only hand tools, in an offgrid<br />

house New Vinyard, Maine. Michael turned<br />

me on to the Guild of American Luthiers. I became<br />

a member and attended their 1979 convention in<br />

Boston, where I met John Monteleone, Steve Klein<br />

and David Russel Young. Wow.<br />

By the time the 80s rolled around, I had saturated<br />

my southern Maine market. I needed either to<br />

project my services to a bigger community or relocate<br />

from the area my ancestors had settled back<br />

in the mid-eighteenth century. Fortunately, I didn’t<br />

relocate. The Big Time came to me when I met<br />

Eric Schoenberg and began repairing and restoring<br />

real vintage guitars from his personal collection<br />

and from The Music Emporium, the shop he coowned<br />

in Cambridge, MA. The first half of the decade<br />

was spent making bi-weekly or monthly treks<br />

to Cambridge to pick up and drop off repair work.<br />

Soon I and my apprentice, TJ Thompson, had a<br />

serious backlog of vintage repair and restoration<br />

work. During those Boston trips I got to meet and<br />

later know a few of my acoustic<br />

guitar heroes, including Russ<br />

Barenberg, Tony Rice, Norman<br />

Blake and Doc Watson. More<br />

importantly, I got to hear them<br />

play guitars I had built. The ideal<br />

I strove for, and still do, was<br />

the sound of a truly great vintage<br />

guitar in the hands of a<br />

great player. In no way is that<br />

actually possible to achieve…<br />

probably ever, and certainly<br />

not back then. But it’s good to<br />

have standards and even better<br />

to understand exactly how<br />

one measures up to them. Tony<br />

Rice once told me, “This guitar<br />

doesn’t quite make it, man.”<br />

Though I still wince at the recollection,<br />

Tony’s unique brand of<br />

kindness and honesty probably<br />

was, in the big picture, at least<br />

as valuable as the last couple<br />

digits on my right hand.<br />

In the mid-eighties, Eric asked<br />

Chris Martin if C.F. Martin’s new<br />

Custom Shop would build a guitar along the lines<br />

of a cutaway OM I had by that time developed.<br />

Chris answered that it wasn’t anything they’d consider<br />

building under the Martin name. And that’s<br />

how Schoenberg Guitars was born, with me as a<br />

founding co-partner. For a few years I selected<br />

wood, made specialty parts, and voiced guitars at<br />

the Martin factory like it was no<br />

big deal. Based on my Schoenberg<br />

Guitars experience, I later<br />

got a gig with Gibson as a process<br />

design consultant, helping<br />

the company open an acoustic<br />

guitar factory in Bozeman,<br />

Montana. Then I got hired by<br />

PRS to help develop a business<br />

plan and product line for an<br />

acoustic guitar division. Around<br />

the dawn of the 90s, Paul had<br />

decided that he wasn’t yet<br />

ready for acoustics and I was<br />

on my own again. That decade<br />

flew by.<br />

After spending two years<br />

planning someone else’s acoustic<br />

guitar venture, having a go<br />

on my own seemed like the natural<br />

next thing to do. The time<br />

was right. By the early 90s, many<br />

of the kids I grew up and went<br />

to college with found themselves<br />

living in better neighborhoods<br />

and rediscovering the<br />

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guitar as a quality, leisure-time experience. Santa<br />

Cruz and Collings emerged as premium brands.<br />

The “acoustic boutique” retail support model, the<br />

ease of small package shipping pioneered by UPS<br />

and FedEx, and, moreover, the emergence of the<br />

internet—all helped pave direct paths between my<br />

fledgling business and The Market. I distinctly remember<br />

blowing away a couple of my dealers after<br />

transforming a three-fold brochure into a website.<br />

Most significantly for the shape of my new business<br />

model, I had seen CNC technology out in the Big<br />

World. Tom Anderson and Bob Taylor were early<br />

pioneers. I determined not to lag far behind. I remember<br />

the skepticism of some dealers and customers,<br />

who, early on, couldn’t quite understand<br />

that properly deployed CNC technology actually<br />

enhances product quality and in no way corrupts<br />

the “handmade” ideal. These days, dozens and<br />

dozens of individual luthiers incorporate CNC-produced<br />

components in the building of their indisputably<br />

handmade guitars. Hand saws, power<br />

saws, and CNC mills, it turns out, are equally incapable<br />

of producing quality product in the absence<br />

of superior design and highly skilled operation.<br />

Much of the going was, and still can be, rough.<br />

I learned the hard way not to run a business on<br />

credit cards, not to pledge your house as collateral<br />

for a business loan, not to hire close friends,<br />

relatives or anyone expecting lifetime job security.<br />

I learned that locally hired employees tend to stick<br />

around longer than someone who’s willing to drive<br />

across the country to start work in the spring but<br />

doesn’t own a pair of winter boots. And I learned<br />

that high-level skill in any craft can be a better<br />

qualification for production guitar work than considerable<br />

lutherie experience, if accompanied by<br />

intelligence, character, positive attitude and excellent<br />

communication skills. The learning curve has<br />

yet to flatten.<br />

Twenty-five years and three production shops<br />

later, I’m still making expensive sawdust. Bourgeois<br />

Guitars now has eighteen employees and produces<br />

about four hundred guitars in a good year. We<br />

recently moved to a newly renovated 8,000 square<br />

foot facility in an 1880s Lewiston, Maine, textile<br />

mill. I hope this was my last relocation. (Hold me<br />

to it…please!) Though my title is CEO, I still spend<br />

the lion’s share of my time working in the shop.<br />

When I’m not in management meetings or on the<br />

road at promotional events, I select wood, voice<br />

tops and backs, inspect guitars at various stages of<br />

construction and upon completion, work on prototypes<br />

and new tooling, and sometimes empty the<br />

trash. My medium-range goals are the continual<br />

optimization of workplace culture to promote and<br />

reward teamwork, and the maintenance of consistent<br />

quality standards across diverse combinations<br />

of body styles, tonewoods and price points. My<br />

long-term goal is figuring out how the hell to retire.<br />

Let me repeat, this has been a truly amazing<br />

time to build guitars. The common thread running<br />

through my entire career is the seemingly miraculous<br />

opening of doors, precisely at times when<br />

entrances and exits made a difference. Along the<br />

way I was often smart enough to recognize opportunities<br />

when I saw them. Hard work, a little tal-<br />

ent and an ability to learn from mistakes helped<br />

a lot. Someone once said that eighty percent of<br />

success is showing up. And that may be right. I’d<br />

be a fool, however, not to acknowledge just how<br />

lucky I’ve also been. I was lucky to be born into a<br />

generation that adores guitar music and guitars. I<br />

was lucky to begin my career at a time when iconic<br />

American guitar manufacturers produced products<br />

of historically low quality. I was lucky to enjoy a<br />

peer network of truly great luthiers, many of whom<br />

loved nothing better than talking shop. I was lucky<br />

to have just enough skills to take advantage of the<br />

moment when older used guitars began a historic<br />

transformation into vintage guitars. I was lucky to<br />

get to know some of the greatest acoustic guitarists<br />

of the American Roots genre. I was lucky to<br />

experience a taste of the corporate guitar world<br />

just at a time when old-line companies began to<br />

feel the need for new blood. I was lucky to launch<br />

a business at a time when emerging technologies<br />

brought certain advantages to early adopters. And<br />

I was lucky to enjoy a forty-plus year marriage to a<br />

wonderful wife (with a good job), who supported<br />

me through numerous bumpy patches.<br />

Most of all, I was lucky to find a way to follow my<br />

passion for music, guitars, and the joys these gifts<br />

bring to so many people.<br />

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Form follows function is a term closely connected to<br />

20TH century modernist architecture and industrial<br />

design. The fundamental principle is simply that the<br />

shape of a building or an object (form) should first<br />

relate to its planned purpose (function). The modern guitar<br />

may be the perfect marriage of form and function.<br />

The Artisan Guitar Show is privileged to present some of<br />

the finest guitar makers in the world each year. The show is<br />

home to guitars that represent the absolute cutting edge of<br />

innovation in the craft. Just as significant is the focus on the<br />

aesthetic details of the instruments presented during the<br />

show. Our guitar makers are respected globally for creating<br />

instruments that are the perfect blend of sonic or tonal quality<br />

and physical beauty.<br />

Many guitar enthusiasts never have the opportunity to<br />

see or play one of these magnificent, hand-crafted guitars.<br />

Those opportunities typically exist only through visiting<br />

Ben Wilborn<br />

In the Eye of the Beholder…<br />

museums, the rare guitar shop specializing in high-quality,<br />

hand-crafted instruments, an event like the Artisan Guitar<br />

Show, or by establishing a direct relationship with a guitar<br />

maker. The closest many of us get is seeing a striking photograph.<br />

Much of the guitar photography we see is remarkable,<br />

but it is truly nothing more than well-done product photography.<br />

There are those shots though that transcend product<br />

photography to become fine art photography. We asked a<br />

select group of guitar makers to choose a photograph that<br />

they viewed as being fine art or simply impacted them for<br />

its message or other reason. These guitar makers were also<br />

asked to provide a comment as to why the photograph was<br />

powerful to them.<br />

We hope that you enjoy these beautiful photos and the<br />

words that accompany them.<br />

Burton LeGeyt<br />

Tyler Robbins<br />

“What I like most about this picture is the gradual<br />

focus along the backplate. The lines become crisp<br />

and you are drawn in to the geometry in a way you<br />

would not be if the focal length was longer. The pattern<br />

grows, both in perspective and literally, as the<br />

design is parametric and increases slightly in scale<br />

as it moves away from the guitar body. The guitar<br />

itself is not pictured, and the neck becomes a compositional<br />

aspect of the photo instead of a purely<br />

documentary one. Obviously a guitar, especially for<br />

someone very familiar with one, but highlighting a<br />

non standard detail, and in a highly stylized way. I<br />

don’t consider this fine art photography in any way<br />

but I do think it approaches product photography<br />

with a desire to abstract the usual goal of simply<br />

presenting an instrument as built.” Burton LeGeyt,<br />

LeGeyt Instruments<br />

Eric Weigeshoff<br />

“I don’t know if these cross the line into art, but I think they<br />

are luscious detail shots. I hope they are magazine worthy! “<br />

Ben Wilborn, Wilborn Guitars<br />

“I really like this photo. To me it conveys the late nights<br />

and the solitude that I often find myself in while working. It<br />

is also bringing to light a bit of the chaos that is Luthierie.<br />

There’s tape and dust and blades everywhere which is probably<br />

pretty confusing to a lot of people. I love that it highlights<br />

the unseen steps of guitar building to show how much<br />

effort and how many hours we really put into our craft!”<br />

Tyler Robbins, Robbins Acoustics<br />

“Here is a shot of one of my guitars entitled “The<br />

Dark Side of the Moon”. I’m not good at quotes,<br />

but I would say that this photo is less about guitars<br />

and more about the study of light and dark. It’s one<br />

of my favorite photos of any of my instruments.”<br />

Eric Weigeshoff, Skytop Guitars<br />

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Ken Parker<br />

“Gotta love it, these<br />

little braces contribute<br />

so much to the voice<br />

of the instrument.”<br />

Ken Parker,<br />

Ken Parker Archtops<br />

Michael Greenfield<br />

Maegen Wells<br />

“When I look at this photo, I<br />

see one of the few angles that<br />

truly captures all of the beautiful<br />

intricacies that define the<br />

Archtop guitar; and then it<br />

transforms into a city skyline.”<br />

“The flow of the overlapping rim assemblies presents an abstract landscape<br />

with a lot of motion in it for an image that is basically still life.”<br />

Michael Greenfield, Greenfield Guitars<br />

Mirko Borghino<br />

“There is no finer art than<br />

Nature. I truly believe the<br />

beauty and power that embraces<br />

this photograph<br />

comes not from the guitar,<br />

but from the tree that it<br />

once was.”<br />

“It’s an incredible experience<br />

to see a photo of a<br />

guitar you’ve never seen<br />

before, and it instantly<br />

feels like you’re holding<br />

it in your arms. You can<br />

even hear the music.”<br />

Maegen Wells,<br />

Maegen Wells Guitars<br />

“In this photograph it is easy to recognize the<br />

many different faces of the Luthier. By photographing<br />

a rough carpenter bench and hand<br />

tools, the years of experience and hours of<br />

research required to transition older traditions<br />

to modern technology is evident – it is<br />

the meeting of the old and new that allows us<br />

to make the finest artistic musical instrument.”<br />

Mirko Borghino, Borghino Guitars<br />

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Patrick Morrissey<br />

“Simple in its design but<br />

executed perfectly - I take as<br />

much pride in the inside of the<br />

guitars as I do the outside.”<br />

Patrick Morrissey, Morrisey<br />

Guitars<br />

Tom Ribbecke<br />

“This is my favorite saying of all, ‘There is no great art<br />

without great science and no great science without art! ‘“<br />

Tom Ribbecke, Ribbecke Guitars<br />

“Hand planes, chisels, rasps, give<br />

you that connection with the wood<br />

- all these years later it is still satisfying<br />

and rewarding. Sanding, not<br />

so much.”<br />

SAM GUIDRY<br />

Jason Kostal<br />

Photo is by Jessica Savidge<br />

“Photography is one of the most important<br />

aspects of building a guitar because, for many<br />

boutique builders, it is the only way someone<br />

will interact with our guitars before committing<br />

to order one. Photos need to convey<br />

a desire to be a part of the process, and to<br />

someday own something created by that<br />

luthier. This photo conveys art, motion, process,<br />

and curiosity. It shows my stained glass<br />

rosette, which has become a bit of a signature<br />

aspect for me, while being cut with a tool<br />

handmade by another artisan, which adds interest<br />

to the shot. The fact that a soundhole is<br />

being cut implies motion of some kind which<br />

makes the photo feel less stagnant, and the<br />

fact that you are only seeing one moment of<br />

that process makes the viewer want to see and<br />

understand more. It creates a sense of understanding<br />

AND longing all at the same time.”<br />

Jason Kostal, Kostal Guitars<br />

“We call this pose “sidewinder” because of how you have<br />

to lay in order to get the shot. It is my favorite shot for<br />

my guitars as it gives an interesting perspective that most<br />

people never see. I also really like that the focal point is the<br />

point of my peghead and I feel it places emphasis on the<br />

detail work that goes into crafting my headstock.”<br />

Sam Guidry, Sam Guidry Handmade Guitars<br />

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5<br />

Minutes<br />

with<br />

Rick Maguire<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: The guitar<br />

generally is the result of an evolutionary<br />

process and each guitar<br />

maker evolves personally through<br />

experimentation, experience, and of course simple trial and<br />

error. After thirty years of creating instruments, what do you<br />

see in the future? Do you think there are any significant developments<br />

to come, or just the ongoing refinement of the<br />

guitar as we know it?<br />

Rick Maguire: I think that when viewing or playing my<br />

work, it’s obvious that I am presently taking the approach of<br />

refinement on the accepted norms, building on tradition in<br />

order to offer a guitar that is familiar but with added comforts<br />

and enhanced performance.<br />

That’s not to say I don’t think there are clever and incredible<br />

innovations happening at present or yet to come. In fact,<br />

on the contrary. I recognize and greatly admire those who<br />

offer designs or specific features that reside outside of<br />

the guitar shaped box we know. Similar to some of the<br />

greatest artistic works of all time, some of these innovations<br />

may not be appreciated or even recognized<br />

in the creator’s lifetime, therefore it takes a certain<br />

level of boldness and confidence to offer something<br />

outside of the norm to a superstitious, sometimes<br />

unyielding group of individuals.<br />

When I started in the trade, I worked with Irish luthier<br />

Paul Doyle. In Paul’s shop on any given day we could be<br />

restoring a centuries old cittern or lute, building a new<br />

Irish bouzouki or baroque inspired guitar, leveling the<br />

frets of a Gibson J-50 or rewiring a Fender Strat. Segments<br />

of the lineage of the instrument could be seen all<br />

in the same day, on the same bench. It was a fascinating<br />

and exhilarating time for me. Looking back, Paul’s<br />

workbench was a daily demonstration that The Guitar<br />

can be considered an emblematic example of mechanical<br />

evolution in process. If consciously studied, both<br />

subtle and extreme refinements can be seen and recognized<br />

on a fairly steady basis. I think that within the<br />

lifetime of any given luthier or player in the last<br />

200+ years, regardless of the era, huge leaps<br />

can be witnessed. The legacies of individuals<br />

like Leo Fender, Ted McCarty, John D’Angelico,<br />

Loyd Loar, Orville Gibson, C.F. Martin(s),<br />

Johan Stauffer and many others too ancient to<br />

name, have made it so the idea of “traditional”<br />

differs from decade to decade.<br />

I think innovation is instilled within the tradition<br />

of guitar making. With that said,<br />

there are sure to be significant developments<br />

to come.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You mentioned<br />

that “scrounging in warehouses, basements<br />

and classified ads in search of old<br />

stock traditional tonewoods” has afforded<br />

you the ability to have an extraordinary<br />

stockpile of irreplaceable woods. Is the search for aged<br />

tonewood that are perfect to create an “Instant Vintage”<br />

guitar still a part of your work process? Do you think there<br />

are still any great finds out there?<br />

Rick Maguire: It goes without saying that natural resources<br />

in general are scarce and the quality of what is available<br />

has diminished considerably. 30 years ago, one could make<br />

a pilgrimage to one of several regional hardwood outlets<br />

with a few hundred dollars and return with a bounty of exceptional<br />

material worthy of the seemingly countless hours<br />

it takes to transform it from lumber into a world class guitar.<br />

Unfortunately, those days are over. It seems as if most of the<br />

hardwood outlets that are still doing business are offering<br />

only construction grade materials. High quality instrument<br />

grade lumber can still be found, but typically only through<br />

specialty dealers with prices that match or exceed its scarcity.<br />

The global depletion of natural resources has forced<br />

luthiers to think differently about how or what they will<br />

acquire to work with. Many have looked to alternative<br />

species, some with great success and acceptance.<br />

Others, like myself, have taken on the challenge as<br />

more of an archeological endeavor. Although I do<br />

work with some responsibly harvested “new” lumber,<br />

I really prefer to work with the antique stuff. Either<br />

way, sourcing lumber has become more and more<br />

of a distraction from time at the workbench and must be<br />

figured into the overall build time.<br />

Word of mouth and Craig’s list account for most of my<br />

finds, but I do still check the local paper for want ads<br />

from the occasional “old timer” who hasn’t bought into<br />

the new way of doing things. It was in this way that I<br />

recently acquired some old stock East Indian rosewood<br />

headstock veneer sized scraps that perfectly match some<br />

fretboards that I’ve had in my possession for decades.<br />

I might have enough lumber on hand to get me through<br />

my career, but I will continue to endeavor to increase<br />

my wood stash. After all, the next piece I acquire might<br />

just be of better quality than the piece I’m about to work<br />

with. Another motivator is that either of my kids may decide<br />

to take up the trade. If so, it could be argued that a<br />

good stash of antique lumber might be a more valuable<br />

legacy than any knowledge or experience I can<br />

offer.<br />

My affinity for old wood has taken me on some<br />

interesting and sometimes odd excursions. With<br />

more failures than successes, these lumber field<br />

trips have provided me with an exceptional<br />

cache of raw materials and given me the<br />

opportunity to meet some exceptional<br />

craftsmen of many persuasions along the<br />

way. Let it be known that I live within 25<br />

miles of the old Guild Guitar factory and<br />

have to believe there are still some echoes<br />

of that time in the form of wide Honduras<br />

mahogany or Brazilian rosewood laying dormant<br />

in closets and basements. Gotta be, right?<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: The acoustic guitar in hollow-body<br />

archtop and flattop designs is typically viewed with an eye<br />

toward sophistication. As an electric builder, you create solid<br />

and semi-hollow body instruments. How would you contrast<br />

the level of sophistication in a fine electric guitar to that<br />

of its acoustic counter-part?<br />

Rick Maguire: Although the electric guitar does lie farther<br />

down the evolutionary scale, I think most would say that the<br />

acoustic guitar is a more sophisticated entity, mostly in the<br />

area of stability. The construction of a fine acoustic guitar is<br />

a balancing act where fragility teeters with stability. If built<br />

too lightly, an acoustic guitar will collapse or distort, possibly<br />

becoming unplayable. Conversely, if overbuilt it will<br />

suffer a loss in resonance and tone, sounding terrible. The<br />

guitar needs to be both playable and possess the proper<br />

tone and resonance. Manipulation of the top’s thickness and<br />

carving of internal braces is where this balancing act mostly<br />

takes place. These adjustments need to take place before<br />

the guitar is assembled, leaving little recourse for failure.<br />

Therefore, I would assert that the burden of sophistication<br />

in design and execution is of a higher level in the acoustic<br />

guitar.<br />

When striving to make world class guitars, either discipline<br />

must meet the same parameters of great tone, ease of playability,<br />

a pleasing aesthetic and flawless construction. I have<br />

practiced both disciplines. My time in Ireland gave me a<br />

great education and experience in acoustic instruments.<br />

I was afforded the opportunity to work on harps, fiddles,<br />

hurdy-gurdys, citterns, lutes, banjos, bouzoukis, mandolins<br />

and guitars. It was indeed a great time for me. Witnessing<br />

successes and failures of past and present designs was<br />

hugely beneficial to experience. Exposure to such an array<br />

of instruments of all ages was something I don’t think I could<br />

have easily found in the United States.<br />

When I returned home and set up shop, I surprisingly found<br />

myself focused on the electric guitar. I guess because I was<br />

mostly an electric guitar player and mostly surrounded by<br />

other electric guitar players, and that’s what was being requested<br />

of me.<br />

Since I came from an acoustic background, I wanted to<br />

bring a higher level of sophistication to my electric guitar<br />

designs. Electric guitars are inherently more bulky than their<br />

acoustic counterparts, and can benefit from added resonance<br />

anywhere it can be gotten. I was compelled to rethink<br />

the neck joint, where the neck and body are joined and energy<br />

can be lost. I weighed the benefits and detriments of<br />

existing methods of coupling the neck and body. I preferred<br />

the tonal benefits of the neck through body design, where<br />

the neck blank runs through to the end of the body. This<br />

method affords the least amount of string energy loss and<br />

therefore a more responsive neck, increasing both picking<br />

attack and sustain. However, I preferred the traditional aesthetic<br />

that the mortise and tenon joint gives. The resulting<br />

concept was a neck blank that runs just shy of entirety of<br />

the length of the body and is sandwiched in between the<br />

top and the back. I call it the “thru-tenon” neck and it is<br />

the defining feature of my Meridian series of guitars. When<br />

the body and neck are joined, I carve the profile of the neck<br />

right up to the end of the fretboard where it converges<br />

with the scalloped cutaways and the rounded heel. This 3D<br />

shape convergence can only be carved by hand and it takes<br />

a considerable amount of time and patience. The payoff for<br />

this time-consuming task is a very responsive and resonant<br />

neck.<br />

The fundamental difference between the acoustic and electric<br />

guitar is obviously the electronics. The acoustic guitar’s<br />

performance must rely solely on the merits of its own design,<br />

materials and construction -- which is indeed a sophisticated<br />

affair in and of itself. Requiring an entirely different<br />

type of sophistication is the challenge the electric guitar faces<br />

in assuming the need to translate string energy through<br />

its pickups, potentiometers and capacitors in order to cou-<br />

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ple with an amplifier and maintain its tonal character. Any<br />

given pickup won’t necessarily work in any given guitar and<br />

be expected to meet any given client’s needs. Guitar electronics<br />

are really another discipline altogether. There are so<br />

many variables in between the ringing of the strings and the<br />

air pumping off the speaker cone. So many, that it could,<br />

and sometimes does, boggle the mind.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: The life of a guitar builder is often<br />

solitary. Describe your life as a guitar maker. Tell us about<br />

the beauty of the solitude and even the “Zen” moments.<br />

Did you even understand that you were choosing a life in<br />

which you were destined to spend much of the time alone?<br />

Would you have it any other way?<br />

Rick Maguire: Yes, I am a one man shop with one set of<br />

hands, so luthiery for me is a solitary affair. I am a gregarious<br />

person by nature, but I actually enjoy the solitude in this<br />

part of my life. My time, my decisions, my successes, my<br />

failures, my motivations, my satisfaction. It’s not only a great<br />

time to explore and execute designs, concepts and abilities,<br />

but also my time for exploring music, new and old.<br />

In my teens and twenties, when I was first learning the trade,<br />

I balanced a day job and a social life along with the luthiery<br />

obsession. That meant shop time was night time. 30 years<br />

later and that hasn’t changed. My dad is a night owl and<br />

so is my 13 year old daughter, so maybe it’s hereditary, but<br />

I think it’s an associative acquired behavior. For me, night<br />

time equals discovery, productivity. Night time means shoptime,<br />

satisfaction. During the day I will make phone calls, do<br />

errands, scout for materials, have discussions with clients.<br />

During the darkness I make sawdust and wood shavings and<br />

guitars.<br />

Because I am a gregarious person, I need the solitude in order<br />

to truly focus, otherwise I would have the desire to chat<br />

with whatever company I may be with.<br />

My most productive hours are between 6PM and 2AM.<br />

During these times I know it’s unlikely that I will receive any<br />

calls and I know I won’t get any visitors. Without the sun moving<br />

across the sky as a means to measure, its easy for time<br />

to slip away from me. My favorite moments are after several<br />

hours in the shop, accomplishing some predetermined goal<br />

or milestone, walking out the door and experiencing 8-18”<br />

of snow on the ground without having noticed a single flake<br />

fall from the sky. I will slowly, almost aimlessly make my way<br />

through the brand new landscape to my house, taking in<br />

the silence and solitude, knowing all the normal people are<br />

sleeping and the amazing and pristine beauty of this brand<br />

new landscape must only be meant for me and the pair of<br />

great horned owls that reside in the giant arborvitaes next<br />

to my shop. Sometimes the owls will look to me and call to<br />

me, maybe to inform me that it has snowed and I should<br />

take cover, or maybe to say, “Well done Rick!” Is there any<br />

level of “Zen” higher than that of a compliment from a wise<br />

old owl?<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Please name three recordings that<br />

you think would be a great addition to any music library or<br />

collection.<br />

Rick Maguire: This is a difficult question to limit to just 3<br />

examples and one that would differ if asked 6 months ago<br />

and will likely be different 6 months from now, but here goes<br />

for the “now” version.<br />

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds- “No More Shall We Part” -- a<br />

very sparse and introspective album written and performed<br />

by post punk/goth icons, driven mostly by piano and violin<br />

enhanced with subtle but sublime guitar.<br />

Joni Mitchell-”Hejira” -- arguably the best female vocalist<br />

and songwriter of our time. A folk music icon choosing to<br />

step out of the folk cast and recruiting jazz icons Larry Carlton,<br />

Jaco Pastorius and John Guerin. C’mon.<br />

Van Morrison- “Astral Weeks” -- there aren’t words to describe<br />

this body of work. It is a singular and ethereal experience.<br />

If you don’t know it, you should.<br />

60 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 61


5<br />

Minutes<br />

with<br />

Bill Comins<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You<br />

began playing guitar at an<br />

early age and went on to study jazz guitar at Temple University.<br />

You entered the music world first as a working musician<br />

and private instructor, but ultimately became a globally respected<br />

guitar maker. What was the catalyst for the transition<br />

from playing to building instruments and how did you<br />

develop the specific focus on archtop jazz guitars?<br />

Bill Comins: In my early twenties, after backpacking through<br />

Europe, I just got the itch to work with my hands. At that<br />

time I had already been doing some repair work on my<br />

students instruments and assembling some guitar kits and<br />

whatnot. For a while I was working in a violin shop and<br />

learning about that instrument so all that coupled with my<br />

study of jazz guitar naturally led me to an interest in building<br />

archtop guitars.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: How has being a formally trained<br />

working musician inspired the instruments you create and<br />

what factors have provided the greatest influence on your<br />

work?<br />

Bill Comins: I really believe there are things I ask my guitars<br />

to do that come out of my experience as a player. I’m not<br />

sure I would understand what I’m shooting for if I hadn’t experienced<br />

playing archtops on a bandstand, playing in different<br />

rooms with different types of ensembles. Making an<br />

acoustic instrument work in electric setting is tricky business<br />

and I think being a musician allows me to bring a degree of<br />

certainty to my building sensibilities.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: You create custom instruments for<br />

a diverse international clientele consisting of professional<br />

and novice musicians, educators, and collectors alike. Your<br />

personal approach to guitar making is to maintain a very<br />

personal relationship with your customers. Aesthetic personalization<br />

is easy to identify on an instrument and unique<br />

player set-up is easy to understand. How much potential<br />

truly exists for a guitar<br />

maker to tailor tone<br />

that is unique to a specific<br />

musician?<br />

Bill Comins: If I’m<br />

building a guitar for a<br />

specific musician I’m<br />

interested in what environment<br />

they hope to<br />

use the guitar in. I’m interested<br />

in their touch,<br />

light or heavy or somewhere<br />

in between. Do<br />

they go for a darker<br />

voice or are they after<br />

brighter sounds? Often<br />

the custom tailoring<br />

has at least as much<br />

to do with ergonomics<br />

such as nut width, scale length, body size, etc. The sonic<br />

character of a guitar can be altered by manipulating parameters<br />

such as wood selection, dimensions, arch shaping<br />

and graduation, bracing patterns, etc. That being said, no<br />

matter how I end up proceeding there seems to be certain<br />

Comins guitar characteristics that remain intact.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Cities have a vibe all their own. Philadelphia<br />

is renowned for artists like John Coltraine, Grover<br />

Washington, Jr., Billie Holiday, Chubby Checker, Jim Croce,<br />

Hall and Oates, Todd Rundgren, and many others who call<br />

the City of Brotherly Love home. Live performance has<br />

always been at the heart of the of the Philadelphia music<br />

scene and it is home to important concert venues. Famous<br />

acts like Frank Sinatra, The Doors, Count Basie, The Grateful<br />

Dead, Luciano Pavarotti, and Bruce Springsteen have created<br />

a reputation for Philadelphia as the “place to play”<br />

for musicians from diverse musical genres. Do you feel that<br />

your instruments are inspired or influenced by the rich music<br />

history that surrounds you and do you ever feel as though<br />

you are a part of a significant music scene like Laurel Canyon<br />

or Muscle Shoals?<br />

Bill Comins: Thanks for giving Philadelphia that nice plug!<br />

I’ve always felt it’s an underrated City. Its a gritty town in<br />

every sense of the word and there are plenty of reasons to<br />

believe in its prospects going forward. The city does have a<br />

rich musical tradition especially when it comes to Jazz, Soul,<br />

and R&B. I guess I did come up in the remnants of that history.<br />

I’ve been very lucky to get to see/hear and even get to<br />

know so many great artists. Its hard to guess how much of all<br />

that has influenced me but I imagine quite a bit.<br />

Artisan Guitar Show: Please name three recordings that<br />

you think would be a great addition to any music library or<br />

collection.<br />

Bill Comins: If you don’t mind I’d like to redirect this question<br />

just a little. I’d like to offer<br />

three YouTube links as examples<br />

of historic archtop jazz guitar recordings<br />

that I think exemplify<br />

really great archtop tone:<br />

Johnny Smith, Cherokee:<br />

https://www.youtube.com/<br />

watch?v=BoEDu00GCJE<br />

Hank Garland, Secret Love:<br />

https://www.youtube.com/<br />

watch?v=WwlGzxIGajE<br />

Kenny Burrell with Jimmy Smith,<br />

I’ll Close My Eyes: https://www.<br />

youtube.com/watch?v=Nid5xk-<br />

J8Qr8&feature=share<br />

Listen to the clarity, the evenness,<br />

and the thick, round trebles.<br />

That’s what always pulls me in as<br />

a listener.<br />

62 | artisanguitarshow.com<br />

artisanguitarshow.com | 63


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64 | artisanguitarshow.com


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