💾 Archived View for blitter.com › OLGA › MUSIC › RESOURCES › CONSTRUCTION_DOCS › GUITAR_COMPANIES.TX… captured on 2022-06-12 at 05:35:14.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
From: timothy@sait178.morgan.com (Tim Maggio) ===================================================================== 1. Guitar Companies 1.1 Large Companies Alvarez Company profile: lower-cost line of Alvarez-Yairi Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Alvarez-Yairi Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: well-made, mostly copies of traditional American designs. Lately they've been making good quality new designs based on working with a variety of pop musicians. Company address: Importer is (or was a long time ago) St. Louis Music. Gibson - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Guild - Company profile: Guild is an all-american (still?) guitar company that produces some of the best guitars in their price range. Characteristics of their guitars: The construction is robust but the sound is uniformly good. There are not many 'fancy' details built into these guitars. Solid spruce tops, solid sides in some cases, laminate backs in all cases. They also tend to be heavier than alot of other guitars. Prices range from $450 to $1,500 (USD). Used Guilds make excellent purchases, and are quite common. There tends to be surface cracks that appear on older models that extend from the ends of the bridge to the end of the lower bout, parallel with the strings. Not sure what causes this, but I have seen it on several older Guilds. Company address: Martin - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: 510 Sycamore Street P.O. Box 329 Nazareth, Pennsylvania 18064 (215) 759-2837 Ovation - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: La Si Do - Company profile: This manufacturer is the largest volume producer of guitars in North America. These instruments are far more popular in Europe than in North America, which explains why they are so scarce in the USA. There are several lines of guitars made including a low cost hand-made model by Simon & Patrick (Sons of owner Godin). Prices range from $250 for the A&L's (low end-mass production) to $900 or so for the hand-made versions. They also have semi- hollow body acoustic-electrics, and classical guitars. Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Takamine - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: This is probably one of the best Japanese guitars on the market. They are fairly light-weight guitars, but tend to be well-built. Some models come with pickup and pre-amp already installed and the electronics are very good quality. Higher end models have either solid spruce or cedar tops. There are some other odd animals, too- check out your local dealer. Prices range from $500 - $1,200 (USD). Company address: Kaman Music Corporation P.O. Box 507 Bloomfield, Connecticut 06002 Taylor - Company profile: Started 20 years ago by partners, then high school friends, Bob Taylor and KurtListug. Their simple philosophy... "that guitars should sound good and be easy to play". Taylor guitars are considered to be right up there in terms of craftsmanship, quality, tone, balance, materials used, playability. Taylor was one of the first makers to use high-tech computer driven machinery to insure consistent shape of their necks from guitar to guitar. They also build their own top-quality cases to the same standards. Characteristics of their guitars: Taylors come in three basic body shapes: Grand Concert (00), Jumbo(J) and Dreadnought (D), and their analogues with cutaways. They vary the woods used, shapes, and level of ornateness such as intricate inlays, fancy bindings, and touches like gold tuners, and depending on the model, one of five different bracing patterns. The basic Taylors have a model mumber xyy, with an extra C if they are cutaways (with varients for 12 strings). x = 4,5,6,7,8 or 9 4yy lower priced line, mostly matte (as opposed to glossy) finish 5yy mahogony sides and back 6yy maple sides and back 7yy rosewood sides and back 8yy fancier rosewood sides and back, more inlays, etc... 9yy fanciest series, mostly rosewood, mostly not currently made. yy = 10 Deadnought yy = 12 Grand Concert yy = 15 Jumbo, In addition there are two signature modes, Dan Cary (a cutaway 6 string rosewood deadnought with special bracing) and the Leo Kottke (a cutaway Jumbo mahogony 12 string braced for heavy guage strings), and the various Aniversary models, which are somewhere betwee 00 and 000 in size. All Taylors are solid wood. Taylor has been in the vangaurd of using cumputer controled equiptment in the guitar making buiness. Company address: 1940 Gillespie Way El Cajon, California 92020 (619) 258-1207 FAX: (619) 258-1623 Washburn - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: 255 Corporate Woods Parkway Vernon Hills, Illinois 60061 (708) 913-5511 1.2 Luthiers A list of the more popular and respected names in the art and business of producing hand-made acoustic guitars. Anderson- Company profile: Steve Andersen is a builder of high-end archtop guitars & mandolins, his best instruments are his F5 style mandolins, and his various archtop models. He also makes flattop D and OM size guitars. His manolins have been ordered by Gruhn's Guitars for resale, and he has also made some Archtop guitars for Pioneer Music in Portland, OR. Mainly he does special orders, dealing directly with the customer. Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Andersen Stringed Instruments Seattle, WA phone 206-632-5986 Bozo - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Breedlove - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Collings - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Franklin - Company profile: Franklin guitars are built by Nick Kukich of Portland, OR. The waiting list is currently at 2 1/2 years! Kukich builds OMs, Jumbos and a replica of the old Stella 12-string. Nick has an excellent eye for wood color, so that his guitars are striking in that sense. He has 2 standard sizes, an OM style and a jumbo style. He also makes a 12 string in the Stella style. Stephan Grossman is quite a fan of Franklin guitars, and Nick had/has videotapes of Grossman and Renborn singing the praises of his work. These are probably available from Franklin. Characteristics of their guitars: Guitars are handmade, to order by Nick Kukich with inlay work by Jean Munro. These low profile, smooth action guitars are popular with Stefan Grossman and his buddy John Renbourn. The OMs I have played have had a very slinky setup and been somewhat on the quiet side. I have observed finish flaws, glue spots and rough brace edges as well on a couple of models. Company address: Gallagher - Company profile: Small company in central Tennesee. Don Gallagher (J.W.'s son) makes about 100 instruments/year. Dreadnoughts in 12 & 14 fret models, and Auditorium-size in 12 & 14 fret. 12-strings & cutaways available. Rosewood or Mahogany bodies. 7-string guitars by request. (How about a 12-fret, cutaway, 12-string for a unique instrument?) They currently offer 14 models in 4 body sizes. The wait can be lengthy (almost two years for my last one). Grandpa Jones, Doc Watson, Steve KAUFMAN (not to be confused with Steve DIKKERS) all play them. Characteristics of their guitars: Volumewise, my month-old A-70 (14-fret,Rosewood, OOO-size) is able to hold its own with banjos. My 18-year old G-70 (14-fret, rosewood, D-size) [projects extremely well]. The tone between strings is very balanced. Fingerpickers should check out the auditorium-size Ragtime special (14-fret, mahogany) Great workmanship, and a warranty that can't be beaten: if something goes wonkers, Don will fix it. Period. [They have a] Great resale value. I have not seen many on the market, but typically a used Gallagher will sell for what the current price of a new equivalent model. The prices are not out of line: currently about $2K for a top of the line, hand-built instrument, give-or-take (depending upon specifics). [Price-wise, they are] basically equivalent to top-of-the- line, non-pearl Martins. (Yep, Don will pearlize one of his if that is what you want.) [Currently], I think they are available only directly from the company. [The staff are] pleasant people to work with, too. Company address: J.W. Gallagher & Son Wartrace, TN 37183 Gurian - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Larivee - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: Lowden - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: The sound is very open and woody. Lovely all-wood bindings, purflings, solid top-side-backs on all models. Very light weight construction. Prices range from $1,600 - $4,000 (USD). Sitka or Cedar tops, Mahogany, Rosewood, etc. sides, backs. Custom orders can be placed so you can pick out the neck width, tone woods, etc that suit your tastes. Evidently there is no extra charge for such custom orders, provided the selections come out of their current stock. Some interesting features on their guitars are: No truss- rod access via some plate on the headstock. The reasoning beind this is the hole in the headstock weakens the neck. In order to access the truss rod you can a) buy a special tool and adjust it (or have a qualified repairman do the same), or b) drill a hole in the brace just inside the sound hole. Most doctors prefer (a)! Additionally, braces are not scalloped. Instead, they are shaved in lateral thickness. This avoids the weakening of scalloped bracing, while also lightening up the braces. Company address: Maton Guitars - Company Profile: Founded in 1946 by Bill May who decided to make his own guitars because he was unhappy with the quality and price of instruments available in Australia at that time. Maton is derived from his name and "tone". By the mid-sixties, Maton had an established reputation throughout Australia and with many overseas artists. Notable Australian artists who have played a Maton at some time in their careers include Bruce Woodley and Keith Potger of The Seekers; Richard Clapton; Beeb Birtles, Graham Goble and Steve Housden of Little River Band; Rick Price; Iva Davies and Paul Gildet of Icehouse; James Reyne of Australian Crawl; and Jack Jones of Southern Sons. Early in his career George Harrison played an MS500, the first Maton solid body. Albert Lee owns a Maton. George Golla, Phil Manning and Tommy Emmanuel have all had their own models designed. Custom models have been built for Richard Marx, Hank Marvin, Deborah Conway, Colin Hay, and Andy White of Hothouse Flowers. Maton now has a modern factory that blends with traditional craftsmanship. The recently installed CNC router is currently the only one of its kind in Australia. Face-joining and side-bending presses have been specially built, as have the internal body clamps and the dovetail router for the neck joints. Maton apply the same philsophy today that Bill May set out with - to build the finest quality hand-crafted guitars at an affordable price. Characteristics of their guitars: Maton mainly produces premium quality acoustic and acoustic-electric dreadnoughts and cutaways. All have solid tops, mostly of sitka spruce with some cedar and Australian timbers such as Tasmanian King Billy Unique processes have been developed in the fitting of the dovetail neck joints, contouring of the neck relief, and hand finishing of the fingerboard and neck shaping. This, in combination with careful selection and seasoning of tonewoods, give the instruments a unique sound and feel. Every instrument is handcrafted. Australian timbers feature predominantly. Maton uses Queensland Maple and Walnut, and Tasmanian and Victorian Blackwood in the back and sides as well as traditional timbers such as Brazilian mahogany, rock maple and rosewood. Most of the guitars feature solid timber in the back and sides. Maton have an alliance with Australian piezo manufacturer GEC-Marconi to develop Pick-Up Systems that faithfully reproduce the guitars' acoustic sound. The definitive instrument is the CW80 dreadnought that has solid Queensland maple or Brazilian mahogony back and sides, and has been in continuous production since 1967. The EM325C is an acoustic-electric cutaway that features laminated Queensland Walnut back and sides, and is favoured by professional musicians for live work as its characteristic bright tone provides cut-through on stage while being durable enough to survive life on the road. Other designs include smaller body "Bluegrass" and larger body "Country Jumbo", as well as 12-string acoustics, classical guitars and electric basses. A range of solid body electrics and arch-tops is planned for reintroduction in 1995. Company address: Maton Guitars 9 - 11 Kelvin Road Bayswater North VIC 3153 Australia Phone +61 3 720 7259 Fax +61 3 720 7273 Olson Guitars Company profile: All guitars are handmade by James A. Olson in Circle Pines, MN. Jim makes about 40 guitars a year and has been making guitars since 1977. The wait for getting is currently 1 and 1/2 years. He never has more than one assistant. Some of the best known players who play Olson guitars are James Taylor, Phil Keaggy, David Wilcox, Sting, Paul McCartney, Leo Kottke, Pat Alger, Russ Barenberg, and Justin Hayward of the Moody Blues. Characteristics of their guitars: Olson makes mostly what he calls a concert "small jumbo" which are shaped like a jumbo but smaller than a dreadnaught. The sound is beautifully clear and balanced from top to bottom and are very easy to play. He also makes dreadnaughts. His guitars feature east Indian rosewood back and sides, sitka sruce or western red cedar tops, five piece laminated neck (rosewood center, maple, mahogany outer) with a carved volute on the back of the headstock. Tortoise shell binding on body, herrinbone top purfling (3 ring sound hole rosette, back center strip). Company Address: 11840 Sunset Ave Circle Pines, MN 55014 (612) 780-5301 Santa Cruz - Company profile: Founded in 1976 by luthier Richard Hoover and repairpersons Bruce Ross and William Davis. Hoover became the sole owner of the company in 1989. Richard Hoover and a small staff (4-6) build each guitar to order, by hand. SCGC produces a few hundred guitars per year. Characteristics of their guitars: Dreadnoughts, OMs, archtops, 000s and a few original designs compose the SCGC catalog. All guitars are built to Richard Hoover's philosophy of "stress free" construction - meaning that top braces are glued in flat, rather than arched, and braces are split along grain lines, rather than cut. This relaxed assemblage emulates what Hoover believes to be the secret in vintage, "opened up" Martins: the fact that time and usage has relaxed the stress inherent in the construction process. The soundboard of every guitar is individually tuned, yeilding instruments of superb response and resonance. The SCGC sound is unique, comparing favorably with vintage Martins. The guitars are impeccably made. Very clean with exacting inlay work. The SCGC aesthetic is fairly subtle. 1994 list prices range from $2150 to $8500 prior to custom option selection. Company address: Santa Cruz Guitar Company 328 Ingalls Santa Cruz, CA USA 95060 +1 408 425 0999 Schoenberg - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: These guitars are made by Eric Schoenberg, a well-known fingerstyle guitarist. The guitars are partially made in the Martin factory, but Schoenberg picks the woods, hand tunes the tops and braces, etc. Prices are $3000 up. These guitars are really at the top end of the luthier market. Rory Block has one. Eric Schoenbery makes appearances on the group. Eric is involved in the specification of the instruments. The wood- working on recent Schoenberg guitars was done by luthier T.J. Thompson. Prior to Thompson, Dana Bourgeois was involved with Schoenberg guitars. Final assembly at the Martin plant in Nazareth. [Editors note (reprinted from original poster) BTW - I have heard that Schoenberg guitars have gone out of production. We should confirm this with Eric, I suppose.] Company address: 38 Shore Drive Concord, MA 01742 (508)369-2272 Thompson - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: 1.3 Resonators And then there are the Resonator guitars, which vary in construction. Some are metal bodied, while others are wood. National - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: National Resophonic - Company profile: Small company in San Luis Obispo, CA. Originally started by two people, and have grown since. Characteristics of their guitars: They make both metal-bodied and wood-bodied resonator guitars. The tone of their guitars ranges from very raucous (single-resonator metal-body) to very warm (three-resonator metal-body). The tone of the wood-body single- resonator guitars is smoother than that of a Dobro. These guitars tend to inspire fanatical devotion, partly because there is a mystique to them and partly because they're just fantastic guitars. These guitars are all capable of incredible volume. Company address: Dobro - Company profile: Characteristics of their guitars: Company address: 1.4 Archtops There's more to guitars than flattop steelstrings. Here's some pointers to makers of archtops. 1.4.1 Large(er) Manufacturers Heritage Company profile: When Gibson abandoned Kalamazoo, MI for Nashville and Montana, several Gibson luthiers chose to stay in Michigan. They acquired the old Gibson factory on Parsons Street and began making guitars in the old Gibson style. At first they concentrated on solid- and semisolid-body electrics, but before long they started making archtops with floating pickups (i.e., no extra holes are cut into the top for the pickup or controls - they're mounted on the pickguard, and the jack goes out through the strap button). They make a variety of cutaway 16", 17", and 18" archtops. They're very nice guitars and are rather economical as archtops go. Characteristics of their guitars: Nice woods, wide, flat necks, traditionally-shaped f-holes, cutaways. The decorations are on the florid side, but that's typical of archtops. Most of the archtops are modified versions of traditional Gibson archtops, specifically the Sweet 16 (16", like the Gibson L-4), the Eagle series (17", variants on the L-5), and the Super Eagle (18", similar to the Super 400C). Company address: 228 (?) Parsons St., Kalamazoo, MI 1.4.2 Luthiers Here are the names of a few builders of archtops off the top of my head. A recent issue of Acoustic Guitar had a pretty good list. Andersen Nickerson Benedetto D'Aquisto Collings Santa Cruz D'Angelico II ===================================================================== 2. Guitar buying 2.1 Beginner These guitars are priced for the person unsure if guitar playing is suited for them. They also make great beach or camping guitars. Features: Price: $100 - $400 Top: Laminate (few with solid wood) Side/Back: Laminate Here are some of the brands that I can think of. There are *loads* of guitars off the Asian market, and they probably are comparable to any in this list. A&L Fender Charvel Ibanez Yamaha 2.2 Mid-Range In this range, the issues involved in buying a guitar are fairly simple: price, playability, and 'bang-for-the-buck' are usually foremost consideratoins. There are several brands that have guitars that suit the bill. Following is a list of features that usually are associated with new low-end guitars: Price: $400 - $800 Top: Laminate (some with solid wood) Side/Back: Laminate Some of the guitars have solid tops. The sound for these instruments is good. Finish on the guitars are usually glossy. Any exceptions to the above comments will be noted. Charvel Fender Guild Seagull (La Si Do) (all w/ solid tops) Simon & Patrick (all w/ solid tops) Ibanez Takamine Washburn Yamaha 2.2 High-End For just about any player, guitars in this range should satisfy some to all of your guitar-playing needs. Features these guitars should all have: Price: $800 - $1,500 Top: Mixed Solid and Laminate (See the FAQ to determine which) Side/Back: Mostly Laminate, some Solid Depending on model, maker, or a sale, you might get a real beauty for alot less than expected. The use of a variety of tone woods is important in this category. Combinations of woods for a variety of effects determine the sound and feel of a guitar. These guitars are usually mass produced, but there are probably a few that have some hand-detailing, and finishing. Alvarez Gibson Guild Taylor Martin Ovation Simon & Patrick Takamine 2.3 Concert These guitars are usually hand made from the finest tone-woods available. Individual luthiers work on each model, and attention to detail is critical to the making of every guitar. Price: $1,500 - $?,??? Top: Must be Solid Side/Back: Must be Solid Expect to pay a pretty steep premium for Brazilian Rosewood, although there is an unsupported rumor that Thompson Guitars will make one from Brazilian for under $3,000. (anyone have better facts?) Many (all?) of these dealers will accept custom orders to mix and match different dimensions and woods. Breedlove Collings Franklin Gallagher Gurian Larivee Lowden Olson Santa Cruz Schoenberg Thompson -- : Tim Maggio # : timothy@morgan.com | : Q : ".. the sofa has vanished." "Well that's one mystery less." (_)