Guitarist Keith Medley's Got Game — A Really, Really Big Game
When a guitarist goes up against an intrastate NCAA Final Four matchup that will be broadcast nationally, there had better be a hefty level of instrumental firepower at his disposal. If not, he can pretty much forget about getting noticed this weekend. ... Read News
Epiphone Les Paul Studio Guitar Review - Review Of The ...
Recommended Beginner Guitars. Top 10 Acoustic Guitars; Top 10 Electric Guitars; Top 10 Bass Guitars ... Read Article
Hondo (guitar Company) - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Hondo was an American guitar company and brand owned by Musicorp that produced entry level acoustic guitars, electric guitars and basses with designs that are usually based on the designs of more expensive models such as the Fender Stratocaster and the Gibson Les Paul. These models are of good ... Read Article
Dino's Guitars
We both are very much into acoustic guitars - vintage, especially - and our tastes in tone lean toward guitar sounds rooted in the sound of wood. ... View Document
Www.simonandpatrick.com All New Website For Simon & Patrick ...
Ranging from guitars in the Woodland, Vintage Burst and the high-end Showcase series, Simon & Patrick guitars are crafted by some of the finest luthiers in the business today. Featuring exceptional acoustic tone and a meticulous attention to detail and craftsmanship, these Canadian made instruments are ... Retrieve Document
The Different Strummer
Holman guitars At some point, the Holman-Woodell folks began to sell their guitars carrying their own the Sting Ray, Traditional, Long Horn, Short Horn, the Bob Cat, Short Horn Bass, Classic and acoustic However, given the number of these babies that turn up in the vintage market, this idea, too ... Read Document
Cinema Vivant At Silvermine Arts Center
The Hot Club of San Francisco, an ensemble of accomplished and versatile musicians, celebrate the timeless music of Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli. ... Read News
About Guitar Review Archive Epiphone Les Paul Standard
Comments about : I have 22 guitars, including Gibson LP Standard, Gibson LP Jimmy Page, PRS, '66 Strat, and 2 of these. Easy Song Tabs; Top Beginner Acoustic Guitars; How to Read Tab; Beginner Guitar Lessons ... Read Article
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Http://www.GuitarJamz.com and http://www.YouTube.com/GaragebandandBeyond ... View Video
VINTAGE GUITARS
ACOUSTIC GUITAR HMBKR.. HUMBUCKER HB.. HUMBUCKING HRD WARE/HDWA.. 14 A Few Words About Vintage Guitars by Clay Harrell What is a Vintage Guitar? ... Return Document
About Guitar Review Archive Hohner Arbor MX1
Guitar Chord Library; Easy Song Tabs; Top Beginner Acoustic Guitars; How to Read Tab; Beginner Guitar Lessons ... Read Article
Rickenbacker - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
It is estimated that fewer than 500 Rickenbacker acoustic guitars were built before the factory shut down the acoustic department in mid-2006. Rickenbacker's humbucker/dual coil pickup has a similar tone to a Gibson P-90 pickup, and comes standard on the Rickenbacker 650 C. Vintage reissue ... Read Article
Vintage Levin guitars X 3 - YouTube
6:19 Watch Later Error Vintage Levin guitars - 1913 and 1936!! by BottleneckJohn 1,033 views 2:22 Watch Later Error '52 Levin acoustic & Hohner Special 20 C harmonica folk improvisation fingerpicking by ChillpointNews 3,494 views ... View Video
There are different reasons that somebody may want to buy vintage acoustic guitars. One of these reasons may be the maturing of the wood that a guitar is made from. Wood expands and contracts as it is exposed to different degrees of heat or cold and it is subtly affected by humidity and light exposure over the course of decades, so that anacoustic guitar today doesn’t sound exactly the same as it did 40 or 50 years ago. A vintage acoustic guitar will sound “mellower” than it once did and may contain added subtle overtones that weren’t there originally, just as a wine takes on hints of new flavors as it is allowed to age, and some people find it fascinating to compare and contrast, say, the sound of an 1833 or 1933 Martin with today’s D-5 Dreadnought.
Other people may want vintage acoustic guitars in their collection because they are guitar players looking to add different musical shades to their present collection’s palette. Advanced guitar players outside of the Classical guitar sphere rarely try to get all of their musical expressive range from just one instrument, especially if they are recording an album or on tour. They will look to a handful of different guitars, some electric and some acoustic in most cases. Vintage acoustic guitars can offer them timbre possibilities that newer acoustics and electric guitars don’t.
And still other people may be taken by the sheer artistry of the guitar itself and want to have a few to put on display. If this is the case, vintage acoustic guitars are often looked to as examples of the works of “great masters” of bygone eras as certain artists’ paintings and sculptures are in the visual arts world. There may be a fascination with what types of woods and make of fittings a guitar maker tended to use in the past vs. what they use or what the luthier industry as a whole uses today.
For instance, 30 years ago and farther back mahogany, rosewood, and maple were the most prominent woods of choice for guitar makers. A mahogany-built guitar “peaks” (that is, gives the loudest, brightest, or deepest resonance that it ever will) anywhere from 25 to 30 years after it is completed; and maple and rosewood-made guitars will reach their peaks anywhere from 35 to 50 years later.
Another instance is collecting vintage acoustic guitars made from Brazilian rosewood, such as the famous 1958 Martin D-21. This wood cannot be used today make guitars because those trees have been put on the Endangered Flora List and are untouchable for any commercial reason. This means the value of any guitars made from Brazilian rosewood is going up and up.
Except for Classical guitars, most acoustic guitars’ tops are, however, made out of Adirondack, Appalachian, or Sitka Spruce. This further subtly affects a guitar’s sound.
And that leads us to yet another reason somebody may want to collect vintageacoustic guitars: they can give a large ROI and become worth a lot of money. In fact, a lot of times these instruments can be bought at auctions or basement clearing sales for only a fraction of their true collector value as people either don’t do their research or just don’t care and simply want to get rid of them.
And still other people will seek vintage acoustics that are in need of repair because they love fixing up old guitars and giving them a new life.
Typically, somebody buys a vintage acoustic guitar for some personal combination of the above reasons.
When it comes to vintage acoustics, the most sought-after guitars are Martins and Gibsons. However, Bourgeois, Collings, D’Aguisto, D’Angelico, Epiphone, Gallagher, Gretsch, Guild, Larrivee, Santa Cruz, Stromberg, and Taylor have also producedvintage acoustic guitars that collectors and players have found very valuable.
If you’re considering buying a vintage acoustic but you are not a guitar player or an experienced collector, don’t rush in where only fools tread. Do your research first, or take an experienced person with you to check out the guitar with you. Guide books, magazines, the Internet, knowledgeable individuals, and luthiers can all be of great help in determining whether or not a vintage acoustic guitar is in good or bad shape and what you should or should not be willing to pay for a particular one.