#1
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Harmony Demise
Not sure how you contact Harmony as everything Iread indicated the company went under in 1975. Said they even sold the Harmony name .So to ask someone claiming to be Harmony about hidden numbers and date stamps on the underside of the Broadways soundboards sounds like a waste of time but what do I know, not too much I totally conclude lol
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#2
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Harmony resurfaced in 2018 under new ownership. BandLab Technologies now owns the brand, as well as Heritage Guitars. Both are made in the same factory in Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA. Their new web site is https://www.harmony.co/ (note the domain is NOT ".com" but ".co").
They can be reached via this link: https://www.harmony.co/pages/contact
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I own 41 guitars. Most are made of wood. Some are not. |
#3
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Quote:
I wonder if they will have acoustic archtops in their future lineup, with models to fill the affordable acoustic void of the Chicago era originals and (more recently) the Godin 5th Avenue. Crazier still, I wonder if they’ll do a custom order for one. Only one way to find out… |
#4
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if you want to ask a question about the old Harmony guitars I would go here
https://harmonyguysboard.net/ These are the guys who seek out and restore the old Harmony guitars for the love of it. The Harmony brand being built in Kalamazoo look superficially like the old line of guitars but bear little resemblance and really don't try to be reissues - they are modern high quality builds (I have a Juno) |
#5
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Yep! And as mentioned above, the same company owns the Heritage brand, started by former Gibson employees. Heritage gets high marks from players who care more about the quality of their guitars than the name on the headstock.
The only archtop currently in their catalog is the H62 Reissue, a sunburst hollowbody with Harmony-designed pickups, but it's a pretty guitar, and at only US $849 deserves serious consideration for someone wanting to round out their collection.
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I own 41 guitars. Most are made of wood. Some are not. |
#6
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That H62 looks interesting. The affordable price made me think there's no way it is made in Kalamazoo and I learned that it's a Korean made instrument. Still....I'd love to sample that baby!
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#7
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Quote:
That said, if a product is made in the USA, I'm always more inclined to give that product serious consideration. Harmony's H62 is a nice looking guitar, but if I were to go the Harmony route, I'd probably look first at the semi-hollowbody Comet. Tim Pierce played one in one of his video segments and said, "I'm keeping this one!" And it's available in three colors/finishes.
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I own 41 guitars. Most are made of wood. Some are not. |
#8
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I Wrote To Them Last Night
On the subway home, I figured, why not? I asked if acoustic archtops were part of their plans, given the role they played of old, and argued that with Godin discontinuing the acoustic 5th Avenue, there’s a gap in the market that Harmony can fill just as they used to.
I suggested that they offer an H-62 sans electronics for starters. And, if they get ambitious, bring back something like this Patrician: https://www.retrofret.com/product.as...ic-Guitar-1954 |
#9
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I agree, I have a Korean (Samick) made Epiphone Howard Roberts Custom I like well enough that I sold my Guild X175 to fund a Guild D55. Very well made.
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Guild F212: 1964 (Hoboken), Guild Mark V: 1975 (Westerly), Guild Artist Award: 1975 (Westerly), Guild F50: 1976 (Westerly), Guild F512: 2010 (New Hartford), Pawless Mesquite Special: 2012, 90s Epi HR Custom (Samick), 2014 Guild OOO 12-fret Orpheum (New Hartford), 2013 12 fret Orpheum Dread (New Hartford), Guild BT258E, 8 string baritone, 1994 Guild D55, Westerly, 2023 Cordoba GK Negra Pro. |