#1
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Blue Spruce?
I have a parlor guitar with a blue spruce top. I've not heard of this species being used on other guitars. Is it because the trees are not usually large enough, or is blue spruce generally inferior tone-wise to sitka, engleman, norway, adi, etc?
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#2
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Overlapping bell curves of tone. BTW, "Norway spruce" is the same as what some folks call "German", "Italian", "European", "Swiss" spruce. It still all "Picea abies"...ie, all the same species. An article on the topic; http://www.lutherie.net/eurospruce.html
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"Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best." Henry Van Dyke "It is in the world of slow time that truth and art are found as one" Norman Maclean, |
#3
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I'm aware of that, so i didn't list all those other names. Here in Asheville it is fairly common (obviously introduced), and called norway spruce. |
#4
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Blue Spruce is Picea pungens not abies. They sell them in the US as Christmas trees, I don't know if it grows in Europe or not. I'd also be interested if it grows big enough for guitars and how it compares tonewise to the others.
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#5
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I've heard it sounds pretty good on this one, which Mike Baranik tells me uses "Colorado blue spruce" (pic is his "black and blue" guitar - check his website for further details):
BTW - JEFF M. thanks for the link to the spruce article, fascinating stuff!
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Ryan MGC EIR/Sitka Doerr SJ Legacy Select MadRose/German Omega MJC EIR/German Baranik CX Mad Rose/Western Red Cedar Last edited by Martin_Nut; 02-24-2009 at 06:21 PM. |
#6
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There was a LONG and heated debate about the tonal qualities of "German Spruce" over at the Acoustic Guitar Forum several years back,some folks weighing in on the subtle differences between German Spruce, Italian, European, etc. etc. etc. Paul Hostettler, luthier, stringed instrument repair professional, weighed in and posted the link to his article. I also love the story about how a German wood wholesaler was caught selling Engelmann Spruce harvested in North America as "German Spruce", importing the wood to Germany and then re-selling it back with the different name.
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"Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best." Henry Van Dyke "It is in the world of slow time that truth and art are found as one" Norman Maclean, |
#7
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Depends.
What is the actual species of spruce you are referring to? The whole problem with colloquial names is people can be referring to different species under the same name (see the different species of wood referred to as "Brazilian" or "Madagasscar Rosewood" for an example)...or, as shown with the whole Picea albia scenario, giving different names to the same species of wood. If it is actually the same species as "Norway spruce", ie Picea albia, then it has the ability to have the same characteristics/quality as that species.
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"Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best." Henry Van Dyke "It is in the world of slow time that truth and art are found as one" Norman Maclean, |
#8
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#9
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With that clarified, I have no experience with it.
__________________
"Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best." Henry Van Dyke "It is in the world of slow time that truth and art are found as one" Norman Maclean, |
#10
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Thanks for the reference.
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#11
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The only person I know who has cut Colorado blue spruce for guitars is Don Musser. Stew Mac offered blue spruce guitar tops for a short period. It is very similar to Engelmann, and Bruce Harvie has said in the past that blue spruce has often been cut and marketed as Engelmann. It has a much smaller range than Engelmann, but is widely planted in yards. Just like red spruce, the name comes from the outward appearance of the tree, not the wood itself.
Here is a seller on Ebay who is cutting blue spruce for archtop instruments: http://stores.ebay.com/Simeon-Chambe...QQftidZ2QQtZkm |
#12
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I did not know that blue spruce could be used as a guitar top, I've always liked Sitka spruce. But, now I have a Large Tonewood tree growing in my back yard
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#13
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I commissioned a lovely guitar by noted solo builder Harvey Leach with a Blue Spruce top/walnut b&S years ago.
http://www.leachguitars.com/
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Wonderful reality guitars now: Ted Thompson Guitars: T1 (GA), T2 (00), T2C (00) all in sitka/EIR ... Wonderful dream guitars someday: Mark Blanchard Pinyon (00) Ad/Koa slothead 12fret contour cutaway, Mark Blanchard Sugarpine (000) Ad/Mad fan 12 fret contour cutaway w/Manzer wedge |
#14
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There is only one blue spruce I know of: Picea pungens. Picea Abies does not sell under 'blue spruce'
John Arnold beat me to the punch again- Don Musser is the main source of instrument blue spruce Interestingly there is also a Black spruce... Terence |
#15
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In any case, only a couple of people addressed my question about why blue spruce is so seldom used for guitar tops. My guess from these comments is that the following are the reasons, in order of importance: 1. Its range is much smaller than sitka or englemann, so it is less common. 2. The trees typically don't get as large. 3. The tone is not significantly better than more common species, and maybe is actually worse? 4. Tradition argues against it. Last edited by rlgph; 02-26-2009 at 10:30 AM. |