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#1
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I’m very disappointed that the acoustic archtop has dropped off the radar of all of today’s mass produced budget guitar makers. I look through catalogues from the 30s to the 60s and it is archtops, archtops, archtops – all the way from pressed birch up to hand carved. Everyone was making them – in the US and Europe.
Then, nothing! OK, so Eastman make an (expensive) one now but the Loar and Godin seem to have stopped production of their purely acoustic models. Where’s the Epiphone, or Tanglewood, or Yamaha, or Blueridge, or Recording King etc etc. It can’t be that difficult to bang out basic but well built archtops. You could CNC carve birch, or spruce or maple etc today by the 100s in no time at all. Laser cutting and heat pressing ply would be even easier. Add a bolt on neck and you are away. Even the neck angle on an archtop has a % of leeway greater than a flattop that would make them ideal for mass production. They are easy to set-up and adjust – and rock solid to take life’s knocks. I think that I should contact Yamaha and see if they would churn out something around the FG800 Series price and level of build quality – all laminate with just a couple of tone bars (like the Godin 5th Avenue). I bet with two body sizes – a 16” and a 14” they would be a good global seller!
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I'm learning to flatpick and fingerpick guitar to accompany songs. I've played and studied traditional noter/drone mountain dulcimer for many years. And I used to play dobro in a bluegrass band. |
#2
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I believe it's all a matter of supply and demand. Acoustic swing (count me in) is such a small microcosm of the market that there simply aren't enough buyers to justify larger companies continuing to produce them. Luckily, the internet has made it easier for players to secure older instruments at not too outrageous prices.
As a builder, I can tell you that archtop guitars require some serious size bolts of wood for the tops and backs (priced accordingly). Then there's the carving of those beautiful 3 dimensional arches. Even starting with CNC, the voicing is still a time consuming process.
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'21 Bourgeois Vintage D '21 Martin Custom Shop 18 Style 3 personally crafted mandolins 2 tele partscasters Yamaha Pacifica 611 VFM |
#3
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![]() By way of background, in its original form the classical-archtop movement drew from the earlier American school of (fingerstyle) classical guitar exemplified by the likes of William Foden, Vahdah Olcott-Bickford, et al. (rather than that of Segovia and his Spanish contemporaries, which would become the accepted concert style and instrument), as well as the parlor, "light classical," and vaudeville music of late-19th/early 20th century America. In addition to transcriptions of well-known classical repertoire, a number of guitarists of the day produced original compositions in a late-Romantic style - music which, while largely out of fashion today, still retains its technical and artistic merit nine decades later. Bear in mind that the original L-5 archtop guitar was in fact envisioned as a "classical" instrument both tonally and visually, intended as a part of the mandolin orchestras of the late-vaudeville era and designed for hall-filling acoustic projection in the days before electronic amplification; were it not for Segovia's sensational American debut in 1928, the plectrum-style archtop guitar - with its violin-family looks and construction - may well have become the accepted "classical" guitar... If anyone's interested there are a number of recordings of these period pieces on YouTube (see below); in addition, you might also want to check out some of the work of Eddie Lang (both solo and with Joe Venuti on violin), Carl Kress and Dick McDonough, Tony Mottola (when he was a teenage whiz kid), and George Van Eps, among others. Finally, there's an excellent collection published by Mel Bay, entitled Masters of the Plectrum Guitar which, should anyone be intrigued enough to investigate this style further, will definitely keep you busy for a while - and give you a taste of what might have been... Here's a couple of samples of "classical archtop" from back in the day: - and a few from modern revivalists keeping this historic style alive: There's also a small-scale revival of the prewar acoustic virtuoso jazz style exemplified here by Jonathan Stout; FYI Mr. Stout (AKA CampusFive) is a fellow AGF member, and one of my favorites of the new generation of archtop players keeping the music alive - here's a few clips:
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"Mistaking silence for weakness and contempt for fear is the final, fatal error of a fool" - Sicilian proverb (paraphrased) |
#4
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Sorry for the derailment, but I just wanted to mention that I've been taking a deep dive into Jonathan Stout lately. What an amazing player! He combines both the precision and relaxation required to pull off that style of playing.
Last edited by Bluemonk; 02-24-2023 at 08:36 AM. Reason: Typo |
#5
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![]() I was thinking far, far simpler.... Most of those thousands of cheap archtops that were produced were just played as general acoustic guitars...period. There looks to be a cohort of younger roots players posting on YouTube that will raise the profile of the archtop again. The manufacturer who leaps in early to this market potential will do well. Jazz = difficult and specialist (and expensive) Roots = cheap cowboy chords and singing to your friends with a few beers. Just a couple of evenings ago I played my cheap 5th Avenue at an event to accompany a simple folk song and a guy came up to me and said what a great guitar it was, how he had learnt on his Dad's archtop in the 60s and how much he missed the sound. There is a market for that under $400 archtop aimed at the balladeer. It just needs some vision and good marketing to get if off the ground. Once folks get this type of guitar in their hands they love them - but at present the archtops on the market are seen as top shelf specialist "jazz" guitars.
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I'm learning to flatpick and fingerpick guitar to accompany songs. I've played and studied traditional noter/drone mountain dulcimer for many years. And I used to play dobro in a bluegrass band. |
#6
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With the Godins being discontinued, and other recent models like the Epiphone Masterbilts, Gretsch New Yorker, Loar etc not being around for long either, I wonder if the demand is really there. Electric archtops with routed in pickups seem to be a much more reliable segment of the market, as several budget options have been more sustainable and lasted for a good few years now.
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Kalamazoo KG-21 1936 Eastman E1OM 2021 Cedar/Rosewood Parlour 2003 (an early build by my luthier brother) Also double bass, electric bass, cittern, mandolin... |
#7
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If I was 15 years younger I'd do it myself!!!!
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I'm learning to flatpick and fingerpick guitar to accompany songs. I've played and studied traditional noter/drone mountain dulcimer for many years. And I used to play dobro in a bluegrass band. |
#8
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I have a one-word reply: Ibanez.
I own an AG95QA, and it's as near to perfect as an archtop can be. And at a price that didn't break the bank, either. Ibanez has a complete lineup of archtops. One for every taste. George Benson likes them. And has for some 45 years... ![]()
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I own 41 guitars. Most are made of wood. Some are not. |
#9
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Happy to be corrected if necessary ![]()
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1963 Martin 0-16NY 2021 Emerald Amicus 2023 Emerald X20 Some of my tunes: https://youtube.com/user/eatswodo |
#10
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I've played a lot of acoustic archtops (though probably not as many as Steve DR), and most of the low-end ones (whether new or "vintage") sounded like, well, low-end guitars. Among the modern attempts, the Godin acoustics I tried were tolerable (though the electricfied model I heard was quite nice--mostly the pickups, I suspect), nowhere near as right-sounding as my Loar 600, which in turn is less refined than my Eastman 805CE, which is reasonably close to my 1946 Epi Broadway. And at the Loar's street-price point, we're already well out of the "budget" area. A big disappointment was the recent attempt to resurrect the Epi archtop line--at least the samples I tried were thin and nasal.
Getting the sound right while also producing a decently-finished and playable instrument isn't going to be cheap, even with pressed-solid tops, which I take to be the minimum build factor. I understand that not everyone aspires to swing-rhythm or acoustic-jazz playing, but I can't see even Americana or old-timey players settling for the thin, banjo-y voice of a cheap archtop, however they might dig the visual presentation of an old Harmony or Silvertone. (And the old budget Gibson and Epi student-grade archtops have been priced out of the budget class by the example of, say, David Rawlings). Though, given the tolerance for quacky-nasal pickups in flat-tops I've encountered at open mikes, maybe my ear is no longer in synch with sonic fashion. (Can't abide Auto-Tune vocals, either.) |
#11
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Here in the U.S. you could walk into almost any large pawn shop and buy the type of guitar you are referencing for $50 - $100 UNTIL David Rawlings cued in a whole bunch of players to the 1930's Epiphone Olympics. Epiphone tried to cash in on the demand, but the guitars just sound bad. Besides, who markets a retro acoustic archtop and then puts a big plastic box on the lower bout? I'd like to have $1 for every one of those that got sold and then immediately slid under the bed or sold off again on the used market. Yes, they COULD be produced inexpensively if a manufacturer didn't already have the marketing statistics to show it would be a very poor decision. |
#12
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For an all-purpose guitar, I like the blues and folk sounding, solid pressed-into-shape birch-topped, ladder braced, feather-light Harmony and Kay archtops. The cheap widespread availability and budget craftsmanship helped keep down prices of used models of these... until sometimes recently... though I don't see too many people biting at inflated prices for these. I'd love it if somebody famous made it a cool type of guitar to have around, and if companies started to remake them somewhere cheaper than even Indonesia, but with even bigger trees, still. I think currently, the market is obviously in favor of big jazzbox style archtops, which I don't think would be as suitable for general purpose strumming, casual playing, like, as the one acoustic someone would have in the house, if they're only going to have one. But the old Harmony serves that purpose for me, and similar ones have for many people in the past. Then, if someone gets serious about it... that sort of guitar. Then, they still keep around the beater guitar... so it might as well be one that has character, right? But for decades now, most people think of a plain old boring boomy flat top when they think of an acoustic guitar, unfortunately. Hipsters would grant you the parlor guitar for over a decade now, but you'd think they'd be all over the PBR of archtops by this point. Maybe they are, and that's why people are asking silly money for the cheap archtops now?
Anyway, I agree with the OP that archtops should be more prevalent everywhere. Which means, not just expensive ones, but right sounding (for blues and kumbaya) and decent playing cheap ones too. |
#13
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Oh well. Sometimes I like autotune too, if it's used as a creative effect. If it's obviously remedial, or trying to give the artist free cred by sounding like some played out trend, then no thanks on the autotune. |
#14
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"Mistaking silence for weakness and contempt for fear is the final, fatal error of a fool" - Sicilian proverb (paraphrased) |
#15
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Every acoustic guitar I've purchased over the past few years has included a pickup system. The last one that offered me the choice was the Furch Little Jane. I paid extra to have the electronics. It sounds great played acoustically, but I like that I can plug it in, too. My second guitar ever is a 1957 Gibson ES-225t. One pickup. How many times do you think I've played it plugged in? I can probably count them on two hands.
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I own 41 guitars. Most are made of wood. Some are not. |