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My acoustic journey with Tim McKnight
I consider myself a singer first with guitar as accompaniment. But I am not a bad Neil Young, James Taylor type player. Tim’s shop is about a hour a half away. Visited many times mostly at the McJams. My first McKnight was a online find. It was this Slim Slope Dred. It’s been my main guitar for 15? years. Just a amazing guitar with his 1959 Sitka top and Madagascar Rosewood back and sides. Was at the McJam yesterday and brought home this OOOO with a cutaway with a cedar top and East Asia Rosewood back and sides. I brought it home and thought it would top my slope but it didn’t its just different? These guitars couldn’t be more different really?
The Slope. The OOOO 1. 14 frets to body. - 12 frets 2. 25.5 scale length. - 24.9 3. Sitka - Cedar 4 Standard headstock. - Slotted 5. Rosewood finger Brd. - Ebony 6. No cutaway. - Florentine 7. 1 11/16 nut. - 1 3/4 8. Crazy thin. - Deep body. (Guitars are reversed on last pic) First impressions are the OOOO has a little more bling no question. Fingering on both are superb and I’m really picky about low action. I’m doing more hybrid picking and the OOOO gives this a very nice feel and sound. A full rocker like Cinnamon Girl it seems like I should grab the Dred. Other more delicate songs the OOOO seems to handle with a very cool difference. But I’m still exploring for sure only a day in. Lol These two show me it’s not that one guitar has to be the best, they just can have different qualities? Tim’s guitars are something special, superbly crafted, great attention to detail. Glad I made that drive over so many years ago. Been a rewarding journey!
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom Last edited by Doubleneck; 06-27-2022 at 08:46 AM. |
#2
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Yay!
Glad you are rockin the McKnights!
Nice playground too… Lovely folks, making super guitars Make a joyful noise, indeed Paul
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4 John Kinnaird SS 12c CUSTOMS: Big Maple/WRC Dread(ish) Jumbo Spanish Cedar/WRC Jumbo OLD Brazilian RW/WRC Big Tunnel 14 RW/Bubinga Dread(ish) R.T 2 12c sinker RW/Claro 96 422ce bought new! 96 LKSM 12 552ce 12x12 J. Stepick Bari Weissy WRC/Walnut More |
#3
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Interesting you can feel the difference in the string tension of the shorter scale length. Just enjoying what they seems to do to my playing and the sound? Its also nice that the cedar, just as I have read, needs no breaking in. It just booms. At my age I don’t have as much time to wait! Lol
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom |
#4
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Hey Steve! It was great seeing you at the McJam! I got to play your new one and it is truly a winner. Congrats on scoring a wonderful guitar. It was the best one in the "Loft" this year.
Don't forget to bring it to McJam 16 next year!
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Rodger |
#5
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Nice pair. Sure like the tone on both but slim would be my choice. Just can't play the big guitars like the 0000 for long before my arm gives out. But sure like the bass rumble in my chest. Whoa!
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Life is like a box of chocolates .... |
#6
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Using the OOOO as incentive to loose some weight! Lol.
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom |
#7
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Actuallly I was surprise its considered a Jumbo. I think the 12 fret neck and slim waist make it seem very comfortable?
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom |
#8
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I love guitar honeymoons! I can’t put down this new OOOO, after a couple days my picking style and the guitar have seemed to come together. It is more articulate than my Dred? Handles both soft and hard playing so well. And its the only acoustic guitar I have come across that can start to drown out out my voice. Bass has no end to it and sustains forever.
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom |
#9
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Quote:
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Life is like a box of chocolates .... |
#10
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Wrong post (sorry)
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A bunch of nice archtops, flattops, a gypsy & nylon strings… |
#11
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One of the qualities that led me to have Tim build a guitar for me in the first place over sixteen (!) years ago, and why I've added more McKnights since, is because he can generate a distinctly different tone to various builds, whether that's based upon a particular customer's playing style or wishes or simply an aural ambition Tim is seeking to achieve. That's not true of every luthier, from my experience. Certainly, the size and model difference between your two guitars, irregardless of the builder, is going to make a difference. I'd suggest, too, that Tim's builds, both in technique and structure, have changed significantly over the years (Tim, you're not getting older, you're getting better... well, at least your guitars, if not your golf game ).
Good on you, Steve, for not simply seeing but feeling and hearing those differences, and congrats on adding the cutaway! |
#12
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Quote:
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom |
#13
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Glad the honeymoon is still in full swing Steve. Seems like every time I visited the loft and whoever had your guitar in their hands had this huge grin going on. I loved to see their facial reactions as they experienced "Thumper" for the first time .
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#14
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Interesting its been two weeks now with my new Jumbo cedar McKnight and I find it hard to go back to my other guitars. It has such a greater dynamic range and pleasing overtones. I can seem to do more with it by changing my picking style to bring out its qualities. I go back to my other guitar and it fells a bit like going from stereo to mono? Hard to describe feel and sound dynamics.
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Steve 2020 McKnight Grand Recording - Cedar Top 2005 McKnight SS Dred 2001 Michael Keller Koa Baby 2014 Godin Inuk 2012 Deering B6 Openback Banjo 2012 Emerald Acoustic Doubleneck 2012 Rainsong JM1000 Black Ice 2009 Wechter Pathmaker 9600 LTD 1982 Yairi D-87 Doubleneck 1987 Ovation Collectors 1993 Ovation Collectors 1967 J-45 Gibson 1974 20th Annivers. Les Paul Custom Last edited by Doubleneck; 07-09-2022 at 06:08 PM. |
#15
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Quote:
Thank you for pointing out and noticing my aural ambitions. I credit my time spent with Ervin as an experience that opened my ears and honed my skills to be able to bring out the very best from each set of wood I build with. Others say that brand X sounds like brand X and brand Y sounds like brand Y and so on but that makes me cringe. Each set of wood is unique and therefore should certainly sound unique and the day that my guitars start sounding like brand McKnight is the day that I hang up my chisels. Thanks again for the kind words of encouragement in regards to my building prowess. Now about that golf game ... well, that is another story that kind words may not apply to ... at least in my case |