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#16
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"Mistaking silence for weakness and contempt for fear is the final, fatal error of a fool" - Sicilian proverb (paraphrased) |
#17
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1930s-40s Epis show up with some regularity on archtop.com, though the Broadway and Triumph models aren't the dramatic bargains they often were when I found my Broadway at a show 25 years ago. Not that I need another archtop, but I would be mightily tempted should a walnut Broadway show up at a moderate (that is, under $4K) price. I've never had the chance to play a walnut Epi, but the word from pickers I trust is that they're pretty snazzy.
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#18
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Yep, similar vibe: ![]()
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2007 Martin OM-21 1950 Epiphone Devon 2019 SilverAngel mandolin (“Swazi” - it’s a long story) Eastman MDA-315 2021 Karsten Schnoor Custom B&D Style 5 tenor banjo 2019 Schnoor Weymann (orphaned pot) conversion 1958 Gibson ES-125T 1967 Emmons GS-10 1976 Fender Telecaster (“Ohmygodthisweighsaton”) Lots and lots of other stuff |
#19
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Just left Rudy’s Music in Soho. The good news is that I played a very nice L30. The bad news is that it isn’t what I am looking for.
The other news is that the very knowledgeable and helpful staff assured me that Gibson could NOT do my custom order. No archtops, I was told: “They don’t have the luthiers.” Unfortunate. I would have thought that the Solid Formed process would have made this pretty straightforward, and cheaper than if hand carved. Oh well. Vintage L4, L75, or L50 (or roundhole Epiphone Spartan) it is. |
#20
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![]() On the other hand, when you have luthiers like Mark Casmpellone and Stephen Holst (as well as a few others) who are producing hand-carved jazzboxes for one-fourth to one-third what Gibson would charge - not to mention the offshore competition from Eastman, Loar, and Peerless in the bread-&-butter price range - a new instrument from a company whose quality has been, er, iffy over the last few decades will be a hard sell... By the same token, the Solid Formed guitars weren't worth anywhere near the $6500 Gibson was charging for them during their justifiably short lifetime: they know it, the guitar-buying public knows it, and given the aforementioned availability of (relatively) inexpensive carved archtops I don't think they're about to get back into that game again... There are a couple of other options, however:
![]() https://reverb.com/item/65281531-gal...netian-cutaway
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"Mistaking silence for weakness and contempt for fear is the final, fatal error of a fool" - Sicilian proverb (paraphrased) Last edited by Steve DeRosa; 09-02-2023 at 09:14 PM. |
#21
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[QUOTE=Steve DeRosa;7314788]FWIW I would have thought that, being the inventors of the archtop guitar, they would have trained at least some personnel to carry on the tradition...
![]() On the other hand, when you have luthiers like Mark Casmpellone and Stephen Holst (as well as a few others) who are producing hand-carved jazzboxes for one-fourth to one-third what Gibson would charge - not to mention the offshore competition from Eastman, Loar, and Peerless in the bread-&-butter price range - a new instrument from a company whose quality has been, er, iffy over the last few decades will be a hard sell... By the same token, the Solid Formed guitars weren't worth anywhere near the $6500 Gibson was charging for them during their justifiably short lifetime: they know it, the guitar-buying public knows it, and given the aforementioned availability of (relatively) inexpensive carved archtops I don't think they're about to get back into that game again..." I was thinking the same thing re having at least some personnel who knew how to make archtops. It's sad that they don't, but then again, unless you get a Mustang, Ford means trucks these days... I certainly agree on the Solid Formed pricing. Gibson blew it there. That prototype is being offered at about $2500, a much more realistic price that should have been their target. I remember those early L4 style Eastmans, though I haven't seen one in a long time. For what it's worth, Rudy's had a lot of Eastman instruments (Les Paul and ES 335 approximations) in stock, but while I was there only one person tried them out. Several people were checking out new 335s, the fit and finish for which seemed excellent; the tone certainly was gorgeous. I guess that means Gibson is doing well with their LP/335/SG strategy to some degree. Too bad they've literally forgotten their roots in archtops. |
#22
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Is there a fundamental difference between the design and construction of the "Solid Formed" models compared to the "Arco-Arch" of the `30s budget lines? It seems very similar in concept.
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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... |
#23
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So the designer himself envisioned these as more cost and resource efficient instruments. And from what I have read elsewhere, the acoustic timbre is highly regarded. It was designed for mass production, but Gibson priced it at a premium. Idiotic move. This process could have made archtops that were cheaper to produce, I suspect, than a Les Paul or ES 335; certainly cost-comparable. I wonder if they still have the tooling. What a waste of a great idea. |
#24
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I suppose there must be a certain size of run where the cost savings would kick in, since the initial cost of tooling up would be higher than for a carved instrument but the labour and materials per unit somewhat lower. In the earlier era of press-formed archtops the archtop was a mainstream instrument and lower priced imports weren't a major market force, so the economies of producing a lower priced archtop in the US would be different from today.
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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... |
#25
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Probably the worst-sounding solid-wood guitar I have ever owned. The tone closely resembled that of the shipping box.
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"{T]echnique becomes the enemy. The thing that was keeping me from doing something new was how comfortable I'd gotten doing something I already know how to do." -- William Gibson |
#26
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![]() I'm also curious which strings you were using - IME it's a rare archtop that doesn't benefit from not only heavier strings (13's on a modern instrument, 14's on those '30s-40s-vintage Epiphone/Gibson boxes), but a couple months of so of good old-fashioned Big Band-era full-boogie comping to break in the top... By the same token the AR400 more than lives up to the Eastman reputation, and at well under $1K when it was new; here's a demo - hard to believe it's all-laminated construction, given the range of tone color/dynamics - and I'm just sorry that they discontinued them before I had the chance to score one ![]() https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrvzvbqmeqY[
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"Mistaking silence for weakness and contempt for fear is the final, fatal error of a fool" - Sicilian proverb (paraphrased) Last edited by Steve DeRosa; 09-06-2023 at 03:24 PM. |
#27
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Hard to judge precisely with YouTube videos, but to my ear the single strings on that 604 didn't sound bad, but it got a bit brash when pushed. (But then, Greene also was playing back by the bridge in those passages.)
On the other hand, a 904 video (also from Bernunzio's shop), sounded smoother, though still a little brighter than I prefer for rhythm. I suspect the spruce top has something to do with that. Again, it's hard to judge without having the guitars in hand in person. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O1VkOPNcsx4 And another 904, a CE variant--and a very sweet (though rather understrung) L-12-- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtXbFsOb0_I |
#28
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I have an Eastman AR804CE I bought new from Lou Del Rosso seventeen years ago. It is a 2006, Serial Number 0094. Fantastic guitar, although quite light in weight. Floating Kent Armstrong pickup -- no tone control, just volume wheel under the pickguard. I have tried many different string sets on it, the best sounding to me being either light monels or TI Plectrums. I believe that after Eastman stopped manufacturing them they repurposed the body as a Mandocello -- their current Mandocello looks identical. I keep thinking a should get the Mandocello so that I have a matched set. Just -- don't particularly like the sound of a Mandocello.
Over the years I have seen one or two on Reverb -- one looked quite beaten up, the other I recalled looked to be in reasonably good shape. If you find one grab it -- you won't be disappointed.
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Martin: HD-35, M-36; Gibson: J-200 Rosewood Limited Edition; McIlroy: AD-30; Guild: Orpheum D 12-fret; Yamaha: NXT-1200R; Eastman: AR804CE (with floater), DM-1; HsianMo: Art Gallery SJ-200 (Euro Spruce with Sandalwood b/s (!); Journey Overhead OF660; Eastwood: MRG Studio Resonator; MRG Octave Mandolin; Gretsch: Country Gentleman '59 VSE; Gibson: CS ES-355; more electrics . . . |
#29
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That is, if they can do new mandolins, guitars will likely follow. Don’t know what timeline, but this gives me hope. I think these prices are fair, all things considered:
https://youtu.be/_rTOqyIwDpo?si=FNb5OgrI1MxDfkVj |