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NGD - Claxton OM, Chapter and Verse
Chapter 1
…or how a song was born In the summer of 2014, this OM-inspired “Traditional” left Ed Claxton’s workbench in Santa Cruz, California and headed for the UK to join TAMCO’s enviable selection of luthier-built guitars. It remained in Brighton until the final leg of its journey brought it to my house in January this year. This is my fourth purchase from Trevor, whose service record with me over the past ten years has been nothing less than sterling. As the pictures show, it’s a lovely piece of craftsmanship built with top-drawer tonewoods. The silky Italian Spruce top comes from a hoard Ed acquired long ago and has used on many builds over the years to great effect. According to Ed’s supplier, the Claro Walnut back and sides come from a log that lay submerged in a small lake in Sonoma County for 50-plus years. The hues and figure of this flitch-matched set flow together as one, and as it shimmers in shifting orientation to light, the box looks like it’s made of the skin of a large prehistoric reptile or perhaps the pelt of an impala. The train-spotters among you will have noticed Ed’s signature touches like the mosaic rosette and use of pernambuco, white holly and ebony for purflings and binding. On my guitar the holly stripe that underpins the ebony veneer at the headstock extends down the neck all the way to the edge of the soundhole. Instead of a coach-lined frame on top of the fingerboard, this elegant detail is for the player’s eyes only. Me likey. A real featherweight, this OM weighs noticeably less than my similar-sized Baraniks, themselves already quite light. In fact, it’s on a par with the much smaller Retreux Parlor. Ed says that by using Claro Walnut he saved a few ounces compared to the same model in rosewood. The end result is that this guitar simply vanishes in your lap. With a profile that suits my hand perfectly, it takes but a moment for the neck to disappear as well. I’ve never owned a guitar that plays so effortlessly. Coming from a guy with three ultra-ergonomic Baraniks, that’s saying a lot, believe me. The good news doesn’t stop there. I’ve read many comments about how expressive Ed’s guitars are, and my impressions of what this OM has on offer match the general consensus. You can tap into its transparent, balanced voice at will, on every string, at every fret. There are no great splashes of upper-order harmonics to cloud your judgment, no great bear hugs of cavernous bass to hog your attention. Rather, you create color, weight and texture by naturally coaxing music from balanced, sustaining fundamentals, their rise and fall, their stop and start. All that magic, floating on a hair trigger, no less. So delicate, so brave of heart, this Claxton stands in a league of its own. In the end it’s all about the music, so I’ll cut right to the chase, folks. After less than a week in the house, this guitar jolted me out of an abiding, often agonizing, decade-long writer’s block. No tribute to the qualities of my new OM could be more moving. One day many years ago, as stirring music came together and tumbled out of my guitar, I felt in my soul that this new piece would someday become something grand. All I had to do was wait for a story to tell, to find the words that would lay the soil for this precious seed to sprout. But time went by and nothing happened, no storms a-flashing, the wetlands gone dry. The drought was so great, so parching, that soon all my other musical ideas would wind up stunted in the bud, never to bloom into proper songs. With time, fallow turned to barren. Repeated attempts to crack the nut saw nary a glimmer of germination, despite the wonderful guitars I acquired along the way. It’s not their fault, of course, they’re only tools for the tillerman, the music box, not the music maker. It was I who was washed out, forsaken by earth and sky and the song of the rainmaker. Anyhoo, after few days of groping the new girlfriend from California, I momentarily interrupted my scheduled program of random noodling and dusted off the jar of formaldehyde where the haunting embryo of that song resides in permanent stasis (that is, I switched to the offbeat altered tuning I’d made up years ago to serve the piece). I began playing and gradually heard, then heard and felt, a gush of musicality surging out of the box as if it had a will of its own, suggesting the way forward, pulling like a riptide with me in its wake, sweeping me away and letting me let go. A timeless afternoon later found me with a song, that song, springing to life. Relief had come at last. Thank you, Mr. Claxton.
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____________________________________________ 1922 Martin 0-28 1933 Martin 0-17 1974 Alvarez/Yairi CY120 2010 Baranik Parlor 2013 Circa OM-18 2014 Claxton OM Traditional 2014 Blackbird Rider |
#2
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Ed's a favorite of mine, I've loved every guitar of his I've played... Nice score, congrats...!
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onedayatatime |
#3
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A very special guitar indeed! Congratulations!
Steve
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Still crazy after all these years. |
#4
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Lucky you, that’s a beautiful guitar!
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#5
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So it, like, sounds good, Wordsworth?
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Circa OM-30/34 (Adi/Mad) | 000-12 (Ger/Maple) | OM-28 (Adi/Brz) | OM-18/21 (Adi/Hog) | OM-42 (Adi/Braz) Fairbanks SJ (Adi/Hog) | Schoenberg/Klepper 000-12c (Adi/Hog) | LeGeyt CLM (Swiss/Amzn) | LeGeyt CLM (Carp/Koa) Brondel A-2 (Carp/Mad) |
#6
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congrats! I love all the Calxtons I've played. Sounds like this one inspires the soul
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Eric Omega Braz MJ, 2011 Omega MJ Braz Baritone Ryan Cathedral ABW/Bosnian Build thread: 2011 Kostal Mod D Brazilian/German Build thread: 2019 Kostal MDW Brazilian/German Build thread:2019 Bigfoot Mod D |
#7
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Very nice! Congrats!
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Life is like a box of chocolates .... |
#8
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New sounds and new directions. Great that you have such a fine guitar, and that it complements the Baraniks so well.
And walnut is such a nice tonewood (says the guy with a walnut Baranik!) Enjoy.... |
#9
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I've said it before on here and I'll say it again: No-one betters Ed Claxton when it comes to building a great guitar. No-one.
Again, TAMCO is responsible for that opinion. I was down at Trevor's 6 years ago and had played half of the guitars in the shop when I picked up a very light and unassuming Claxton OM with Cuban back and sides. That guitar blew me away. It was tremendously refined. https://www.acousticguitarforum.com/...d.php?t=307434 I remember me + Trevor having a long chat about the fact that it probably required a lot of prior experience with fine instruments to truly appreciate what it did because it didn't shout it's brilliance at you: No thunderous basses, no ultra-sparkling treble, not super loud, just everthing absolutely as it should be. Like I say above, "refined". I remember thinking, "this is a Traugott for half the price". Alas, half the price of a Traugott is still a huge amount so I had to let that guitar go - it was new and I couldn't afford it (it did come back to me many years later but that's another story...). It was one of the best guitars I ever played at TAMCO and I said so on here. I played all of the Claxtons that Trevor had subsequently and this walnut guitar was one of them. It's lovely. Every single one of Ed's guitars were mind-blowingly fabulous. I think he's the most consistently brilliant builder out there. A pal of mine had a BRW Malabar that had - easily - the best midrange and trebles of any guitar I've ever played. Deft has played a load of great guitars, so listen to what he's saying here! Cheers, Steve |
#10
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Quote:
Truly special, Conquistador, thanks. Its easy playability and immediate, ringing trebles remind me of the Baranik Parlor. Thanks! It's a feast for the senses. Quote:
Thanks! (Actually, it's very, very, VERY nice.)
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____________________________________________ 1922 Martin 0-28 1933 Martin 0-17 1974 Alvarez/Yairi CY120 2010 Baranik Parlor 2013 Circa OM-18 2014 Claxton OM Traditional 2014 Blackbird Rider |
#11
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You just got an A on your book report.
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____________________________________________ 1922 Martin 0-28 1933 Martin 0-17 1974 Alvarez/Yairi CY120 2010 Baranik Parlor 2013 Circa OM-18 2014 Claxton OM Traditional 2014 Blackbird Rider |
#12
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Yes, Colin, this OM is a great addition to the family. Each of my Baraniks has its relative strengths and weaknesses, and I'm sure to discover the Claxton's as time goes by. No guitar can do it all, which is why I have more than one. Lucky are we who have multiple squeezes!
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____________________________________________ 1922 Martin 0-28 1933 Martin 0-17 1974 Alvarez/Yairi CY120 2010 Baranik Parlor 2013 Circa OM-18 2014 Claxton OM Traditional 2014 Blackbird Rider |
#13
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Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
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____________________________________________ 1922 Martin 0-28 1933 Martin 0-17 1974 Alvarez/Yairi CY120 2010 Baranik Parlor 2013 Circa OM-18 2014 Claxton OM Traditional 2014 Blackbird Rider |
#14
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Congratulations! What a beautiful guitar and what a gift to find an instrument that fits you so well in so many ways. Now I'm intrigued to hear a sound clip of this altered made up tuning song on the wonderful Claxton
beth |
#15
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You're so right, beth. This guitar is an unexpected gift.
I'm working on the final touches of the song I mentioned. I hope to post something acceptable to the perfectionist in me soon.
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____________________________________________ 1922 Martin 0-28 1933 Martin 0-17 1974 Alvarez/Yairi CY120 2010 Baranik Parlor 2013 Circa OM-18 2014 Claxton OM Traditional 2014 Blackbird Rider |