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09-19-2024 12:09 PM
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The 2 guitar builders I worked with and knew had their shop attached to the house. It was a dangerous thing in they could go out and simply work all the time. Bill Hollenbeck said to me I love to build guitars, but I like to do many other things. I am not about to go live in my shop. Factory vs Luthier individual is always a situation of pros and cons. The only exceptions are when you have someone like Mark Campellone who simply can do it all no matter the task, they the choice is obvious. That said at the moment his guitars and Gibson L5s are neck and neck...pricewise in the used market.
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no doubt there's luthiers like this...but there's also a lot of em that'll be happy to take your money and turn a 9 month wait into saying you should've expected 18 after you finally got the guitar youre not happy with in 24. or just straight up disappear with a dozen deposits in their wallet.
there's one in particular that i dealth with...i somehow got my $1,500 deposit back but he left a trail of pissed off customers on the guitar's yahoo page (lol yea it was a different time). without naming names, it was a company the founder sold, who's headless guitars were played by bill frisell, david torn and henry kaiser.
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I would recommend a guitar with a floating pickup - this results in better acoustic sound. The rest ist up to the "individual character" of the instrument. Solid top, full depth (3"or more) and 17" would be my preference. $5000 sounds too little for a L5, but probably a used Heritage or maybe a Campellone would fall into that category.
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In the North Jersey I grew up in a bazzilion years ago in a predominately Italian culture we called pasta noodles, sauce gravy, and calzone pacheese n ham which I later learned meant pot cheese and ham...talk about anglicized. but it sure as hell was never called a cal zonee
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I played a WesMo today, and while the neck needed an adjustment and other things (the action was uneven and a tad high), it had a pleasant acoustic tone.
What I have experienced, is that, when a guitar is re-assembled, for whatever reasons major or minor, there needs to be a settling-in time. Time after time, those parts, frets, bridges etc., need to "synch" in to the system that is the guitar. The same seems to be true when a guitar comes out of storage, it needs to be played, things in the composite need to be vibrated. Ain't it fun though?
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I am the son of an Italian immigrant and my Italian is decent. In Italy, they would likely pronounce it "Cam-PELL-own-eh" (the emphasis being on the second syllable).
While, we're on the subject, Italian words with apostrophes in them are pronounced as if there was no apostrophe. So it's not "D-Angelico" but rather "Dan-gel-ic-o"
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Yep.. sound like a familiar thread…
quick answer- nothing beats a L5.
If you begin with the lead in what beats a L5, you have already began the journey- I recently traveled the same path- bought 2002 “Hutchins” L5 Wes Montgomery… 4 months ago I can’t put it down… a beautiful instrument. Period! A beautifully built, sweet neck that will improve your abilities in multiple ways…You will pay more than $5K.
enjoy the journey as it’s a great way to understand the world of archtops and to appreciate the expertise of our forum, so many talented and helpful people!
best of luck!
McGregor
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Where I grew up in the Bronx it was Cal-zone. No ee or ay at the end, but almost all of the last letter vowels were simply not pronounced. Ricott, mozzarell, prosciut, that was how the Italian kids in the neighborhood pronounced those words. Us Irish kids always assumed that was correct, but heck, I've been wrong multiple times just today (according to the bride LOL).
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I sold my vintage L5. Damn fine instrument. I bought several 175s , sold them all. Damn fine instruments. I bought 2 1970s oval hole Gibson HRs. Sold them both. Damn fine instruments. There are many instruments that will work just fine, the point is to find one you love playing, and keep on playing. As even EvH said, “rock stars come and go, musicians play until they die”. We’re pretty lucky to have many fine instruments to play, many of which are not nearly as expensive as a mediocre cello for a cellist in the symphony.
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And don't get me started on bologna
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We’re luckier than most guitarists realize. Top quality bows are $50k. Raguse has been making bows for about 50 years. They’re probably L-5 level quality and desirability, and they cost as much!
But there’s a world of instruments far beyond anything we know. $100k bowed instruments abound, and the best bows for them cost more than the most expensive Grimes, Benedetto, D’A etc. Instruments like these aren’t “even” Strads, but they’re 6 figure purchases:
Last edited by nevershouldhavesoldit; 09-20-2024 at 03:51 PM. Reason: typo
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Ha - a very entertaining discussion : ) In "proper" Italian, the correct pronunciation of my last name is Cahm-pehl-LO-neh, with accent on the 3rd syllable. However, in many dialects of southern Italy (where my family is from) it's very common to drop the last vowel, so the pronunciation Cahm-pehl-LONE (as in 'Lone' Ranger) is OK, too.
And if we want to get really technical, another important (though subtle) aspect of pronunciation is the double consonant, like the "LL" in Campellone. I wasn't aware how important this is til I'd spent time in Italy. In Italian, each letter of a double consonant pair is pronounced, and the meaning of a word can change, depending on whether or not you pronounce it correctly. For example, the word pollo (pronounced POL-lo) means chicken - and the word polo (pronounced PO-lo) means pole, as in North Pole. There are very few words in English that have pronounced double consonants (one example is "bookkeeper") - sound-wise, the effect is like the difference between the word "alienation", and the title of the old sci-fi TV series "Alien Nation" - if you pay attention to the way you say the two, you'll realize there is a subtle difference in pronunciation - in the latter, you kinda hang on the "N" a little longer.
In general, with a few exceptions (like the pronunciation of gl and gn) Italian pronunciation is pretty straightforward - if you see it, you say it : )
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I just didn't want to sound like an idiot if I call about one lol
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Someone seriously tell me what beats an L5. AFAIK nothing. Does an L5 plugged into a BF vibrolux count?
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