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My interest is piqued. Has the Chinese archtop industry matured to the point that there is stuff coming out as good as Gibson, etc? (I certainly realize that there are individual luthiers in China building excellent, top-grade guitars. But, are there production instruments that "have arrived?")
I have played some fascinatingly good "The Loar" and Eastman guitars over the last ten years. The better examples are going to be at home on anyone's bandstand. These are solid, player-grade instruments--by "player" I mean pro-player.
However, would I have, in the last ten years, been likely to shop for an Eastman or Loar when I would be out looking for a Gibson L-5, Guild Benedetto Johnny Smith, Heritage Golden Eagle, etc?
I have been a consumer of Japanese guitars for over 50 years. Long ago, I realized that not all of the top-line Japanese instruments were reaching the US. If you shopped in Tokyo you could find guitars that were a cut above and reserved for the home market. Does anyone know, is there any similar phenomenon going on in China today?
GT
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04-02-2017 06:22 PM
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Pizza dough has sugar, salt, flour and water. Yet each maker is able to make a different tasting crust. It almost takes on the personality of the maker. I don't know how to build a guitar. I don't know what it is that Gibson does that makes the personality of a Gibson. I could give you an exact recipe for pizza dough and you could make it and I guarantee it wouldn't be anything like the dough I make. If I had to guess I would say that Gibson probably does a shoddy job of bracing, and building as compared to the current lutihers. They no doubt cut every corner that can be cut, but in the end to my ears they all sound like Gibson. Not exactly, some are duds some are incredible, but they all have the Gibson personality. I envy you in many respects, you hear no difference. I do, and proving that would be as difficult as proving a bad back. What ever guitar you choose if it inspires you to play you have made the right choice. "And the beat goes on"
Originally Posted by ScoopTheMids
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
Nice work Swinger.
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So ScoopThemids please tell me what Chinese guitar manufacturer makes a guitar that sounds exactly like a Gibson L5. I will be eternally grateful ! You will save me a ton of scratch. In fact please inform me about that Chinese model and I will buy you the Chinese guitar of your choice delivered to your door at no cost to you. That is my promise to you.
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Originally Posted by vinnyv1k
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I had to change my avatar in response to the anti-Gibson sentiment that I have read in this thread.
IMO, Gibson makes the best electric archtops in the world and have since they started making them. Just like Harley-Davidson makes the finest motorcycles in the world and have since they started making them.
And if you have to ask why in both cases, you would not understand.
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Originally Posted by medblues
Nope, it's not. Some people care about the last few thousand feet of altitude, and some care about the final 10% or whatever that sits between the Gibson and the Epiphone Elitist. It's a high-altitude difference, and up there above the treeline, small differences matter a lot.
Whoa I think my metaphor just got out of control!
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Originally Posted by medblues
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I've been through a large number of archtops. Many brands and models. L5's, 175s, Tals, etc. Gibson, Eastman, Heritage, custom luthiers, lawsuits, etc. And right now I have 5 nice archtops. All that time that I've been going through guitars, I've been looking for the Gibson sound that is in my head. I get it with the Bozeman L-7C I currently have and it is the one I play most of the time. I'm an old guy and I've come to the conclusion that "only a Gibson is good enough". But the one that is the most Gibson-like for me is not from the Crimson Custom Shop. Unfortunately, I don't think you can get a Bozeman L7 anymore, either. Every individual instrument is different, but to my mind, only Gibson really has the Gibson sound... And feel, which is just as much a part of it. So it will be sad if they don't make them anymore. Doesn't mean they've disappeared from the universe, though. You can still get a pre-war Martin, too. Maybe stockpiling isn't a bad idea, if you've got the dosh.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
The percentage arguments and the Everest analogy are in my humble opinion not really equivalent, both are by definition quantifications whereas tone judgments are not- hence the utility of blinding and placebo controls. I have nothing against Gibson, I would make similar claims about a genuine vintage Fender Deluxe Reverb versus for instance a Carr Rambler (USA made, as expensive if not more expensive than the Fender) in a blinded test. A corporate brand does not equal a magical recipe for sound.
This is not about Chinese-Korean-Japanese made gear either. Elsewhere in the forum, I have read some Gibson fans claim that guitars made in the Kalamazoo Heritage plant by hand by former Gibson artisans are also different or discernible in sound from Gibson guitars made probably by the same folks using the same wood and tools ! Accepting that without some convincing evidence is very difficult for me.
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no other guitar sounds like a Gibson
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The thing about perceived "brand value" is that over time, non-existent "differences" do tend to get exposed for what they are, namely, the Emperor's Clothes.
Someone cited the e.g. of Grey Poupon mustard earlier. This was a U.S. phenomenon: In France, the French would laugh at any Grey Poupon mustard user, as well they should. Mustard is a well-known, common, inexpensive and key ingredient in much French cooking. Mustard is basically ground mustard seed, vinegar, salt, some spices, and some white wine, for Dijon style mustard. Cheap and plentiful, and something that has been used for centuries. Since the 80's U.S. heyday of Grey Poupon, there are now supermarket brands of Dijon-style mustard, as well as imported French cooperative products (e.g. Temeraire) that are good, and less expensive. I think Grey Poupon is no longer the high flyer it once was. The same thing is true with the Cuisinart food processor. (BTW I like CHEAP food flavorings...if it is plentiful, you have a better chance of getting the real thing, and not some ersatz, artificial substitute...honey, and citrus are usually safe , but start getting into vanilla and nut flavorings, and watch out....you're likely to get something phony and unconvincing.)
Once upon a time Coors beers was regarded as something exotic, back in the days when it was distributed in only 12 states back in the mid-70's...hard to believe today, given its generally, weak and characterless nature.)
I know someone who works in the branded liquor business. The dirty secret about some "boutique" liquors is that they are re-branded, re-bottled, generic liquor from some national distillers, that are supported by heavy ad campaigns. They technically are "hand bottled" just like some specialty waters, I suspect, are bottled tap water. The same phenomenon occurs with some "craft beer" makers, some of which are literally made in the corner of national brand breweries. There is heavy "lifestyle" aura surrounding liquors, and for the life of me I will never understand why people buy pseudo-products like Smirnoff vodka, when, for the same price they can get the real deal--authentic Polish vodkas distllled from Danofsky rye: After all, the Poles invented vodka, and for 500 years, Polish vodka has been good.
Someone earlier mentioned the demise of the Epiphone guitar brand, and this is a sad and bitter story. I went to HS with a girl who is related to the Stathopoulous family, and there is bad feeling, even to this day, over what happened to the guitars, and its fire-sale purchase by Gibson back in the early 60's. But, the brand had fallen into decline, and makers like Gibson came along with the 175 and the 335 model, which were new, and very good products.
There is an "installed base" issue with Gibsons. By this, I mean that some brands become dominant in the marketplace because they get well known, and other less supported brands don't establish the user base, and servicing base, to compete. This is kind of true with Fender amps which became the de facto standard, though many old jazzers preferred Ampegs. AT some pt. it CAN become self-fulfilling prophecy. I like Jim Hall's '50's sound but not his Sadowsky sound. I don't like Metheny's sound at all, because of its over-processed nature, and guitarists surely are a conservative bunch for all their cries of individuality.
I still pine for old time Coca Cola, in that green bottle, with its natural sugar flavoring and the bite, that brought tears to your eyes, when you downed a whole 7 oz. bottle in one swig on a hot day. Better yet, if it was fished out of a red cooler in the Carolinas in a gas station with a larger than life-sized cardboard cutout of Richard Petty, one of the South's true sports heros, looking over you.
The Porsche is still a classic sports car design, though a Corvette does most of the same things at about 1/3 the price. I would argue that the Corvette is a classic design as well.
Nobody pays list price for Gibsons, and they still maintain their resale value, to a more marked degree, and there is still, IMO, something "under the hood" that makes them sound different than their competitors, incl. Heritage. (I suspect when Heritage was set up originally, there was a modus vivendi worked out with the Kalamzoo-Heritage people, that allowed both companies to survive. A Heritage 575 is not quite a 175, and a Super Eagle, in not quite a Super 400. They are both good, but different.)
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Originally Posted by goldenwave77
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Originally Posted by ScoopTheMids
Last edited by citizenk74; 04-02-2017 at 09:50 PM.
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I believe that the capability to have a Chinese L5 copy is there, but there isn't one. It would be a simple argument to win if you would just post the example, even just the name of the guitar if you don't have a clip. There isn't one though. A blind audio test would not help because I think a vast minority of people are able to pinpoint the L5 sound - different players, strings, picks, different years...there are too many variables. Even in the 70's with the lawsuit guitars there wasn't a clear, true ripoff of the L5, presumably because it would have been too expensive to make back then which is why the copies were laminates. Good instruments (I love the lawsuit 175 I have) and I think that some came very close (again, 175) but there were no actual carved top copies that nailed it. They could definitely do that now - Chinese instruments are very good. If Eastman had copied Gibson schematics instead of Benedetto then I believe they would have an L5 copy that was very convincing. But the whole argument is "bullshit" because there isn't one - it doesn't exist. Right now I like my Eastman more than my L5. It is easier to play. But I still put the time in on the L5 because that is the sound I want and if some magical copy came along I would be the first to buy one - I am not a brand loyalist but I know what sound I like and so do many other people here.
I just don't get the argument really. It is all smoke blowing out of various body parts until there is a concrete example to name rather than just arguing that the capability is there.
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Originally Posted by ScoopTheMids
That said, I think people are responding to your stridency and aggression. Perhaps you don't notice the tone you are striking. If you really have no interest in making this thread nasty or personal, I can only suggest that you read over your posts and try to be open to the suggestion that your tone is overly bombastic. After all, we are strangers who don't know you. You can always start a new thread specifically to debate whether Gibson has any secret sauce, or whether it is all psychoacoustics. As the OP I think we can all agree that you get to set the tone and invite others to debate you.
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Originally Posted by Greentone
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Originally Posted by Bluedawg
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Originally Posted by ScoopTheMids
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I have been reading this forum for awhile without posting. Most everyone here knows a lot about this field and these instruments and I have been reading and trying to learn.
This thread is very much unlike the others I have read -- tone-wise, that is. I generally admire the tone in this forum.
I've never played an L-5. Too expensive for me to even touch. I just purchased an Eastman 605. Still, I do know, Scoop, that your tone in these posts is substantially different than the normal tone in this forum, at least the threads I have followed.
I would also bet that you and I are not the only ones here who have read Nicholas Capaldi.
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Originally Posted by ScoopTheMids
Orville's ground up bones in the finish. And you are also going after the wrong person because I think your points are valid - I do think that a copy could be made that might sound like an L5. But there isn't one that I have heard about, anyone else here has heard about or any of the large number of musicians that I know have heard about. I am not the one trying to convince a forum of guitarists that my opinion is somehow more valid than anyone else's though so I don't need to bring evidence to support what I am saying.
I also don't think there is anything scientific about proving your point through a listening test but I have already mentioned why but you have decided to mock "YouTube compression" instead of the actual relevant reasons that a listening test would not really work. Too many variables - believe me, I am fascinated to hear side by side comparisons of guitars. But I don't build my opinions about the worth of entire brands and models on those examples of just one guitar vs. another. Like someone else said here, we think we know what a Gibson sounds like because there is so much in the jazz guitar library recorded on Gibsons. But one guitar still doesn't sound like another whether it be strings, picks, playing differences, differences in construction or just different players.
I am just very curious now - if you had to sum up your point, what is it exactly? Do you just really want people to know that Gibson's aren't magic and any guitar can sound l is a Gibson? Do you want to convince people that there are modern Chinese guitars out in the wild that sound and feel just like an L5 because you have invested so much effort into posting about it at this point? Just here for the ride and being reactive? You are clearly passionate about something but I'm not sure what it is.
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All I know is that the recent Gibson Archtops sound GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!! Hats off to the people (Luthiers) building wonderful sounding Gibsons.
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In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is.
Yogi Berra
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Originally Posted by Lobomov
To the point of my post: could you tell the difference between a 59 and a 99 ES-175, for example? Because that is what I was replying to. Could you tell the difference between a Gibby and Epi 175 on a recording? How many of the cognoscenti thought Jimmy Page played a Les Paul on Zeppelin I?
It cracks me up, how many guitarists will type reams online about how tone is in the fingers, and at the same time exalt gear based on name brand alone -- not saying you're one of those, just using your post to make this point.
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Originally Posted by skiboyny
"Gibson sounds like Gibson" is a meaningless tautology until you define your terms.
Originally Posted by ScoopTheMids
dingdingdingding
Until you can get tone down into the realm of metrics, you're only talking preference, and that is malleable in accordance with bias.
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