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Originally Posted by bluejaybill
Yup, there're a bunch of them out there and it's a fun process to compare them. At the very least, it might add to the knowledge that informs why one would worth more than another. On paper, they can look quite similar. Making music, if you're good enough to appreciate and discern, they can be quite different.
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06-16-2021 09:40 PM
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Luthiers should get more than subsistence wages for his or her skill and expertise. When we buy a guitar, we are not buying wood. The wood is the least of it. We are buying the knowledge, the skill, the dedication and passion of the craftsperson that made it. Watch Ken Parker's "Archtoppery" video series to get a good idea of what goes into thinking about archtop guitar design and then executing it. The minutae he has focused on to try to perfect is amazing. That's why one of his guitars is $30,000. Look at the work of Monteleone, Benedetto, Manzer, etc. I would love one of Parker's archtops; the fact that the price tag would be more than half of my take-home income for a year means that I'll never have one. So be it. That is just the way it goes. I will never own a D'Acquisto or real D'Angelico, either. C'est la vie. And my skills on the instrument don't warrant that, anyway.
When a luthier is charging under $4000 for a hand carved arch top guitar, they are probably making US minimum wage or less on an hourly basis. Do we want them to live in poverty so that we can have really nice but not particularly expensive luxury guitars?
And quite frankly in a world where someone can charge $3000 to build a Telecaster, most of which can be done with a bandsaw, $6000 for an archtop doesn't seem so absurd.
Roger Sadowsky's archtop guitars are made by craftsman in Japan who are second to none at what they do. And Japan has very high labor costs, not to mention that it's across the Pacific Ocean so there are also shipping costs involved.
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Originally Posted by Jim Soloway
Sadowsky Jimmy Bruno Model A530 Archtop Guitar- USED
Sadowsky Jimmy Bruno Archtop - CR Guitars
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Or you could go to Japan and pick one up for JPY490 000 or about $4428.
sadowsky jim hall????????????????
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bless their little hearts for getting what they can get, and (hopefully) ensuring living wages for their staff, but i got some mij poly/laminate archtops that say "epiphone" and "gretsch" on them for less than a third of that. never once regretted it.
you could say the same about collings, and i'd say the same, too. i'll never be in a position to need or deserve a $6000 instrument, and i suppose i'm fortunate for that. my guitars may not (or may) be as nice as a sadowsky or any other name you'd care to mention, but that difference never once held me back or was detrimental to what i do or how i create. money talks, and other things do something else.
and if you can hear the difference between a sadowsky and something else, you aren't using enough gain.
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Sure, I'd like a Sadowsky or 2, and a couple of Collings as well.
Are they worth what they're selling for? Impossible to answer objectively.
But, until I win the lottery (I guess I'd have to buy a ticket), I'll stick with these:
Total cost (actual outlay over 40+ years): About $19K.
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Originally Posted by Tom Karol
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Originally Posted by feet
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Originally Posted by cmajor9
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The Gibson ES175 before it’s demise in 2017 had a $5K+ MAP but you could wiggle down that price.
If it ever returns I hate to think what the price might be seeing some LP models selling for over $7K now.
I should have stuck with the clarinet.
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Labor costs go up each year, real estate costs go up each year, material costs go up each year etc.
25 years ago a 300K house was expensive, now it is the price of a starter home in much of the USA.
You can still get cheap guitars from places like China where slave wages are still paid and the environment is raped, or you can pay more. Your choice. Your Karma.
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Originally Posted by vinnyv1k
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I am reminded of a story about Jimmy D'Aquisto. At one point in his career, his guitars on the used market were selling for more than he was charging for them new. People would order a guitar, take delivery and then immediately flip it for a profit. He ended up canceling all of his existing orders and if people still wanted a guitar, they had to reorder them at the higher price. Otherwise, what the hell was he working for?
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Originally Posted by omphalopsychos
But the bigger thing is that it is luthier-built, by hand, nice touches like wood binding etc.
Both a Trenier and a Borys are over $6K new I'm pretty sure, I got mine used for considerably less. So $6K can get you near one of those.
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Originally Posted by bluejaybill
I got turned off by Sadowskys when I heard Walter Becker play one at Steely Dan's "Plush Jazz-Rock Party" on their big comeback special on PBS.
I couldn't understand why they let WB play all these fills on this 'honking' guitar, when they had Herrington getting sublime sounds out of his axe.
I realize this is subjective, but it blemished what was a transcendent concert otherwise.
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Well the good news is there are great guitars to be had. The bad news is the guitars I like are always the expensive ones! LOL!
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I’d pay $4200 for that blue Sadowsky.
Sadowsky Jim Hall Model(新品)【楽器検索デジマート】
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Originally Posted by 2bornot2bop
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Originally Posted by Woody Sound
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No Not Heritage Again! LOL
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Originally Posted by jads57
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Originally Posted by Woody Sound
This thread got me thinking-how is the Sadowsky Jim Hall compared to some of the Eastman Guitars?
Doug
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Originally Posted by Doug B
Both guitars’ stock pup are replaced with 57 Classics.
My luthier cut the top of the Eastman just enough to not mess with the top brace and dropped the pup beautifully.
These are two very different guitars: one is a thin carved spruce top/solid maple body and sides, the other maple laminated.
The Eastman is more resonant acoustically, and has the typical thin carved-top sound with bright overtones. The general sound changed after chopping up the top, of course: not as resonant acoustically, but the electric sound now is darker, more even, less prone to feedback, and definitely more practical for me.
The Sadowsky is more modern sounding; very even across the entire range. Less upper-mid hump, less sparkly treble, and less deep bass than the Eastman, due to several factors including the height of the arch, material, body depth, and etc.
Can handle high volume better than the Eastman.
Can’t really comment on workmanship/build quality of the current models, since the Eastman is 20 yrs old. All the cheap hardware on the Eastman have been replaced over the years, as they sucked. But I felt the basic build and the tone potential were better than (some) modern Gibsons, I sold my early 90’s L5 WesMo soon after getting the Eastman.
Got the 2012 Sadowsky used. I consider it to be a good workhorse, in terms of quality: there’s no real weakness in any area.
All my instruments are tools for my work, as a full-time pro.
Both instruments serve their own purposes adequately.
Hope this helps.
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Originally Posted by Doug B
Jimmy made beautiful working instruments with laminate tops for people like Joe Pass and Jim Hall. These are like the ones that are discussed in this thread.
In his last years as a builder, he shied away from those models, (the New Yorker and the Exel) in the more traditional specs that had their origins in old Gibson and D'Angelico parentage and pursued a form that was more purely acoustic. They were more resonant, more lightly built and were dedicated to an acoustic "concert" sensibility. I think he called these the Avant Garde, the Ultima and the Centura.
Of course guitarists, being largely a "traditional" market, ignored and never really embraced these magnificent instruments.
But building wise, this more resonant way of building, and especially the emphasis on an acoustic form that used higher archings, lighter graduations and plate tuning tops and backs for the best acoustic response (something that's impossible on laminates), live on in the the guitars of Monteleone (direct lineage), Benedetto and to a large part, the sensibilities of Eastman guitars, especially the higher end acoustics.
So the more appropriate comparison might be between ES-175 innovated electric/acoustic guitars and late model D'Aquisto inspired acoustic/electric guitars.
Anyway that's one way you might look at it, and make the comparison between those families; those building philosophies.
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Originally Posted by Doug B
Warm Up exercises
Today, 07:53 AM in Guitar Technique