Review – 000-42 Marquis

Martin’s 000-42 Marquis, an exceptionally fine guitar of top grade materials and

premium appointments 

Used Market Price: $3,800 – $4,200 (discontinued but findable)

000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.comPros: Wonderfully executed design, with top notch resonance and purity, and top shelf tone woods inlaid with pearl at a reasonable price, especially compared to Style 45 Martins.

Cons: Discontinued. They were planning a Madagascar rosewood version, but when the economic crisis struck, the changed their minds. They made it, but they slapped Eric Clapton’s signature on the fingerboard and offered them only in Japan for a king’s ransom.

Bottom Line: One of the finest Indian rosewood fingerstyle guitars Martin ever made.

When I first saw this instrument at the Martin factory I was genuinely surprised. The fabulous 000-42 had only recently entered the Standard Series line of guitars and none of my insider sources at Martin had ever mentioned this new 000-42 Marquis. But then, nothing could have prepared me for how absolutely blown away I was by this guitar, one of the best C. F. Martin has come up with since the Second World War. With its first rate Indian rosewood and pearl inlaid, premium grade Adirondack spruce top, supported by light, 1/4″ bracing, forward shifted in the pre-1938 fashion for even more resonance, this relatively small guitar sounds huge and magnificent. “Astonishing” would not do it justice. 

The instruments in Martin’s Vintage Series pay homage to the classic guitars of the 1930s. The Golden Era models came later as genuine attempts to offer more-accurate replicas, with the exception of some modern conventions such as an adjustable truss rod, contemporary glues and so forth. The Marquis line of instruments came into being when Martin had to restrict their Golden Era editions of rare, Brazilian rosewood. So they offered the same dreadnoughts and OMs with the same construction and appointments, only with Indian rosewood for the back and sides. But this new 000-42 is the first model designed expressly for the Marquis line. They couldn’t have picked a better one.

When Modern Style 42 was introduced, pearl-trimmed Martins were found in Styles 45, 41 and 40, each with stark white binding and hexagon fret markers. The public clamored for the grained ivoroid binding and frilly snowflake fingerboard of Vintage Style 45 and Martin answered in 1986 with the D-42, followed some time later by the OM-42. Although these models do not have pearl trim on the back and sides, from the front they look like vintage 45s. They also have the modern bridge with a short saddle, a low profile neck and top bracing that places them in the Standard Series. On the other hand, the Standard 000-42 is a bit of a hybrid. It shares the same trim and bridge of the other 42s, but also has the V neck and other related specs of the Vintage Series 000-28 Eric Clapton model. It is an extremely well-made guitar, featuring top shelf materials all the way around.

 000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.com

 Martin 000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.com Indian rosewood sides

 Martin 000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.com Indian Rosewood
 Martin 000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.com Adirondack spruce cross silking  Martin 000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.com Style 42 pearl  Martin 000-42 Marquis review One Man's Guitar onemanz.com headstock photo

(All Photos: R. Geradis)

This new 000-42 Marquis differs in some significant ways. With its Marquis/GE specs, it features a more historically accurate heel shape, which alters the feel of the neck in the upper frets for the better, in my opinion. It also has the slightly simpler appointments of Vintage Style 42, which was retired in 1943. This translates as an abbreviated snowflake pattern on the fingerboard that leaves the first four frets blank and puts a large, circular snowflake at the 5th fret. With the Golden Era style Martin logo arching across the headstock, this guitar looks exactly like the 1939 000-42 that Eric Clapton played during his watershed performance on MTV Unplugged. Even the limited edition 000-42ECB model released to commemorate that performance actually had the Vintage Style 45 fingerboard and headstock inlay. So this new Marquis has a look rarely seen by modern players.

But what really makes the 000-42 Marquis extraordinary is found in its top wood and the braces underneath it. Where the modern 42s are made with premium grade Sitka spruce, which accentuates the warm, lush and powerful aspects of Indian rosewood, the Marquis guitars get premium grade Adirondack spruce, which accentuates high harmonics and brings a bell-like clarity to all registers of the guitar’s voice. When you put that spruce on serious rosewood and inlay the edges of the top with pearl you skyrocket into the stratosphere of complex, sophisticated tone.

I subscribe to the opinion that inlaying the edge of a guitar’s top with dense, abalone shell results in an increased complexity to the voice that is often described as an added shimmer or jangle. It simply isn’t present in guitars inlaid with wooden herringbone or thin plastic lines. All one has to do to experience this is play a Clapton 28 and a 000-42 side by side. The only difference is the pearl inlay. If they then play another model made in Style 42 side by side with its counterpart in Style 28 or 35 they will find the same tonal qualities present in both 42s and find them equally different from those non-pearled guitars. But when comparing pearly Martins, the differences are heard from the different spruces. Where the Standard 000-42 has a wonderfully warm ring, that is a marriage of the smoky, Indian rosewood undertone and the beefy harmonic overtones of Sitka spruce, the extra clarity brought into the soundscape by the highly-reflective Adirondack on the 000-42 Marquis is truly breathtaking in how it accentuates the undertone swells while showing off that extra, pearly essence. 

What contributes even more astonishing vibrancy to the Marquis’ voice is the use of scalloped, 1/4″ top braces normally found on long-scale OMs. The short-scale 000 has the same body size, but since 1934 has had thicker, 5/16″ braces. The mahogany 000-18GE was the first regular production 000 to employ the thinner bracing, when it appeared this time last year. Now this rosewood 000-42 Marquis has followed suit. Although 1/4″ braces are not historically accurate on a 000, they allow the top to resonate more freely so the tone mimics that of the true vintage 000s, which were built with a lighter overall construction than used today. The results must be heard to be fully appreciated. 

So now Martin has two short-scale, 14-fret 000-42s from which to choose: The Standard, with its extra pearl inlay and its warm, powerful Sitka top over 5/16″ braces that promote a focused clarity and forward projecting voice, or the Marquis, with its time capsule looks and vibrant, bell-like Adirondack top supported by the lighter 1/4″ bracing that lends itself to a more open, expansive and glowing resonance. I do not envy someone having to choose between the two.

When answering an email asking how I would compare this new 000-42 Marquis to the recent and very impressive 000-18GE, I put it along these lines: The 000-18GE is an angel’s breath kind of guitar – clean, clear, open and forthright. The 000-42 Marquis is an archangel, with a flaming sword of righteousness in one hand and a silver trumpet in the other, overlooking a luscious, ever-swelling undertone. With those vibrant fundamentals and glorious harmonics, it is a pirate’s chest of dark, rich wood, filled to the brim with glittering jewels, swaying to and fro at the bottom of a coral sea. 

To add my own touch of mimicry, I shall steal a bit from a Saturday Night Live sketch when I say this guitar is so good I must invent a word to express how good it is. And that word is splentaculoricious!
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And that is one man’s word on …

Martin 000-42 Marquis

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Martin 000-42 Marquis One Man's Guitar onemanz.com label

Read more about C.F. Martin & Co. HERE

Read our primer about Martin Model Designations and Naming Conventions HERE

 

7 thoughts on “Review – 000-42 Marquis

  1. I’ve seen a 2006 for $6450. That’s a lot higher than the used value you have at the top of the page. Nevertheless, It’s the only one I can find and I’m really tempted. I don’t know how old this article is and wondered how it compared with a reimagined 000-42

    1. People can try to sell used Martins at such prices, but that does not mean anyone will pay that price. And there is no telling what limited availability or mystique will do to prices. The Gordon Lightfoot and Jimmy BUffet signature dreadnoughts have always sold way beyond their intrinsic worth as “a mahogany dreadnought.”

      However, they only made approximately 150 of the 000-42 Marquis. I was looking VERY forward to the 000-42 Marquis Madagascar, but Martin cancelled that model for multiple reasons (the political crisis in Madagascar being one of them.) Instead, Martin took the ones they had started to make, slapped Eric Clapton’s signature on them and sold them as a Japanese exclusive EC model. Sigh.

      My original review was based on the NAMM prototype I played at the factory the year it was released in January 2007. So, if that guitar has a 2006 stamp, it was one of the few that were under construction before the NAMM show. It might even be the one sold at the show, as Martin tended to keep the one they put on display at the factory. But some of those were later sold at employee auctions. So, it is clearly an early serial number for what turned out to be a short-lived catalog model. What is that worth? That is up to the buyer.

      How does it compare to the modern 000-42? The Marquis has Adirondack spruce for the top and Golden Era style Adirondack bracing, plus the Modified V neck that is a bit rounder in the cheeks in the upper frets due to the 1930s style neck heel, and 2/-5/16″ string spacing to go along with the 2-1/4″ fingerboard width at the 12th fret. I would say those are all significant differences from the Sitka spruce soundboard with standard scalloped bracing and the modern Modified Low Oval neck shape, High Performance fingerboard taper and 2-5/32″ string spacing.

      1. I bought one at around 6k a year ago. These rare ones appear to sell around this price now unfortunately. I don’t think I would ever buy another acoustic fingerstyle guitar however ! Sounds and feels awesome…

  2. I need this guitar. Have been looking for a 000 14 fret short scale for years. Went thru 3 Claptons and a recent custom with Adi top and braces, hide glue construction and TRUE Waverly tuners. ALL were disappointments. The projection I’d expected, especially the last one, was just not there. They’re fine when driven with a flat pick but not responsive at all as a finger style guitar.

    1. Well you would love one of these then. Your concerns were exactly why I liked the model so much. I could really dig in for serious fingerpicking.

      I badgered Tim Teel and others at Martin to start putting 1/4″ bracing on their 14-fret 000s as a result. I had not taken into account how much softer Sitka is than Adi. The 1/4″ braced 000-18s do not respond to flatpicking and pick strumming in the same manner, even if they are great for lighter fingerpicking. I think that is why they went back to 5/16″ for the modern 000-28.

      Did your Adi custom have Golden Era scalloping? Were they 5/6″ or 1/4″ braces?

      I would love to see a short-scale 000 with a Sitka top and 1/4″ scalloped Adirondack braces. Just to see if that got the desired strength to resonance ratio.

      1. The Adi custom I have has 5/16″ bracing and GE scalloping. It’s an amazing sounding guitar. Just not the “One” I’ve been looking for. Started searching but haven’t found any Marquis 000 42s yet. All of the ones that were posted have sold.

        1. Yeah. Not surprised. They did not make that many. They were supposed to come out with the 000-42M Madagascar rosewood model. But that particular economic downturn hit, so they instead turned it into a limited Eric Clapton model exclusive to the Japanese market. Sad to say.

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