Vintage Statesboro 12-string – NAMM 2017

British-based Paul Brett introduces a new 12-string for the Vintage brand of acoustic guitars

Official Debut at the Winter NAMM show

One of the more interesting arrivals at Winter NAMM is the Vintage Statesboro 12-string guitar, from John Hornby Skewes & Co. Ltd. (JHS) who distribute brands like Fret-King™ electric and bass guitars,  Vintage® and Encore® electric, acoustic and bass guitars and Pilgrim® Folk Instruments..

Made with a 1920s Stella look, and dedicated to Blind Willie McTell, this “bluesmachine” 12-string features a maple back and mahogany sides, topped with solid Sitka Spruce, and a metal trapeze tailpiece, and a bone nut and saddle.

It is available as an acoustic (V5000SB-12) and acoustic-electric version (VE5000SB-12) that has the Fishman Rare Earth humbucker soundhole pickup system.

It comes with a Kinsman Hardshell case.

JHS/RBI Music NAMM Booth 5279

Additional Reading:

Vintage Guitars US Website

Santa Cruz Guitar Company at Winter NAMM

Wonderful Guitars from Santa Cruz Guitar Company

 Winter NAMM Booth# 1708 (Hall E)

Models on display for the playing include a Standard OM Grand and an all-mahogany 00 1929, while the Custom Shop display includes the 12th and final installment of their 40th Anniversary FTC model, and an a Firefly model made with highly flamed koa back sides and top,

NAMM 2017 Jamie Stillway Santa Cruz Firefly
photo: SCGC

seen here enjoyed by indie fingerstyle phenom Jamie Stillway.

The Brad Paisley B/PW signature model debuted at Summer NAMM. Is a pre-war style dreadnought made with Indian rosewood for the back and sides and a bearclaw Sitka spruce top, forward-shifted bracing and a 1-3/4″ V neck and 2-3/16″ string spacing, and a white calligraphy cowboy hat on the headstock.

Scott Law’s D-Law signature model is a mahogany dreadnought with vintage D-28 appointments including diamonds and squares on the fretboard and herringbone trim, a Italian spruce top with tobacco sunburst, Adirondack bracing, hide glue construction. It has 2-3/16″ string spacing at the traditional-looking long saddle to go along with a 1-11/16″ V neck that is slightly shorter in scale (25.25″) from the usual SCGC 25.375″).

They have a Bob Brozman Baritone Pro, a 12-fret dreadnought sound monster by any means, this one has outrageously flamed koa rather than the usual mahogany, and a German spruce top.

And then it gets really good.

While many of the 12 40th Anniversary FTC models have maple back and sides, this one is made with mahogany back and sides, a bearclaw Sitka top, whiteish cowboy rope purfling and rosette, the classic SCGC art deco fret markers set into upper left corners, and replica decco tuners. Each of the 12 guitars has a different styling in terms of toner, sun burst tops or lack there of.

Other custom shop offerings include a Tony Rice model with bearclaw German spruce, an OM Grand 12-string with high-grade Adirondack top (!) and an H13 custom with Alpine moon spruce over cocobolo, a soft lamp light sunburst and super fine sparkly Style 42 inlay

And that is just the ones I can remember at the moment.

Related Reading:

Jamie Stillway official site

SCGC 40th Anniversary Model

Martin OMs Making Music

Marshall Fleisher’s Martin OM-42 and Maury Rutch’s OM-28V

Mates of mine meet up at Maury’s, where music magic is made

Check out this series of videos over at Maury’s Music’s blog

Maury's Music guitarist video

Two of my brothers-in-Martin make up the R and F in D.O.R.K.F., the classic rock cover band that perform in Pennsylvania, but once a year with a long list of special guests.

Marshall Fleisher has been journeyman musician since the Woodstock era and is one of those players with a built in encyclopedia of songs and his own arrangements of fingerstyle tunes, who I get to hear at Martinfest and occasionally elsewhere.

Maury Rutch made his living as a performing musician long before he started moonlighting as a dealer in fine Martin, Blue Ridge, Reverend, and Mesa/Boogie music-making machines. And when he’s not out gigging with one of his own bands, he is happy to serve as sideman for visiting musicians, wandering minstrels, or the occasional back alley tomcat.

I could listen to these guys all day long.

Martin GPC-15ME Review

Grand Performance in Martin’s 15 Series’ GPC-15ME


Versatile mahogany top tone at a great price

Specs include: Grand Performance body size with cutaway; solid wood construction; African mahogany back, sides, top; 5/16″ scalloped forward-shifted bracing; mahogany High Performance neck with Modified Low Oval profile, Indian rosewood bridge and fingerboard with High Performance taper, 1-3/4″ at nut, 2-1/8″ at 12th fret, 2-5/32″ string spacing; satin finish, open back tuners with butter bean knobs; Fishman Matrix VT Enhance N2 electronics

“I am pleased as punch at the punch from the GPC-15ME’s midrange, and how it is hugged by a cuddly bear of mahogany warmth in the bass. And my ear loves being tickled by the sweet, sweet laugh of the 15 Series treble notes that make me want to reach out and pluck them from the air.”

Read the Full Review Here

Martin GPC-15ME shoulder 2 NAMM

Why 2-3/16″ string spacing, not 2-5/32″? – Reader Q & A

A reader asks why his custom Martin has the string spacing it does.

Leslie in Tennessee writes:

Ok, I guess I’m a guitar geek because I love all of this information! And, it makes me wonder about mine….

Long story short, I played a lot of different Martins, figuring out what I liked. I ended up with a custom, a 000-28, Adi top with 1/4″ scalloped Adi braces, and a 1-3/4″ short-scale mod-low-oval neck.

I did specify short-scale and the 1-3/4″ nut; but I didn’t specify a width for the 12th fret: looking at the build sheet specs, it shows it at 2-1/8″, not a surprise.

But this string spacing is not 2-5/32″, it’s 2-3/16″ (which would be 2-6/32″.)

It’s great, I’m not complaining all, just geeking out, wondering why my custom Martin has wider spacing.

Spoon replies:

First of all, allow me to congratulate you on your taste in guitars.

I have a custom short-scale rosewood 000 with Adirondack top and 1/4″ bracing as well. But mine has the Golden Era neck and 5/16″ string spacing, having been made before all this modern taper business came about.

Your mystery is easily solved. My inner Sherlock Holmes deduces that your guitar was ordered before 2016 and the Custom Shop “starter model” was an OM-28, made with the customizations you requested.

Therefore, it would by default have the High Performance Taper to the fretboard and the corresponding string spacing of 2-3/16″, which Martin changed to 2-5/32″ in January, 2016.

The change came because the right people in the right places (probably touring professionals who Martin actually listens to) complained that it was too easy to pull the high E string off the frets up near the neck. This is an issue I have dubbed string “derailment.”

According to Tim Teel at Martin, “the difference in spacing is literally the width of a unwound light gauge E string.” But he feels it is enough to correct the issue.

When it comes to necks with a modern taper, Taylor and Collings use 2-3/16″ string spacing, as do other brands. So Martin went with that for their new taper, at first.

I have heard of the derailment issue from Collings and Taylor players, but not players of Huss & Dalton guitars, which actually have even wider string spacing of 2-7/32″ for their standard 1-3/4″ neck taper.

H&D does not base anything on the fretboard width at the12th fret. I called to ask, and Mark Dalton told me the measurement there is 2.184″, a smidge narrower than 2-3/16″. So its wider at the 12th fret on their standard taper than on that of Taylor, Collings, or Martin’s High Performance taper, if not by much.

Personally, I believe it is an issue for any guitar with frets cut at too steep an angle, too far into the fret, regardless of the string spacing or taper. But having the string closer to the edge certainly increases the odds of a derailment happening.

The times I have encountered this issue tended to be specific to a guitar, not a across multiple examples of the same model. And I tend to naturally adjust my playing over time to compensate for the occasional derailment of the string.

Since your guitar has the short-scale neck, the string spacing will not be exactly the same as on a long-scale Martin at any point along the string, except right where it terminates at the saddle and nut. If I remember correctly, the strings widen farther up the neck relative to long-scale guitars.

So you may never experience the derailment issue. Plus, your frets might not be cut as severely as guitars that have the issue.

 

Martin LE-Cowboy-2016 Review

Martin takes the western motif guitar tradition to new heights with their LE-Cowboy-2016

A stallion of a 12-fret 000 melding new technologies, Martin tradition, and a Western Americana aesthetic

Specs include: 12-fret 000 body size; all-solid woods including quilted American mahogany back and sides; Sitka spruce top with VTS torrefaction and adorned with image by western artist Mathew Williams; scalloped braces with 5/16” X brace and 1/4” tone bars; long-scale American mahogany neck with simple dovetail neck joint, slotted headstock, Modified Low Oval profile; ebony fingerboard, 1-3/4” at nut, 2-1/4” at 12th fret; ebony straight bridge with bone saddle, 2-1/4” string spacing; ebony bridge pints; Style 30 colored wood purfling and back strip, Golden Era short pattern diamonds and squares fret markers; grained ivoroid binding, mother-of-pearl rider’s saddle headstock inlay; Golden Age relic side mount tuners with ivoroid buttons

“This guitar has such character and depth to its voice, with the resonant response reaching way down inside to create a more 3-D soundscape, which quivers with colorful sympathetics lit by the clear and present fundamentals firing off the played strings.”

Martin LE Cowboy 2016 NAMM top lo

Read the Full Review Here

2017 Martin Models Announced

Artist signature models and a 000-30 among the 2017 Martin guitars

New for Winter NAMM

After various names and numbers have leaked out over recent weeks, the latest 2017 Martin news offers something for almost everyone

Updated January 17, 2017

000-30 Authentic 1919

I have waited over two years to talk about the Authentic Series entrant for 2017, a replication of a 000-30 built in 1919. As per their mission to keep as many features identical to the original article as possible, this is a VERY lightly built 12-fret Auditorium-size guitar; just as the actual 1919 000-30 is very lightly built even by the standards of the day.

2017 Martin 000-30 Authentic 1919 Winter NAAM useThe vintage source guitar is quite rare, only one of two 000-30s ever built. It is historical significant as the first Martin model to feature a neck and headstock carved from one solid piece of mahogany, rather than a conjoined neck where the headstock is made separately. And it was also the first time Martin used grained ivoroid for the binding instead of elephant ivory. Given the fact C. F. Martin IV is passionately committed to the Save the Elephant movement and other efforts to stem the illicit ivory trade, it is a timely Authentic model indeed.

The Authentic Series reproduction has solid Madagascar rosewood back and sides, and an Adirondack spruce top treated with Martin’s Vintage Tone System torrefaction, including the bracing and bridge plate, which were made to closely replicate those on the very special vintage Martin. You can read more about VTS torrefaction HERE.

This model is also special for having rosewood back and sides made thinner than even their other Authentic Series offerings. And since Martin didn’t start using truss rods in guitar necks until the mid-1920s, this guitar does not have one. According to the manager of the Custom Shop that built it, it is “such a lightweight instrument and extremely responsive.” While it has modern T frets, it has a type of compression fretting developed expressly for a solid mahogany neck without a support rod.

Style 30 (and the basically identical Style 34) was designed to offer a high-end Martin without the use of abalone shell purfling. Instead, it has a colorful wooden mosaic inlaid as rope or “half herringbone” purfling. Style 30 has always been a personal favorite of mine. And to be able to play a time machine version, before the colors faded from the inlay, even if the modern German marquetry inlaid around the top is not exactly the same as that used back in the day, will make this particular Authentic a woody feast for the eyes and ears.

List Price: $8,599

 

2017 NAMM Show Special

SS-0041GB-17

2017 Martin SS-0041gb-17 headstock NAMMThis guitar is based upon a vintage 1896 guitar by Philadelphia luthier George Bauer, who built instruments between 1890 and 1910. Martin purchased the Bauer Presentation Model at auction and have used the unique and quite fancy aesthetics to create this year’s Show Special.

It is a 12-fret 00, larger than the source instrument, and made from Guatemalan rosewood and European spruce treated with Martin’s Vintage Tone System. It has hide glue construction throughout, and scalloped 1/4” bracing, Style 41 pearl top trim, and the one of a kind fingerboard inlay was altered slightly to add a Martin-esque touch. Limited to 50 instruments.

List Price: $9,999.

 

CS-D18 Outlaw-17

2017 Martin CS-D18 Outlaw-17 Winter NAAM dThis limited edition of 100 guitars is available to dealers only in 2017. As with other Custom Shop Series instruments, this model is made with hide glue construction as on the Authentic Series guitars. And it has a VTS Adirondack top as well as other features normally unavailable outside Martin’s Authentic Series. But it has the modern High Performance neck rather than a V neck, so it basically makes it a mahogany companion to last year’s CS-Bluegrass-16. It also gets unique Antique White binding and the same Antique top toner that debuted on the Bluegrass model.

The name Outlaw was chosen by Custom Shop manager Jeff Allen and relates to the Martin “laws” that prohibit him from allowing outside custom orders to have certain spec combinations along the Authentic Series lines, but which he can get away with for his CS limited editions. In Jeff’s words, “It’s basically an Authentic Series body with the modern neck.” The most notable differences is the fact the Outlaw bridge plate, bracing and kerfing are not “tucked” under one another.

And then there is the herringbone and ivory-colored trim on a “D-18.” While not entirely outlaw, similar styling did appear on a different D-18 made years ago for that self-styled pirate Jimmy Buffet.

List Price: $6,999

 

CEO-8.2 and CEO-8.2E

Martin CEO-8.2 Winter NAAMDesigned by Martin CEO C. F. Martin IV, this is one big Grand Jumbo guitar, with a unique Bourbon Sunset Burst shading to the top. The E version has the new Fishman Blackstack sound hole pickup, with an exclusive ivoroid cover that matches the binding. This guitar is made entirely with Forestry Stewardship Council certified wood.

It differs from the 2015 CEO-8 in several ways. Where that guitar had sycamore back and sides and a VTS Sitka spruce top, this new version has mahogany back and sides and a VTS European spruce top (a favorite combination of mine.) It has the simple dovetail neck joint, however, rather than the full dovetail, and it has an ornate headstock taken from Martins old archtop models, and the rarely used slanted “The Martin” headstock logo, which appeared on the prototype of the 2015 CEO-8, but not the main run. The fret markers are different as well, and there is no inlay on an otherwise identical pickguard.

List Price: $3,999 – $4,999 for the acoustic-electric version

 

00-28

2017 Martin 00-28 NAMM

Standard Style 28 gets scalloped braces on a model other than an OM, finally! The 00-28 has the same Indian rosewood and Sitka spruce along with the same classic cosmetic appointments as the Standard D-28 and OM-28.

I absolutely loved the new 00-18 that came out in July, and I am sure Martin was well aware what a successful design it proved to be. A 00-28 with the same High Performance neck and scalloped 1/4″ braces was a no-brainer.

List Price: $3,599

 

There are two artist “signature models” coming out at Winter NAMM as well.

Dwight Yoakam DD28 Signature Edition

2017 Martin D 28 Yoakham cards and guard Martin D-200 fingerboard Winter NAMM

Based on Yoakam’s 1972 D-28, it has a 1-11/16” low profile neck, and Indian rosewood backing a Sitka spruce top as on a Standard D-28, with the addition of scalloped braces as found on an HD-28 while retaining the Standard D-28 top trim. It also has unique fret markers from a deck of cards, and a stunning pair of deuces in mother-of-pearl inlaid around the 12th fret area, and a black “bull horns” pickguard (think Chicago Bulls logo more than Texas A&M’s,) all of which came from the imagination of Dwight Yoakam, and ultimately turned into practical aesthetic designs by Martin Custom Shop Manager, Jeff Allen, and his staff.

The singer’s personal guitar was made in the Custom Shop, with more expensive woods and construction features like hide glue. The production model is being built more like a Standard Series guitar. Allen told me, Yoakam “was adamant that the price point remain below a certain ceiling, so a greater population of his fans could afford to own and play his signature model.”

List Price: $5,999

 

D-28 John Prine

2017 Martin D 28 Prine headstock Winter NAMM

Inspired by the 1960s D-28 played by this master musical storyteller, his new signature model has Madagascar rosewood back and sides and an Engelmann spruce top with scalloped Adirondack braces (!) to support it, and a 1-11/16” modified V neck.

According to Martin’s Tim Teel, Prine brought his workhorse D-28 to Martin and was directly involved with the design process. Teel was especially impressed with the bass response. “I am pretty certain it has an Engelmann top, so that is what we went with” for the signature model “and it has great bass response.”

Special inlay includes beautiful mother-of-pearl angel wings on the headstock faceplate, denoting Prine’s classic song Angel from Montgomery, as well as Golden Era Style 45 abalone snowflakes for fret markers.

List Price: $6,999

 

D-200 Deluxe

This is the production run version of Martin’s two-millionth guitar, which was officially completed in December, 2016. Made with rare pre-CITIES Brazilian rosewood and other beautiful tonewoods, like the ridiculously figured bear claw Engelmann spruce top, it is also embellished all over the place with amazing inlay inspired by exquisite time pieces. It is a very different direction taken from other milestone Martins, and features the absolute zenith of decorative craftsmanship.

Martin D-200 Delux full back and front 2017 NAMM

 

2017 Martin D-200 fingerboard Winter NAMM

List Price: $149,999, including a stainless steel case, and fabulous high end wristwatch with its own handmade Italian case.

 

16 Series Reboot

Martin OMC-16 Winter NAAM

We did get some new and very cool additions to the 16 Series, which is now being called the Americana Series.

In addition to fabulous new styling, including brushed silver bindings, it is focusing on domestic American hardwoods, including cherry on an OM cutaway acoustic-electric, and a sycamore dreadnought with 000/OM depth, in both a cutaway and non-cutaway versions. All of them come with Fishman Matrix VT Enhance electronics.

List Price: $2,899 each ($2,699 for the non-cutaway dread.)

 

Road Series and X Series Additions

The introductory X Series has added a 14-fret Grand Concert size instrument, the 00LX1AE, made from Martin’s High Pressure Laminate back and sides and a Sitka spruce top, it has a short-scale High Performance neck shape and on-board Fishman Sonitone electronics. List Price: $799

The X Series now has its own ukulele, the 0X uke is made of durable high pressure laminate in an attractive bamboo pattern, also available in green, blue or red bamboo pattern HPL. List: $499

The impressive and affordable Road Series has gained a Grand Performance and a Dreadnought model made with cutaways and Fishman Sonitone electronics. The GPCRSG and DRSG have Sitka spruce tops and, new to Martin, back and sides of African mutenye, sometimes called bengé or olive walnut, because it has attractive grain similar to walnut. List Price: $1,699 each.

2017 Martin X Road Series ukulele NAMM

Backpacker and Ukulele Anniversary Models

For those liking even smaller Martins, there is a new Backpacker 25th Anniversary model made with sapele back and sides ($399 List), and two new ukes. The C1 Centennial is made with African mahogany ($599) and C3 Centennial is made from South American mahogany ($2,999) to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Style 1 and Style 3 ukuleles.

Martin C1 Centennial C3 Centennial ukulele NAMM 2017 Martin Backpacker-25th-anniversary NAMM 2017

The D-420

Martin D-420 unreleased modelThe most surprising new Martin model was made in commemoration of the expression “Four-Twenty” associated with smoking marijuana, and used for Proposition 420, which went on to expand the rights of Californians relating to personal marijuana use.  And even more surprising, all mention of the model was removed from the Martin website two days after it appeared as one of the new models released in 2017.

And then it reappeared. Cheshire cat that it is.

With a list price of $2,999, it was made from African mahogany and a Sitka spruce top printed with a custom illustration by Robert Goetzl, known for illustrating books on Martin Luther King and the Wright Brothers, and who has designed other elaborate murals for Martin Guitars.

What happened to the D-420? I thought perhaps it went the way of record albums like Neil Young’s Homegrown and unreleased movies like Hippie Hippie Shake.

Unfortunately there were other models intended for release that will not be making an appearance, which I may not discuss as a result. Here is to hoping we see some of them at the Frankfurt or Nashville shows later this year!

Martin is also debuting new Titanium Core strings, which I will be getting on a guitar soon. They have nickel windings and the core is more flexible than steel cores. I am thoroughly converted to their Retro brand Monel alloy strings when it comes to mahogany guitars. But I will give these new strings full testing with a variety of tonewoods and see what it what.

Visit the Martin website for further information about the new 2017 Martin Guitars

Related Reading:

Winter NAMM 2017 Acoustic Guitar News Headquarters

 

Here’s to a most musical 2017

A Martin guitar was in hand, ringing in the 2017.

I was lost in the lovely sounds of my early ’90s Martin 000C-16 when I heard the boom of fireworks, declaring Year 2017 had come to Brooklyn, New York.

I shall consider that a good omen for a musical year ahead.

Martin’s rebooted 16 Series debuts this month at the Winter NAMM show, featuring American tonewoods like sycamore and cherry, among other woods that have been under consideration for some time and which I expect to appear on later 16s as time goes on.

So keep your eyes and ears pealed for upcoming reviews. In fact I still have some 2016 Martin reviews that already have the video shot. I will be getting those out before NAMM.

Happy New Year to all and to all a good musical 2017

Martin CS-Bluegrass-16 Review

Martin makes a humdinger dreadnought in their CS-Bluegrass-16


Modern Martin playability meets classic herringbone tone

CS Bluegrass 2016 specs include: All-solid woods with hide glue construction throughout; Guatemalan rosewood back and sides; Adirondack spruce top with Vintage Tone System torrefaction, antique toner and fine herringbone purfling, large sound hole, forward-shifted scalloped 5/16” VTS bracing; mahogany High Performance Neck with Modified Low Oval profile, ebony fingerboard with 1-3/4” width at nut and 2-1/8” at 12th fret, white dot position markers; ebony bridge with 2-5/32” string spacing; chrome open back butter bean tuners

“There is something charming to the chime ringing off the unwound treble strings, supported by a palpable cushion of rosewood undertone welling up from the bottom end, where the bassiest string is plump and succulent. Overall, this is a guitar of power and personality.”

Read the Full Review

Martin CS Bluegrass 08 shoulder