Martin OM-28 Authentic 1931 Review

With all the projection and string-to-string balance heard from the legendary first modern acoustic guitar, Martin has resurrected their original Orchestra Model in the OM-28 Authentic 1931 – the most anticipated addition to the Authentic series in many years.

Martin’s historically accurate Vintage Gloss Finish makes its first appearance on this new OM-28 Authentic, and heard for the first time is a refined version of their Vintage Tone System of wood torrefaction, reserved exclusively for the Authentic series of vintage Martin reproductions.

“…I approved of how it responded at every level of attack, and how it felt in the hands, both in terms of the tactile experience of holding it, and how the strings pull and release, as well as the clarity of the notes and how they pop out, yet stay connected to the resonant undertone glowing behind them.

Even though this OM requires little effort to reach the “sweet spot” of optimum resonance with minimal resistance, this is not a frail instrument. In fact, it flourished with a certain amount of extra string tension from the fingertips. It was like it said, “Oh yeah. That’s the stuff!” when I would increase the pull on the strings, so it could convert that potential energy into kinetic energy, and ultimately full, unbridled tone.

That was but one of the subtler prewar Martin traits to be found in this new OM-28 Authentic 1931.”

Read the Full Review

OM-28 Authentic 1931 torrefied spruce top
photo: Maury’s Music

NAMM 2015 Martin Guitar Compilation Video

Here is the sneak preview of the video I shot on Thursday of the NAMM 2015 Martin Guitar offerings.

A full-length video of each model will appear with the exclusive written review at One Man’s Guitar, approximately once a week.

Information relating to all sorts of NAMM-related products from various companies will be receive attention in the coming week. But first things first. I spent the biggest night of NAMM at home in front of my computer, synching and editing the exclusive video I shot of the NAMM 2015 Martin guitars, during my annual NAMM day visit to the Martin factory in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.

I sat down at 3PM with the videos already synched to audio, ready to begin splicing together the annual compilation video. I finished at 3 AM. And now that it has processed on Youtube, here it is.

Watch on YouTube in full 1080p HD

For more information about torrefaction processes and how they relate to luthiery, and on Martin’s proprietary VTS version of torrefaction, please go HERE.

New 2015 Martin Guitars – Exclusive Report

The NAMM show opened today out in California, and I made my usual trip to the Martin factory to see the new 2015 Martin Models.

At the factory I get to the see the prototype that wasn’t chosen to go to the show, and I get to play and hear this runner-up in a quiet room, unlike those at the NAMM show who get to try to hear acoustic guitars in the equivalent Mall America on Black Friday.

I didn’t break a fingernail all day!

Don’t you hate that when that happens?

I did some other stuff too. Was fun.

Anyway, I should get to bed. Been a long day, the first day out of the house since I came down with the flu over a week ago. Left at 7AM and got home just a bit ago.

So I will just say for now that there wasn’t a disappointment among the entire crop of new 2015 Martins and the NAMM Show Special is a big hunk of shimmer koa goodness in a Grand Performance body and drenched in pearl inlay and the CEO-8 looks a lot like a Gibson J-200 and sounds more like a Gibson than any previous Martin, when it comes to the spindly thin trebles and quick chirping strums, but with a lot more going on inside the voice in terms of overtones and sustain and the CS 00041-15 is an effortless joy to play and hear and I think my favorite Custom Shop Series offering to date even if I might have preferred the CS#1 neck profile over the high performance neck but this short-scale 000 is just so effortless and woody and lovely and alive and tension free like playing it made me feel like I just had a long massage at some ritzy resort and the D-35 50th Anniversary model made from Madagascar rosewood with a Brazilian center wedge has a wild evocative reflective glimmer thing going on in the trebles and muscled Grade A Beef in the bass and is a marvelous idea well wrought into living breathing dreadnought and they did X-Ray and CT Scan the 1931 OM-28 and 1930 OM-45DX that were used to make the new Authentics and if Martin had chosen to keep this whole dialed-in torrefaction spruce top thing secret and had released these two guitars without saying a word about how they were unique in that respect, people might have thought Martin had changed something about the cosmetic toner used but otherwise they would be doing stationary back flips over just how good they feel and look and how great they sound, and how the longer torrefaction used on other new models, now called M2, can be HEARD, is a discernible thing and a certain kind of ring thing and recognizable, tangible, but the M1 version on the Authentic Series guitars is less so, is subtler or at least quickly forgotten about as the whole voice just seems, well, really good, and those who know nothing about prewar Martins would think the OM-28A is a wonderful guitar that needs no pampering with a wide dynamic range but just gets louder rather than roars when played harder but those who do know about prewar Martins would whistle aloud as they quickly recognize that the OM-28A just has so MUCH about it that is “just like a pre-war OM-28” only more so than they or perhaps anyone has managed to put into a brand new guitar until now and I would love to fill a room with TJ Thompson and Eric Schoenberg and Roy Bookbinder and David Musselwhite and George Gruhn and Fred Oster and Robert Corwin and Bob Hamilton and a 1931 OM-28 and an OM-28A and some other very close modern reproductions of OM-28s and other prewar OM-28s and have them all just pass them around and drink coffee and talk about what exactly is or isn’t right on the money in that guitar or that other guitar but in the case of THIS guitar it is really splitting hairs and trying to catch sprites and faeries in a jar out of mid-air to quantify and qualify what may not be exactly the same as the old timers, because there is just so much that IS, and it is still not going to be for everyone who loves rosewood OMs since so many modern versions are built to do what a dreadnought can do just in a smaller body with subsequent shifts in balance but with all the roar and rumble when running in overdrive, where this thing compresses and just gets “louder,” you know like a prewar OM does and the Dreadnought Junior is I am happy to report so much cooler than I had feared and is a lot of guitar for the money and the size, but this example left me wanting a low E bass string that had the same dominant pow in ratio to the other five strings as you get from a bigger dread, which the fancy full gloss full dovetail R&D version did have but still it was fun and has a very fast neck and so well made we will be seeing some young professional one-upping Ed Sheeran someday soon and the Purple Martin is a classic Cocobolo dread that is dense in weight and in the bottom end tone that looks so amazingly pretty in person with its inlaid pearl flowers and the big soaring bird but it very much preferred a light and pretty playing that brought out the singing ringing highs, where the koa version released previously wanted to be run like a stallion and really did roar as well as shimmer, but I think they had light strings on this one for some reason and the action was way too low for someone with my kind of digging in attack and suddenly it was 5:30 and everyone had gone home and I hadn’t even taken any photos but that was because I couldn’t let go of that OM-45DXA because how often do I get to play a $100,000 guitar that isn’t even a pre-war Martin “just” an amazing replica of one but we happened past the cart containing all the new models as we were leaving the plant and so I grabbed a stand and hurried through as many shots as I could squeeze off and only made the bus because it was later getting to the bus station than I was and I hope some of the photos will be usable and that all the recording and video is too.

Did I mention the OMs were really good? I’m sleepy.

New Martins for Winter NAMM 2015

The new Martins slated for the Winter NAMM show are out of the bag.

One Man’s Guitar will offer exclusive video on January 22, the day the NAMM show opens its doors. Written reviews to follow in the coming days.

Vintage Tone Right Out of the Box

In addition, Martin has gone public with their new Vintage Tone System (VTS) that is featured on most of the new models. Martin’s VTS is a proprietary technique that employs the torrefication of spruce soundboards and bracing to artificially “age” the wood, with positive results in tone production and in the wood’s resistance to fluctuation in environmental humidity. To learn more about torrefaction and its use in modern luthiery, go HERE.

See the excellent video below, released today by Martin, explaining how their new technique differs from all previous forms of torrefaction used at the factory and by other guitarmakers. But first…

A Quick Rundown of the New Martins

000-15 Burst

The only “basic” model among the new Martins is the smaller sibling to the D-15M Burst already on the market. These 15 Series guitars offer exceptional value, with all-solid wood construction including South American mahogany for the back, sides, top and neck, and an Indian rosewood fingerboard and bridge.

Of all Martins made without a traditional, hand-fitted dovetail neck joint, these are my favorites. Mahogany tops have their own special musicality, with a certain sweetness to the highs and special kind of presence in the lows.

And now that the 15s are made with the recently introduced “simplified dovetail” joint they sound even better. What makes this model new and different is the shaded top – something Martin only recently started using on mahogany.

Dreadnought Junior

The other modestly priced guitar among the new Martins has a shape like a dreadnought, but in a smaller size. They are cool too look at and to play. This is being targeted as a travel guitar, but also one ideal for children or those who simply prefer smaller guitars.

This is made out of sapele along with other features of less-expensive Martins. But since this is being listed under the “Junior series” it is hoped we will see other versions.

The original R&D version of the Dreadnought Junior was made exactly like the Standard Series dreadnoughts, with the traditional dovetail neck joint, all solid woods, gloss finish, etc. It was sensational. I’d buy one in a heartbeat.

But I was told it would likely never make it into production that way. Hopefully this more economical version will sell well enough, and eventually we will see full blown Style 18 or 28 versions someday.

These are different than the old 7-28 reduced size dreadnought from the late 1970s, as they tweaked the junior’s shape so it is not exactly the same dimensions as a full-size dread only smaller. Those guitars were fun and novel, but over built and didn’t really sing.

The full gloss prototype I played sounded wonderful. It is a very successful design in terms of feel and comfort and sound volume. I am sure the more-affordable sapele version will also sound good and likely sell well.

D-35 Brazilian 50th Anniversary

Martin introduced the D-35 in the mid-1960s. The first Martin with a three-piece back, it was conceived to take advantage of nicely figured Brazilian rosewood that was too small to use on a two-piece back.

They also introduced 1/4″ non-scalloped bracing on a dreadnought, in an early attempt to replicate the vintage Martin resonance and tone. Instead, they invented a new type of Martin resonance and tone with a rich, round bottom end and pinpoint clarity in the top trebles.

This commemoration model has Madagascar rosewood for the sides and back, with a Brazilian rosewood center wedge. It also has “Certified European spruce” on top, which is Martin’s way of saying it is European spruce, but the Swiss dealer who sold it to them was unable to specify the actual country where it was harvested.

Other special D-35s made with Alpine spruce tops have all been realllllly great. This one also comes with the modern neck shape and string spacing sometimes called the High Performance neck with Performing Artist taper.

CEO – 8

Following in the footsteps of the smash hit CEO-7, the latest model designed by C.F. Martin IV is another tribute to a classic Gibson model, the SJ-200. A prototype has been seen at some public events already, so the gossip mill of Martin copying Gibson designs is well underway.

While this new guitar looks obviously similar to a Gibson SJ-200 with a sunburst top, it is very much a unique musical instrument, and I look forward to getting to know its personality better next week.

Instead of creating a new body shape, this is a Martin Grand Jumbo, their largest size, with some very interesting features.

It sports solid sycamore for the back, sides and neck. Last year’s D-18 Sycamore is an open and airy guitar that has a leaner, more defined bass than typical Martin dreadnoughts. The extra-large sound chamber on the CEO-8 should increase bass response, without overdoing things.

It also has a top of torrefied Sitka spruce, given Martin’s new VTS treatment, and a non-scalloped 5/16” X-braces with “graduated scalloped tone bars,” a bracing configuration seen on a Martin for the first time. AND it has the D-TAR Wave-length multi source pickup system, basically the same thing that Laurence Juber uses on all his stage guitars, like his Martin OMC-44K LJ.

OM-28 Authentic 1931 and OM-45 De Luxe Authentic 1930

The most anticipated of new Martins in memory has finally arrived. Closely based on a 1931 OM-28, but with Madagascar rosewood for the back and sides rather than the ultra rare and expensive Brazilian rosewood, this new 28 should be every bit as impressive as previous Authentic Series offerings, if not more so thanks to the new VTS treatment, which offers a top and bracing artificially aged so that it is structurally similar to spruce found on real pre-war Martins.

I am sure there is so much anticipation involved with this model that it will never live up to the hopes and dreams of certain people – at least one person I know of gave a down payment for one several months before any public announcement was made that it would be appearing in 2015.

But I have every expectation that it will be one seriously great OM. Once examples get out among the shops and general population, it will be fun seeing how it stacks up side by side with some of those small-shop luthier replicas that have been appearing for the past 40 years. The new VST treatment should give it a head start when it comes to opening up and breaking in.

But where the OM-28A will sell in large numbers, the OM-45DXA is limited to 11 instruments at an astronomical price, even if it is a 3rd the cost of the real thing, if you could even find one for sale. Made only in 1930, it is considerably rarer than the more famous pre-war D-45.

This new 45 does have Brazilian rosewood, along with the VTS Adirondack spruce top and bracing. Only the elephant ivory nut and saddle is missing from the original, due to its worldwide ban, and to Martin’s commitment to environmentally sound practices. But frankly, I think good old bone sounds so much like ivory, even more than partially fossilized ivory, that it matters not.

I have played 3 of the existing prewar OM-45DX models. Each is different from the almost-as-rare OM-45 made between 1930 and 1933 by virtue of a pickguard inlaid with a flower arrangement made of abalone shell, and ornate banjo tuners that stick out the back of the headstock, although at least one had the tuners replaced with side tuners. One of the three was owned by the late cowboy crooner Roy Rodgers and among of the most excellent acoustic guitars I have ever played. The one used to create this new Authentic series instrument may be even better.

I played these two masterpieces 5 years apart, so I cannot compare them with any fairness. Both qualify as the kind of guitar that one could sit alone with for hours, perfectly enraptured. It is too bad the replicas are so limited and so expensive.

My only other lament about these new OMs is the fact I played both of the vintage Martins used to create them and, frankly, the neck on the 1930 OM-45 DX is THE most wonderful OM neck I have ever had in my hands, and it is being reproduced on only 11 Authentics.

I lobbied from the heart for it to be put on the OM-28A. As far as I am concerned Martin should retool their entire line to put a replica of this neck, down to smallest detail, on every OM they produce from now until the unmaking of the world. It is that wonderful, comfortable, and effortless to play.

But the decision was made to stay with the convention of creating an Authentic series model based on one specific vintage Martin. So the world will be denied that wonderful neck, except for the 11 very lucky and very wealthy individuals who buy the new Authentic version of the 45.

Not that the 28 neck is a bad OM neck. But it has more of a pup tent V to it and is what I consider a typical prewar OM-28 neck – less bulky than the late 1933 version and not as pointy as some others – rather than than the exceptional perfection that appeared on certain OMs made in 1930, like the 45 here mentioned.

Read more about Martin’s Authentic series HERE.

 CS-00041-15

The Custom Shop series provides another winner for 2015 in a guitar I am anticipating more than any CS model since the first CS-21-11.  The CS models offer unique aesthetic features in combination with woods and special touches like hide glue and ultra-responsive light construction, at a cost considerably less than what a private customer would be charged by the Custom Shop if the exact same guitar had been built as a one-off custom order.

This guitar is a 000 made with 1/4″ bracing and a short-scale version of the High Performance neck, that has the modified low oval profile in combination with the Performing Artist taper and string spacing. It also has figured cocobolo for the back and sides, wood fiber inlays, including a lovely intertwined ribbon marquetry on the back made from East Indian rosewood and South American mahogany, and figured koa binding and accents.

Reviews of other CS Models can be found HERE.

The rest of the new Martins are all limited editions. There is a cocobolo version of the fancy Purple Martin bird theme already seen in a koa version. The D-41 Purple Martin K sounded magnificent and full-bodied, so this darker rosewood version will likely be more of a powerful beast in tone and dynamics than the pretty songbird motif suggests.

And then there are two NAMM Show Specials, available only to dealers who come to the Martin booth during the show.

The SSC-OM35-15 is made exclusively for Canadian dealers and features a cherry wood body with a maple center wedge on the back, herringbone trim around the Adirondack spruce top and sound hole, and Style 42 snowflakes on the ebony fingerboard.

The SS-GP42-15 is the NAMM Show Special available world wide but limited to fifty guitars max. This is the second Martin limited edition to feature the Grand Performance body size without the usual cutaway on the treble side. Last year’s CS-GP-14 was lightly-built and geared toward nuanced fingerstyle playing. This Show Special is fancier and made from stunning woods, festooned with intricate inlays, and like the GP-14 it has cutting edge Fishman Aura VT electronics.

Read the official Martin Press Release of all the models HERE

Learn more about Martin’s Vintage Tone System treatment and watch the official VTS video in the post below this one.

Martin VTS – Vintage Tone System

Torrefaction perfected, the Martin VTS or Vintage Tone System has taken the torrefication of acoustic guitar tops into new territory.

A proprietary version of an ancient craft, Martin has partnered with a veteran wood treatment company to develop a new approach to torrefaction designed expressly to take new spruce used for soundboards and bracing, and alter it on the molecular level though natural forces to, in a sense, accelerate the aging process.

Torrefication treatments remove moisture from wood, permanently changing its cell structure. It evolved centuries ago as a way of preserving grain stores and to weatherproof construction timber. Some 200 years ago, French violins had their tops torrefied. Now many years on, it has become more common in guitar making. But the Martin Vintage Tone System is unique.

Learn more about torrefaction in detail HERE.

Under the microscope, typical examples of torrefied wood are nearly indistinguishable from wood 300 years old. But Martin has perfected the process to the point they can control the results almost down to the exact decade, and are releasing new models with brand new spruce tops that possess many of the properties found in Martin guitars made in the early twentieth century – known as Martin’s Golden Era.

Martin has also released a new video, explaining a lot about this new Vintage Tone System and how they are putting it to use across a wide range of instruments.

I have been privy to much of this for some time, and I feel they have done a great job in explaining the details of the Martin VTS and why it matters, without getting too technical, and keeping a few trade secrets well up their sleeve.

As I had hinted in some previous reviews, torrefied tops appearing on recent Martins was but the tip of the iceberg. They have been quietly excited about this zeroing-in process for quite a while.

The first test model I played was handed to me with out any explanation. It appeared to be a typical Martin vintage reissue sort of guitar. But it sounded noticeably alive with big 3D depth and loads of charm and character, and there was nothing to look at that might have clued me into it being torrefied in any way.

It had the top and braces “cooked,” and yet it did not have the usual darkened coloring associated with torrefied wood.

Previous Martins made with torrefied spruce tops have all been very successful in the tone department. But they were all cooked until they were more like 200 year old wood, or older. Next week two new members of the Authentic series of exacting vintage Martin replicas are making their debut, with torrefied tops.

These are the first guitars to feature this zeroed-in version of the Martin VTS top and braces, tweaked to get the spruce as close in accelerated aging to a 1930s Martin as possible.

I have been awaiting them almost as long as the folks at Martin, and this informative video only piques my appetite all the more.

Other models are appearing with torrefied tops as well, but were treated to different levels of torrefaction. For now, if you want the new-prewar top, you will have to buy an Authentic.

Further Reading Related to Martin VTS

Torrefaction and how it is used in guitar making

2015 Martins Announced

Martin Authentic series

Martin Custom Shop series, some featuring torrefied tops

 

Martin D-18 Sycamore Review

The torrefied Sitka spruce top and American Sycamore back and sides of the Martin D-18 Sycamore marks 50 years Martin guitars made on Sycamore Street.

With all the features of the popular D-18 and very special additions.

A D-18 with a difference, the D-18 Sycamore comes in somewhere between maple and mahogany in looks and in tone.

“It sounds like a more complex maple, with thicker top notes, more overtones and complexity over all, like mahogany, but with a maple-like bass that shifts the focus into the mid-range, which has the same kind of defined top notes and high overtone ring as the trebles.

I realize this description might make it seem more like a Jazz archtop than a dreadnought. It is not. It still has plenty of the complexity, resonance and sustain one looks for in a dreadnought. In fact, it excels at traditional flatpicking, with the kind of punch and “cut” that would leap out of a Bluegrass jam when it is time to switch from playing rhythm to a solo break.”

Read the Full Review

Martin D-18 Sycamore side review at onemanz.com

Review – Martin CS-21-11

An ultralight dreadnought with many pre-war Martin features, the CS-21-11 kicked off a new era for the Martin custom shop that created it

A woody aesthetic and sleek modern neck, matched to impeccable and “Authentic” pre-war construction techniques makes the CS-21-11 a uniquely versatile dreadnought, even by Martin standards.

“That ultra-light build contributes mightily to the guitars breathtaking resonance, response, and purity of tone. It astonishes with how much resonant, living tone swells out of it with the lightest touch, and how that glow increases as chords and picking patterns sustain over time. And the response to nuanced playing and the ultimate payoff in tone only increase as the top brakes in and the guitar grows up.”

Read the Full CS-21-11 Review

bridge Martin CS-21-11 review at onemanz.com
Madagascar rosewood bridge

CS-00S-14 Traditional 12-fret 00 Meets Future

From the Custom Shop comes, the CS-00S-14

The first Martin made of Honduras rosewood is a marriage of classic and contemporary design with other notable elements, both ancient and futuristic, never before seen on a Martin.

A carbon fiber neck rod and Martin’s first foray into the world of torrefied wood, adds exciting new facets to one of the most classic guitar designs of all time, the 12-fret 00.

“If the CS-00S-14 is anything, it is resonant. It comes alive with the lightest touch, and it feels alive…  from the warmth glowing out of the bottom end and a low E string impressive for this body size, a fatness to the midrange strings that reaches down like a pillar into the echoing cellar below the top voice, and trebles with a distinct chime that leaps out, with a vintage-like openness directly under them, but reflecting harmonics off the midrange like the surface of a mirrored pond disturbed by the sound waves firing off that crystalline fundamental chime. It is a sophisticated voice…”

Read the Full Review

Martin CS-00s-14 review onemanz.com torrefied spruce lobby shot small

Martin D-28 Authentic 1937 – Review

The Benchmark Dreadnought Lives Again in the Martin D-28 Authentic 1937

The latest attempt to replicate the acoustic guitar to which all others are compared, Martin’s D-28 Authentic 1937 is an exquisite example of guitarmaking.

“Martin has succeeded wonderfully in this endeavor, building a time capsule of a rosewood dreadnought eager to begin its own sonic journey toward musical immortality. While it remains impossible to build-in 77 years of seasoning, the envied owner of a new D-28 A 1937 will be afforded the privilege of breaking in the fledgling tone woods and ultra-thin nitrocellulose finish, to coax out more and more of the guitar’s rich, round rosewood lows, punchy Adirondack mids, and pure, ringing trebles that signify the classic Martin sound.”

Read the Full Review

Martin D-28 Authentic 1937 review

Martin 000-28K Authentic 1921 is Stellar

Aesthetic beauty, effortless playability, and charming tonality
make the 000-28K Authentic 1921 a big success

“When Martin unveiled their revamped Authentic Series this time last year, each of the new models were an immediate sensation. These ‘as close as we can make ‘em to the old days’ Martins are meticulous recreations of specific guitars residing in Martin’s own museum, and they are everything people hoped they would be. So there was considerable speculation and anticipation regarding what additions might be made to the series in 2014. The Martin 000-28K Authentic 1921 was a most pleasant surprise.

An all-koa 12-fret 000 from the twenties was not atop anyone’s list. That is, until they actually get their hands on an example of the new 000-28K Authentic 1921, when they marvel at the majestic and melodious music it makes. With its stunning good looks and its warm, plump bass notes, strong mid-range, and pure and ringing trebles, it was declared again and again the most impressive of the impressive crop of 2014 Martins by those who had a chance to play them all.”

Read the Full Review of the Martin 000-28K A 1921

(2/6/14 – now with updated video!)

Martin 000-28K Authentic 1921