UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
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Went to Denmark street to drool over guitars yesterday and ended up trying a few guitars:
- Fender Paramount (P1?) - hmmm, attractive guitar but not for me
- Taylor 700 and 800 series something or another - lovely looking but too bright for my current tastes
- Maton (beautiful!)
- Avalon (amazing)
- Lowden (WOW!)
- Martin D28, D35, D18 and 000-18 and another I can't remember
Sorry, can't remember the models of most. I loved the Maton and the Lowden was on another planet. But the stand out for me and my tastes was either the D18 or the 000-18.
I'm torn though, the 000-18 felt more comfortable but the D18 had something about it...they both sound gorgeous to my ears. Lovely, lovely guitars.
Am I missing anything or discounting a guitar that I should be looking at?
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View my feedback at www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/comment/1201922
it's always tricky questions like this, cos it kinda depends on what you want and the sort of music you play. For me, even for strummy strummy stuff, I prefer a more balanced sound, so I'd probably go for the 000, even more so as I play a lot of fingerstyle as well. I don't really do the single note kinda flatpicking. However, if you do a lot of flatpicking, then I'd go for the D in a heartbeat.
However, you won't go far wrong with either, I've yet to play a Martin I didn't like.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
OK, they don't play those exact models, but the character of their sounds is pretty illustrative of the D and OOO sizes.
Or alternatively you could end up with both… I didn't mean to buy a Gibson dreadnought *and* a Gibson orchestra-size, it just somehow happened .
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
View my feedback at www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/comment/1201922
@Johnspreyer, nice idea!
View my feedback at www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/comment/1201922
I'd always go for an 000, or an OM.
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The MTV Unplugged has a lot to answer for, including Rod Stewart (sp) Unplugged WTF.
Just people milking they're back catalogue - on acoustic - don't mean they're 'acoustic players'.
As for Claptons (acoustic) tone - ??? I only hear a 'plugged in' tone.
Sure he's big in electric circles - ok
I'd like to see him )only him) walk on stage with a Greenfield or Michi Matsuda (read cutting edge instrument) and play half an hour (or more) of original music - from now.
rant over
And I think he could pretty comfortably fill 30 mins of originals!
Swapped my HD35 for a similarly specced 000 - (he wanted more oomph. I wanted less - win:win !
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BTW I meant original 'new' music - remember what Michael Hedges was doing on acoustic guitar over 30 yrs ago ? - wonder what he'd be doing if HE was still alive ?.
View my feedback at www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/comment/1201922
odd you thought that. I only played it once but I seem to recall thnking your HD35 was a pretty well balanced guitar.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
D-18s and even D-28s are less whumpy - the 18 is quite punchy and midrangy, although obviously still less so than a 000.
And also sits somewhere between the Martin D and 000 in terms of voicing. The difficulty - with all Gibsons - is finding a good one, or even knowing if the one you're trying is a good one or not, if you haven't already played some.
I really wish I still had my '61 J-45. My biggest guitar-sale regret.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
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Good Gibsons....thankfully so rare that few people have to know what it's like to have one get away from you....
As far as the OP's search is concerned a great J45 would be a very good shout, a great picker and strummer with that lovely dry low end thump. That being said, the current 18 series Martins are very good value, especially since Martin revised them in the last few years to give a 1 3/4 nut width which makes them a little better for some as a pickers guitar. Add to that nice dark ebony boards and bridges with the toroishell scratch plate and they look the business , classic Martin. I think ICBM has it right in terms of a broad accessible description of the difference between a D and the 000. The shorter scale allows for a little more flexibility and snap while the D is more strident. Personally, I really like the dry immediacy of mahogany along with the short scale for finger picking.
Well said. Anyone who is making a living making music, whether selling out the RHA for umpteen nights or working hard on a local scene is worthy of respect, especially from other musicians, who at least should have an inkling what it takes to be there. Anything else comes across as nothing but bitter and twisted. Sure we don't have to like everything and there is a place to discuss our preferences but why go out of your way to do it ?
What ya get is a bottom / mid-range end (sound) that can go down to B's and C's tuning wise but maintaining definition and balance along with a meaty treble end for lead line stuff - u'r ideal.
mine is a Bourgeois J-OM 1999 sent to the Frankfurt music fair, it didn't make it back to the states I pounced on it.
mine is similar to this design but with East Indian R/Wood b/s, Bolivian Rosewood f/board & bridge.
https://eddiesguitars.com/bourgeois-jom-banjo-killer-7461
how it sounds picked 'n strummed (please forgive the sound quality noise) -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXdGXIRSibo
Lower Bought - 15 5/8" (398mm)
Soundbox Depth - 4 3/4" (120mm)
good for plectrum, strummed - or fingers
lotsa - well everything in a manageable size - just realized some makers call these kinda body sizes - 'Small Jumbo', for future reference.