UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
Recently I got a bee in my bonnet about wanting to play the prelude from the first Bach cello suite and decided to get a classical guitar which could also double for sofa-noodling duties. I looked at Alhambras, the Taylor Academy crosssover nylon - a fun little guitar, but I didn't think the sound of it would go the distance - and an ancient 7/8-sized Giannini, which sounded great and had Brazilian bossa nova cred but also some alarming warping on the neck. I thought too about the Yamaha transacoustic with the crazy built-in reverb, but in the end decided it was gimmickry and would spoil the Zen-like purity of a traditional Spanish-style guitar.
I ended up taking a punt on a late 70s/early 80s Yamaha G-250S, a guitar that was near the top of their line back then and cost the equivalent of about £1300 when new. My thinking was influenced by
this blog post and also by the fact that I could get it for considerably less than the price of, say, an Alhambra 4P. It showed up two days ago:
And I've got to say I'm really pleased with it. I don't know from wood (or photography) but the top seems to be a really nice bit of spruce:
The back and sides are laminated but made with some classy-looking rosewood:
More important, the neck is straight, it plays well and it sounds really good, with a decent amount of bass and a decent dynamic range. I'd spent a lot of time obsessing about sizes and nut widths, but in practice a full-sized classical still feels pleasingly small and sofa-friendly if you're used to a dreadnought, and the two-inch nut just feels right for this kind of guitar: it's not like you're going to be flatpicking bluegrass numbers on it, and I have a dread if I want to do that. So I reckon it was 200 quid well spent, and I'm already 16 bars into BWV 1007 (with a right-hand technique that would make a classical teacher throw up, but whatever, it's making me happy).
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Comments
However, Cedar is more susceptible to dings than spruce, particularly an issue with thin top finishes (ask anyone who has a cedar-topped Lowden).
I've a couple of high-end guitars for which I specifically selected a cedar top for the tone.
I've never seen a cracked cedar top. I've seen cracked spruce ones. I'm not sure either would crack unless you mistreated them
I'd generally choose cedar over spruce on steel and nylon guitars
Nice Yamaha. Pre-owned is always going to have dings if it's been loved and played. The lines on the back are from someone playing the instrument whilst wearing a shirt with nylon buttons. Wouldn't bother me at all but a good example of something to avoid doing! On all guitars actually. Shops hate it.