UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
What's Hot
Everyone knows about Sigma guitars, right?
Sigma began 50 years ago as a cheap brand owned by Martin and manufactured under contract in Japan. From memory, Tokai made most of them and they were remarkably good - possibly better than Martin really wanted. Anyway, Martin moved the manufacturing offshore, first to Korea, then Taiwan, then Indonesia - presumably chasing ever lower labour costs. Eventually they gave the game away and sold the brand to a German company, which for the last 15 years or so has sold Sigma-badged guitars all around the world. As usual with this sort of thing, the guitars are actually made in China in a factory which also makes assorted other instruments for various other brands.
Sigma mostly sells into the what you might call "the half-decent lower mid-range" or the "could-be-worse upper bottom end". Typically you see them in shops for around $300 to $800 AUD - let's say up to about 500 pounds or so but usually less.
Anyway, here is a Sigma going for the best part of $4000!
https://www.acousticcentre.com.au/collections/all-steel-string-guitars/products/sigma-50th-anniversary-limited It is their 50th Anniversary model, a dreadnought in European Spruce and Cocobolo, with a mahogany neck, bone nut and saddle, and more bling than a fake duchesses.
There is no suggestion that it comes from anywhere other than the usual Chinese sausage factory. Some companies selling cheapish Chinese or Indonesian guitars under a Western brand name also make a handful of very expensive higher quality instruments in their native land (for example, PRS, Epiphone, Breedlove, many others) but not Sigma. So what's it like?
It's very tempting to wander in and see how it plays, but I'm on the wrong side of Bass Strait and Melbourne is in lockdown right now anyway. Besides, I don't really care for bling.
All this is purely out of curiosity. I can think of a dozen better-credentialed, less blinged-up guitars at this sort of price that I am more likely to buy, I'm just bemused by the notion of a $4000 Sigma (that's about
£2200) and though it was worth mentioning.
0 LOL 1 Wow! 1 Wisdom · Share on Twitter
Comments
It'll be tough sell, like a two grand anniversary Squier Strat would be.
The price is not really appealing as makes it compete directly with all the Furch / Lakewoods / BSG and so many other high end manufacturers.
edit: geez it does not even come with an LR baggs, or anything
"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
I felt significantly richer the first time around
The guitar's an interesting one alright, looks-wise a D-45 in all but name. Might be a tough sell though, cheaper versions of an aspirational brand are easy enough to shift, the other way around not so much I'm guessing.
Still, they must think someone will buy them and they know a lot more about marketing guitars than I do!
(It's around about the same price as better-credentialed instruments like a J-45, a D-18, a Messiah, or a hand-made-in-Japan Takamine, but who knows? The $4000 Sigma Blingmobile just might play beautifully. If I lived a bit closer I'd go and try it out.)
I'd like to try this guitar too. My favourite guitar bar none is still my father's mid-80s D-35 which I learned on, so the comparison would be interesting.
To compare the price to a Martin, it would be necessary to consider what Martin would charge for a 40 series appointed guitar using Euro spruce and Cocobolo. The upcharge on a D41/42/45 using anything other than standard series Sitka / Indian rosewood is a huge jump, while bearing in mind that standard 40 series Martins are marketed at premium prices.
I suspect that the majority these guitars will end up sold in markets closer to home.
[This space for rent]
Victoria is virus-free again, and I was passing through ... so why not? I had a couple of serious prospects to look at in the same shop, so while I was there, I begged the favour of a little tinker with the Sigma.
In short, it plays like a very nice dreadnought, bright and crisp. Nothing knock-your-socks-off great, but certainly a good, worthwhile guitar. I wouldn't pay almost $4000 for it, but if we ignore the bling and just consider it as a box that makes a noise, it's a good, well-made box, it plays well, and it makes a good, stock-standard nice dreadnought sort of noise. Put it this way: if someone gave it to you as a present, you'd be happy to own it and you'd very likely play it regularly.