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The European sound is cleaner and slightly softer, looser at the bottom end and more scooped in the midrange, which suits fingerpicking and chord/arpeggio playing especially in open tunings better, ie what you find in celtic folk and related styles.
The two things are obviously self-reinforcing as TheBigDipper said. You probably wouldn’t choose a Lowden for bluegrass or a Gibson for Irish folk, and the manufacturers evolved their designs to suit what their customers wanted.
There’s also a ‘modern school’ which is less obviously tied to either of those styles - Taylor, Breedlove etc - these are generally brighter, cleaner and with better string separation than the ‘American’ style, and tighter and more even frequency response than the ‘European’ style.
That’s how I hear it, anyway.
"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
Although by American sound do you mean the old-school Gibson & Martin designs?
It's probably possible to group together the related Lowden / Avalon / McIlroy / etc as the Celtic sound
But then there's the more "boutique" i.e. small workshop brands like Santa Cruz, Goodall, Bourgeois - and I'm thinking of those when people say "American sound"
Usually people consider the bracing patterns to be the most important factor:
Acoustic Guitar Bracing - Know Different Patterns & Designs (themusicambition.com)
They sound very different from the other Avalons
https://www.avalonguitars.com/americana/D300A
This model sounds a lot drier, with far fewer overtones than the main Avalon range
Compared with normal Avalons/Lowdens, I think it suits the kind of arrangements your'd play on a nylon classical guitar, i.e. ones with bass, harmonic content and a melody all going on at once, it sounds more focussed.
Then again, the most "dry" and clear sound I've heard was a Sobel guitar, made in England
I'd see/hear it with on one side Martin to represent the traditional American sound and on the other Lowden the traditional UK sound, but with lots of points on the graph for signature sounds in between.
For my money I think Martin style braced instruments are generally the best all rounders for a number of different playing styles, they work for open tunings, fingerstyle, percussive, bluegrass, etc.
they're nothing like "Martins" either, closer to Lowden tho.
Taylors are nothing like Martins or Lowdens Id also put Atkin closer to the "Martin" - most of their models are along the traditional Martin "styling"
Furch/Stonebridge ? theyve models in both / neither The Vintage are very Martin
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.