I did what I should have don
e in the beginning of my ‘tone’ hunt and went to a big guitar shop - GG in Epsom, to try out a lot of acoustics side by side:
One of highlights for me was the Alvarez Artist at I think £329 new. This sounded really warm and with a wide string spacing was ridicously easy to play, it also had some lovely bling. Given all this, I found it suspiciously cheap and moved on ( I am an idiot btw).
Next while I was looking around, the sales person offered me I think a laminate Martin at £650 new. It looked and felt really nice, but I found it sounded really thin and clangy. Actually a much cheaper Sigma sounded better.
Next a Yamaha at £599, this had some lovely adornments reminiscent of a vintage Gibson, but it sounded just awful.
In the end, I felt after all the trouble I had caused I had to buy something,and halfheartdley opted for the Sigma, it sounded Ok and with electrics was quite good value at £430.
Then whilst they inspecting my trade I spotted the below tucked away in a corner.
A barely used Furch Blue Cedar and mahogany dread at £700. Tonally it just blew the others away, including a similarly priced solid wood Eastman. The Furch manages to sound warm, rich and throated.
My advice when going to guitar stores, and not being sure what you want, is to try and be nice, but inwardly sceptical about any guitar the sales people actively offer you, they are likely to be the ones with the most profit for the shop. Also not to be afraid to walk away if you can’ t find something that you can happily live with.
But above all persist in trying as many as possible, even if you think you’ve already found the ‘one’. So maybe try not to go at the weekend when they will be busier.
Here’s a pic of my new preowned Furch.
https://imgur.com/a/4HIHuSP
Comments
All solid
Cedar
Mahogany
£700
That's five ticks out of five. Good one!
Like this one??
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Downloaded the image to Imgur and...
Possibly they use eye catching paint jobs and other adornments to hide the underlying quality of the wood,
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Finding "the one" can be a very long journey and take years, so well done.
"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'd been eying the Eastman 00 and feel increasingly unhappy about buying Chinese, so Furch could be an option. Wonder if they do a 12-fret 00 style?
I think so, but you'd better check to be sure. Dowina would be another option (made in Slovakia).
Excellent value for money and beautiful guitars.
The one in the OP is a stunner fo' sho!
Dowina are Slovak and are also stunning.
If you express any reservations about Eastman or Chinese manufacture round here you will be descended upon by rabid owners whose reaction will have you convinced you just questioned their mothers' fidelity.
* Furch (Czecho)
* Dowina (Slovakia)
* Lakewood (Germany)
* Lowden (NI)
* Kremona (Bulgaria)
* Various smaller-scale EU and UK makers possibly more sensibly regarded as "luthiers" rather than "manufacturers", e.g., Atkin, Brook, Stoll, Cuntz, Avalon. None of those try to be cheap, just good.
There are lots of Spanish makers still, but pretty much exclusively classical and flamenco I believe.
So far as I can tell, neither the French nor the Italians manufacture anything anymore, just badge-engineer stuff out of China.
I think a solid wood Eastman will be significantly cheaper than a similarly specced new Furch. I personally found the Eastman tone to be quite bland, but obviously the only way to properly compare is to try them side by side.
Until China cleans up its act and starts acting like a responsible, grown-up country, I flat refuse to buy Chinese-made timber products* and do my best to avoid other Chinese products too. Indonesia is tarred with the same brush.
* Exception. I recently bought a cheap Yamaha made in China (or possibly Indonesia, there is some confusion). Yamaha go to considerable trouble to use sustainable timbers and document that. So I don't mind buying Yamaha. Some other Chinese-made guitars claim to use responsible sourcing, but provide no evidence. There is no reason at present to treat such claims as anything other than greenwashing. To be sure, we cannot be 100% certain about the provenance of any guitar made in any country, there is always some risk. Chinese-made products, however, are in the red alert high risk category.
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I've got a Furch-made (Stanford badged) OM and a Lebeda F5 mandolin - both from the Czech Republic and both great instruments. Your dread looks fantastic and I'm sure you'll love it. Enjoy.