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Hi all,
I have a Lowden S35, beautiful sounding and looking guitar in every way which I have a love/hate relationship with, hence why its currently for sale, during a period of hate! I bought it and it was to be my forever guitar, it was a very serious amount of money.
I am a bedroom player, little or no intentions of ever playing out etc. I play mostly "strummy" type stuff for my own enjoyment think Billy Bragg, Neil Young , Bob Dylan, Beatles etc.
I bought the S35 for the body size mostly because in the past I have struggled with big dreadnaughts, plus I was two stones heavier so the guitar felt/was further away. The S series are more known as finger pickers guitars, wider nut, shorter scale length. so I am not fully using it for its intended purpose, is this a problem?
So my dilemma (which I grant you is a nice one) is, keep the Lowden, keep on using as I currently do, or sell/trade/PX for larger potentially more suitable acoustic or more radical buy a Strat/Tele and a small amp. I recently bought a Squier Tele to scratch the itch and have been enjoying that but the difference in quality between a £4+ Lowden and a £200 Tele is understandably huge.
I value your opinions, I might just need reassuring, I might be/probably am being stupid. What would you do? every time I think I've got it sussed, I change it a couple of hours later. So apologies to all of those who's guitars I have enquired over for being so indecisive!
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Comments
The problem will be that - if you like the liveliness of the Lowden sound - Martins and Gibsons sound a bit 1D in comparison.
Maybe a Lowden F would be better?
I could not have one as my only acoustic, they just do not do that strumming thing anywhere near as well as other alternatives. I had an F50 last year which I A/B'd alongside my J45 Legend for many months, and the J45 was honestly more than good enough as a finger picker, probably 75% as good as the Lowden. Whereas the Lowden was probably 25% the strummer the Gibson is. Lowdens can get a bit clangy when strummed, which can clash with vocals, sure there are people that can make it work, but I don't think it's their natural place.
As Moe_Zambeek has said, maybe start looking at some Martins, Gibsons, maybe also Santa Cruz, Bourgeois, smaller shop stuff like Fairbanks etc. Even if you can't manage a dread, I reckon plenty of the OMs will get you nearer to that strumming sound you want. I don't think a Lowden is the answer, whether it's S, F or O.
I was sorely tempted by yours in the classifieds. Have had the Koa/Redwood combo before and it is great.
Alternatively, go bespoke and get a custom made Atkin or a Fylde like this one.
U’r looking at the wrong culprit - the guitar - when it’s down to the player.
I’ve written on this before so have coped ’n pasted.
Go through the examples and make u’r mind up.
Ross Martin playing an ‘F’ Lowden - by choice his favoured weapon for accompanying fiddle ’n pipes - whats he thinking of ? - a Cedar topped, fingerpickers dream and he’s thrashing the £@!£!T outa it, cant be right ?.
It’s HOW he’s doing it and yeah I’ve heard them play pray acoustically (unplugged and he still uses that same guitar.
Theres another video of Darel Scott playing a thrashing may on a Soblell accompanying his singing - and all ya hear is, U cant heavy strum a Sobell - they’re for ‘finger style’ Theres another guy in an Irish band who uses a Sobell for band accompaniment
’n here -
technique damping / muting with both hands is whats required.
this first video is of an O38 - cedar / Brazilian which in most hands would get out control, think 'F' model then some - it's just not an issue for this guy - My favourite Lowden strummer
or here
OK, you want this whole misconception / misinformation taken to the extreme ?
Here is a Stefan Sobell, widely known as one of THE fingerstyle soloists instruments - being used in an out and out strumming / accompaniment role
watch listen and learn -
could it just be u want another guitar WnW ?
The 'F' model was re-voiced so it would work for flatpick and fingers - viz Richard Thompson 's work - etc
the 'F' me thinks
You can stroke it gently and it will sound great but it is primarily suited to fingerpicking.
As others have said, I would trade it for an OM sized guitar. You might get a good trade in deal with a specialist shop - Coda in Stevenage is worth contacting.
I own a Lowden O series, which has that "Lowden sound". I really like what I get out of it.
If you like the sound of the guitar keep it, if you don't then move it on. For what it's worth, I love me some Neil Young and Dylan and think it sounds just fine with my little mahogany box.
Maybe try strumming without the plectrum too, it seems to soften the sound and warm it up a little compared to a plectrum?