UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
Stella by Harmony Parlor Guitar - Does anyone else here have one?
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I just bought a 1951 Stella by Harmony on Reverb, it's coming from New York City; It's a 1950's but it's an early 1950's, and hasn't got a steel reinforced neck.
(What is that, is that an NFL sticker)?..
Is on its way.
By coincidence in Croydon I got a 1950's Catania Carmelo today (like an Italian parlor guitar I've never heard of before that seems rare).
I might keep it, but, since I feel like I got a good deal on that one, my instinct/reaction was to list it as soon as I found out, but I may decide it's not for sale, depending how it feels next to this Harmony I've been jonesing for.
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This video sounds good...
Playing on my Gibson R7 Les Paul after a night with a Catania Carmelo 'Italian parlor guitar/seems rare' that I acquired yesterday and coming back to my everyday player like Buckethead aside; I recommend these parlor guitars (like the others who also say this) for noodling and song writing...
I mean, I had to very quickly slow my self down because I'm not trying to be Herman Li here, which was fun going up and down my R7 bending away, and after a night with a parlor guitar on your very nice everyday player - when you slow yourself down, it's like 'in tune with the bend - It's like one with Hendrix j/k but the slow blues bends are there in your playing and, I find way more control; like my body had a tune up with the ins and outs of guitar/sound/and tone...
A book I have, love, read, and have read it 10 years ago... (So for me this is old knowledge)... but
Zen Guitar, a very wise book by Philip Tosho ISBN: 9781508246084 originally published in 1997 says:
'There are many ways to play a single note.'
I am reminded of that this morning.
I just got off the phone with Vintage & Rare of Bath (who have the only other Harmony parlor not in private hands that I can find in the UK) who quite honestly told me when comparing what I've got coming to a Martin...
They said... Yes... It is a cheap guitar (my Stella by Harmony that's coming) compared to a Martin...
But it's all about what tone do you want? and that even though it's cheap, it's got that 'twang' as I call it/that tone, then the guy there named a bunch of blues guitarists who's worked with them, and this lifts my spirits tremendously after finding out last night from YouTube that they're cheap guitars.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stella_(guitar)
I was pleased to see a picture of one like the one that's coming on its Wikipedia page.
And pleased to see the list of notable players contain names I've heard of/like too.
They are good guitars for the delta/blues etc as they can be quite boxy in tone, but if that's the tone you're after you cant go wrong with a Stella,
They may be cheap but were hand made in the US, so and not made anymore so they will probably start to rise in price in the future.
"The Martin sounded like a middle class white boy playing the blues."
"And the Stella by Harmony might be a cheap guitar, but, it's got that tone..."
Then he named a bunch of famous blues musicians who used them.
That's thanks to my proximity in Thornton Heath, my heritage/my father, bless him.
He's a well to do man who can talk professional and is a writing/entertainer; but he came from 1939 pre war Hoxton and the family moved from there to Battersea in that whole war and my Dad's a Battersea lad who loves his music from Mario Lanza, Johnny Cash, Frank Sinatra etc... My father's musical influences.
As a teenager, with me and my guitar playing, my father, I asked him to manage my career, he had me learning Ghost Riders in the Sky and suggested I learn C&W and showed me different covers, cover after cover. I went to hospital for a month, I called it Rehab, they called it Bipolar, that was 2005, they gave me my Kay under lock and key for an hour a day, and had me on one on one lest I off myself (I guess, IDK), was only 18.. And my father made me a mix tape of songs to play which included Mario Lanza singing the blues...
Cool man my Dad, am lucky.
I'm going to be playing Welcome to the Ghetto (probably/maybe/most likely), If There Was a God, Flicking the Bean and anything else my crazy self/A comes up with, maybe the Thornton Heath Blues ? j/k.
It left FedEx in Memphis, TN an hour ago...
This was taken a couple of minutes ago...
Flying over KY/OH...
...
Kurt Cobain used a broken 12 string Stella Harmony with 5 strings and recorded Polly which is on Nevermind, Elvis Presley, so far, is the only guy I see who's got one like the one that's coming, I believe. IDK... He seemed alright I guess..
Think he owned one or used one in a film or something, but it's a Stella by Harmony parlor without a steel reinforced neck. Same colour too and not the rarer colour I wanted.
I can't wait, tbh.
How do I find the right people to find Cliff Richard's people so I could even make invitation to treat for this parlor... IDK.
There's no connection to Elvis other than he used one, but, IDK, I'm only fooling/funning when thinking about trying to sell it to Cliff Richard (for a fair price), I don't want to rip nobody off, but I do love sourcing nice guitars...
Wow..
In January, I'm thinking, it was dark this morning for it when it took off and it's going to be dark again tonight when it lands...
Crazy.
That flight's getting what little if any daylight now? in mid air.
That random thought just occurred.
That random thought still blew me back enough to mention it here though.
(Audrey Hepburn 1961)
The only thing stopping me (and it's a big thing) is; I don't love the sound of them/their tone.
I just have to remind myself what they sound like to stop myself from getting it.
https://reverb.com/item/9260114-nirvana-1969-harmony-stella-h913-12-string-pro-setup-new-strings-vintage-usa-kay-silvertone
...
I even paid for it then post purchase, found out famous musicians worked with these...
It's kinda cool to know, but me, I like that tone.
So me not liking the 12 String Stella is why it's not my 12 String Buy.
Sounds like this:
wow what a sound everyone should have a guitar that sounds like this - lookin forward to hearing u'r chops on this 12er
.......like a fire in a pet shop....
Looks cool though.
But it's a parlor, therefore; it's very cool to noodle on. This Harmony is great at identifying notes with/noodle on and... I'm writing, but since it's cheap and nasty, I have like 1 riff...
This guitar has been teaching me songs today by ear. It's just practising them but this guitar is good at doing that whatever genre.
Playing my everyday player, after a day of playing on Stella by Harmony, is meaner.
I mean, it's more aggressive but not beating up the guitar, it's still calm/cool/fun to play but the meaness is there and it's in the notes/the rhythm, after you've been on a Stella, by Harmony for close to 9 hours, 'give or take' coming back to my everyday was meaner. - I like that.
Bought my self a parlor this week which was a surprise find, and it's a nice guitar, sounds like this...
Play on that all day, and you're like Buckethead upon your return to your everyday player...
Probably because it's mahogany *citation needed vs plywood though. But Stella by Harmony guitar makes your guitar playing sound meaner?! - if that's possible, and I don't mean hitting the hell out of your everyday guitar and if your everyday player's a keeper/nice/heaven to play, it's all going to be good, so when I say meaner, I mean meaner in sound and in tone and in how you approach the guitar I guess, what it does for your guitar playing is very cool though.
Also, like Slash sold me a Gibson Les Paul, a set of pickups and even an amp, this girl sold me a Stella by Harmony without a truss rod and she even sold me my first capo...
It was this video/sound which made me pick what model/type of Harmony parlor to get.