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Review: How to Make a Living Doing Something Crazy — Like Making Guitars by Kent Carlos Everett

Review: How to Make a Living Doing Something Crazy — Like Making Guitars by Kent Carlos Everett

Reviewed by John Calkin

Originally published in American Lutherie #101, 2010



How to Make a Living Doing Something Crazy — Like Making Guitars
Kent Carlos Everett
$9.75 from www.everettguitars.com

Thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands of guitarists who admire fine instruments and seem to know all about them, have a fantasy life where they are a luthier. Their fantasy days slip slowly by as they sit quietly at their bench, engrossed in the pleasant task of rendering expensive wood into the most exquisite guitars the world has seen. Their favorite artists fill the background with wonderful music as they pause to admire a favorite lick and wonder oh-so-briefly what the lesser unfortunate members of humanity might be doing at that very moment. Their life is full and peaceful and maybe even prosperous.

I’ve come to believe that their fantasy is the real foundation of our New Golden Age of Lutherie, and that without it luthiers would be groveling for a living in some miserable cubicle in the ever-expanding megalopolis that houses American commerce. The next time a customer or friend is envious of your lifestyle just nod knowingly and tell them you entirely understand.

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Review: More on Somogyi’s Responsive Guitar

Review: More on Somogyi’s Responsive Guitar

Reviewed by Michael Sandén

Originally published in American Lutherie #102, 2010



I first meet Ervin in 1984. I was in my second year as a wannabe guitar builder, and already I had read about him in Frets magazine. Over the years we have met a few times when I have passed through San Francisco and of course at Guild conventions. I have listened to his workshops and I have read his articles in American Lutherie magazine.

When I saw these two thick books of about 300 pages each, I got the feeling that Ervin had left nothing out. Finally someone has taken the time and effort to write all of this down. He goes through the many aspects of the guitar and just tells you his experience (which spans over four decades) of how everything works. Ervin makes a full chapter of some topics that are barely mentioned in many guitar building books. Take for instance the chapter, “The Functions of the Guitar Back.” I have been building guitars for almost thirty years. To now be able to read about these things that have been in my head for so long gives me great satisfaction.

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Review: Building the Selmer-Maccaferri Guitar by Michael Collins

Review: Building the Selmer-Maccaferri Guitar by Michael Collins

Reviewed by John Calkin

Originally published in American Lutherie #96, 2008



Building the Selmer-Maccaferri Guitar
Michael Collins
Acoustic Guitar Resources
DVD, 14 hours
Available from Stewart-MacDonald, $159.98

The Selmer-Maccaferri guitar, whether D-hole or oval hole, is unlike any other commonly encountered. As far as I know, this DVD set and the accompanying book (available separately) are the only thorough guides to the construction details and how to put one together, though the DVDs only cover the oval hole model. Although Michael Collins makes references to the book and plans to help clarify specific details, I haven’t seen them, so we’ll have to examine the DVDs on their own.

The most obvious and remarkable aspect of the DVDs is their ten volume, fourteen-hour run time. Editor Tim Olsen’s e-mail to his crew hoping to find a reviewer asked, “Is anyone not in prison going to have time to watch these?” Well, there I was with my cybernetic arm waving in the air. I guess I’m just a glutton for this stuff. I must confess, though, that while I try to watch video media at least twice before reviewing, once through had to suffice for this set.

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Review: The Responsive Guitar & Making the Responsive Guitar by Ervin Somogyi

Review: The Responsive Guitar & Making the Responsive Guitar by Ervin Somogyi

Reviewed by Roger Alan Skipper

Originally published in American Lutherie #102, 2010



The Responsive Guitar
ISBN 978-0-9823207-0-9

Making the Responsive Guitar
ISBN 978-0-9823207-1-6
Two-book hardback boxed set
Ervin Somogyi
Luthiers Press, 2009

To suggest that this two-book set is striking would be an understatement. Contained in this box is more than eight pounds of quality glossy paper, and a quick fanning reveals a large section of stunning color photographs, plus sharp black-and-white images and sharply detailed drawings throughout. Also of immediate note is the price: $140 per book, $280 for the set; that this is intended as a serious and significant work is clear. A bit of investigative work (this information is found in the introduction of one book, on the back cover of the other) reveals that The Responsive Guitar is the first of the set, with Making the Responsive Guitar an accompanying and subsequent tome.

The first book’s purpose and the author’s qualifications are clearly defined on the cover: “The Responsive Guitar is about the physics, dynamics, acoustics and construction of the guitar”; “Somogyi is arguably the premier maker, theoretician and expert of the modern acoustic guitar for his generation.” The last page of text is numbered 339, but the numbering doesn’t begin until approximately fifty pages in, after a logical and concise table of contents, a brief foreword by musician and recording artist Martin Simpson, and an introduction and acknowledgments page by the author. This is followed by thirty-two pages of professional color photographs of contemporary guitars of all descriptions — innovative, artful, minutely detailed, and divinely crafted — to quicken the pulse of any luthier. Only ten pages are of the author’s work, as he pays homage to other makers.

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Review: A Guitar Maker’s Manual by Jim Williams

Review: A Guitar Maker’s Manual by Jim Williams

Reviewed by Cyndy Burton

Originally published in American Lutherie #10, 1987 and Big Red Book of American Lutherie Volume One, 2000



A Guitar Maker’s Manual
Jim Williams
Guitarcraft, 10 Albury St.,
Dudley, NSW 2290, Australia, 1986
$19.95 from Stewart-MacDonald (1999)

In 1976 I decided to make myself a guitar. I have no idea now what possessed me. The bottom-of-the-line Yamaha I was learning on sounded a bit thick, I guess — but I hadn’t yet witnessed Segovia, alive and in person, nor the wondrous and magical sound of Julian Bream. A friend loaned me Irving Sloane’s Classical Guitar Construction and I was off — off on a tremendously frustrating journey which led two years later to an intense and gratifying six-week course with William Cumpiano (Stringfellow Guitars, now in Amherst, Massachusetts) where I successfully completed my first nylon string guitar.

People learn best in different ways. For me, a very attentive and competent teacher was a requirement, but for some a how-to-do-it book may suffice or may be the only choice available.

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Review: A Guitar Maker’s Manual by Jim Williams

Reviewed by Cyndy Burton

Originally published in American Lutherie #10, 1987 and Big Red Book of American Lutherie Volume One, 2000



A Guitar Maker’s Manual
Jim Williams
Guitarcraft, 10 Albury St.,
Dudley, NSW 2290, Australia, 1986
$19.95 from Stewart-MacDonald (1999)

In 1976 I decided to make myself a guitar. I have no idea now what possessed me. The bottom-of-the-line Yamaha I was learning on sounded a bit thick, I guess — but I hadn’t yet witnessed Segovia, alive and in person, nor the wondrous and magical sound of Julian Bream. A friend loaned me Irving Sloane’s Classical Guitar Construction and I was off — off on a tremendously frustrating journey which led two years later to an intense and gratifying six-week course with William Cumpiano (Stringfellow Guitars, now in Amherst, Massachusetts) where I successfully completed my first nylon string guitar.

People learn best in different ways. For me, a very attentive and competent teacher was a requirement, but for some a how-to-do-it book may suffice or may be the only choice available.

Reading Jim Williams’ A Guitar Maker’s Manual has brought back those memories for me, but the question one must ask of this book is, “Can a person make an adequate first guitar, either classical or steel string, from this book?” I guess the answer is, “maybe.” Although Sloane’s book was the only one I could lay my hands on in 1976, today’s aspiring guitar maker has many choices, some pretty good, some not. I’m not up on all of these, but if I were starting out again, and had no access to a good teacher, I’d study all the books I could buy or borrow, and this one would be an important addition.

The large workbook format, (almost 8 1/2" × 12" size), about 160 photos and diagrams, and a spiral binding to allow the book to lie flat and open on the bench, are great advantages. Having clear diagrams of workable jigs, including a “go-stick (what we call go-bar) board” and a side-bending jig similar to the one available from Luthier’s Mercantile, as well as actual-size drawings of a steel string and classical guitar, which are folded neatly in an envelope attached to the back cover, are invaluable.

This is a nuts-and-bolts approach; a straight, let’s-get-to-it method book. No words are wasted on theory or philosophy, a fact which some people will find disturbing. The analogy of a good basic cookbook comes to mind. And, as with a good cookbook, the final results of specific recipes are often dependent on the experience, competence, and sensitivity of the cook, rather than just the list of ingredients and directions for combining them.

Writing a how-to-do-it guitar book is a monumental task. To build a successful guitar literally hundreds of steps must be carried out with some degree of accuracy, and for certain ones, there is no margin for error (bridge placement, for example). This book will certainly serve as a step-by-step guide and a source of ideas. The potential for frustration and a very negative experience is always present. But this book probably significantly betters your chances for a successful outcome.

I would like to see more space spent on the details that affect setup and, ultimately, playability. For example, in this method the fingerboard thickness is not tapered except a small amount on the bass side on classicals, so saddle height must be quite extreme (string more than 12MM off the top of a classical) to compensate. In addition, no under- or over-bridge cauls are used for gluing on the bridge. A novice gluing on her or his first bridge might, with overzealous clamping, split the top. I think more detail on the really crucial steps is needed.

To conclude, I’d like to recommend this book, but with some reservations. It is an unpretentious, straightforward approach which will guide a novice, and with a little luck and maybe a little help from a guitar maker friend, a successful instrument can be made. ◆