Posted on April 16, 2026April 17, 2026 by Dale Phillips Meet the Maker: Federico Sheppard Meet the Maker: Federico Sheppard by Roger Alan Skipper Originally published in American Lutherie #106, 2011 I’ve studied your website and other Internet articles about you. You’ve led quite an interesting life: you were born in Mexico City; you mentioned that one guitar stayed with you through “five different moves” and “three careers.” You’re a chiropractor, and have been a cab driver, sod cutter, lead Hawaiian guitarist for a Polynesian dance band, a consultant for the National Museums of Paraguay and El Salvador, and have ridden a bicycle around the world. I’ve even stumbled across a rumor that you traveled with a circus. Could you share some of that life with me, and tell me how you got started in lutherie? Everything you read about me on the Internet may not be accurate. I was tempted to join a Mexican midget circus I came across on a bike trip in France, but I didn’t meet the height requirements. And that is God’s own truth. Become A Member to Continue Reading This Article This article is part of the Articles Online featured on our website for Guild members. To view this and other web articles, join the Guild of American Luthiers. For details, visit the membership page. MEMBERS: login for access or contact us to setup your account.
Posted on April 3, 2026April 3, 2026 by Dale Phillips Meet the Maker: James Condino Meet the Maker: James Condino by Roger Alan Skipper Originally published in American Lutherie #105, 2011 James Condino has lived and traveled in forty-three countries in his forty-four years. The instruments of this extreme outdoor adventurer have accompanied him to highest mountain peaks and through raging rivers. He’s an author with a pair of books in the works, one concerning the mandolin, and the other on the double bass. He’s also a lutherie teacher, previously at the college level, and now one-on-one in his shop. He’s landed, for the moment, in Asheville, North Carolina, where he builds mandolins and double basses, and specializes in repairs on vintage guitars and the plywood basses he digs out of the Appalachian hills and hollows that surround him. James, teaching is interwoven with your building. Let’s start with the school of lutherie mentioned on your website. Beginning when I was nineteen, I spent almost six years in the Air Force; I got out just after Desert Storm. Then I went to school at Oregon State University. It’s an old-school land-grant institution, and still had a nice public-access woodshop. When I built a flattop steel string guitar there in 1995, they approached me about teaching a lutherie class. I was busy with field expeditions just then, so I didn’t have the time. The following winter, though, I taught a very popular ten-week course in solidbody electric guitars. That morphed into a three-academic-quarter, nine-month class in building acoustic steel string guitars. I taught there for four years, and I learned as much as the students during that time. That experience also allowed me to home in on what I wanted to teach and how to approach it. Become A Member to Continue Reading This Article This article is part of the Articles Online featured on our website for Guild members. To view this and other web articles, join the Guild of American Luthiers. For details, visit the membership page. MEMBERS: login for access or contact us to setup your account.
Posted on March 25, 2026March 25, 2026 by Dale Phillips Meet the Maker: George Gruhn Meet the Maker: George Gruhn by Roger Alan Skipper Originally published in American Lutherie #107, 2011 Growing up in Pittsburgh in the ’50s, at age twelve George Gruhn seemed destined for a life centered in zoology. So many animals, in fact — ’possums, snakes, turtles, frogs, and fish — filled the basement of his parents’ home that a Pittsburgh newspaper sent a reporter to interview him. His college education began with a premed major but quickly shifted to ethology (animal behavior, in the psychology department). A department chair nervous about venomous pit vipers left George with twenty-five to thirty cottonmouth moccasins in his apartment, rather than in the psychology building. Also in George’s apartment at that time were the beginnings of a vintage guitar collection. He’d scoured classified ads, pawnshops, and music stores for the instruments few others yet sought, but couldn’t find enough in the Chicago area to satisfy his hunger. On a vacation break in 1965 he visited Nashville, expecting to find shops overflowing with old instruments, but found virtually nothing of interest. Ready to leave in disappointment, he heard of collector Mike Longworth (later to write Martin Guitars: A History) in Chattanooga, four hours away. Become A Member to Continue Reading This Article This article is part of the Articles Online featured on our website for Guild members. To view this and other web articles, join the Guild of American Luthiers. For details, visit the membership page. MEMBERS: login for access or contact us to setup your account.
Posted on February 23, 2026February 23, 2026 by Dale Phillips Meet the Maker: David Cohen Meet the Maker: David Cohen by Roger Alan Skipper Originally published in American Lutherie #99, 2009 DR. Dave Cohen, of Cohen Musical Instruments, crafts guitars, mandolins, mandolas, octaves, and mandocellos in Richmond, Virginia. During a sabbatical from the chemistry classroom, Dave seized the opportunity to study the mandolin’s vibrational properties with Dr. Thomas Rossing at Northern Illinois University. From this and other studies he has produced a number of lectures and publications to complement his instruments. Dave, your website mentions a “lifelong interest in science, woodworking, and stringed instruments.” What kinds of woodworking did you do prior to lutherie? My grandfather was a carpenter, and my dad was a civil engineer. Dad knew I’d value something I made more than something I bought, so as a kid, I was always making things with my dad, using my grandfather’s tools. Between the early ’70s and the mid-’90s, I built furniture, mostly casework, that was strongly influenced by James Krenov and Sam Maloof. They still influence my stringed-instrument design. Lutherie is woodworking. Lutherie, though, integrates my background in science and mathematics, and music. I love that part of it. If lutherie were simply reproducing the instruments of the past, I doubt that I would have made more than a few instruments. Become A Member to Continue Reading This Article This article is part of the Articles Online featured on our website for Guild members. To view this and other web articles, join the Guild of American Luthiers. For details, visit the membership page. MEMBERS: login for access or contact us to setup your account.
Posted on March 1, 2025May 13, 2025 by Dale Phillips Meet the Maker: Stan Werbin Meet the Maker: Stan Werbin By Roger Alan Skipper Originally published in American Lutherie #108, 2011 I met Stan Werbin, owner of Elderly Instruments in Lansing, Michigan, in 2009 at the Midwest Banjo Camp he directs along with Ken Perlman in nearby Olivet, Michigan. It was clear then that Stan is a busy man, but I didn’t realize just how busy until I tried to arrange an interview. Our schedules finally meshed, however, and with his office door closed to the business without, I found him relaxed and forthcoming. Stan, you’ve been a member of the Guild of American Luthiers, even back when, as Tim Olsen says, “there was not much to show but a good idea and a naïve willingness to try.” Yet you’re not a builder. What’s the attraction? In the early days of Elderly Instruments, I was just trying to learn to repair instruments so I could fix the ones we had for sale, but I didn’t really have the time required to get good at it. Before we even had a repairman on staff, I’d farm out repairs to Jeff Elliott, who lived here in the early- to mid-1970s. Become A Member to Continue Reading This Article This article is part of our premium web content offered to Guild members. To view this and other web articles, join the Guild of American Luthiers. Members also receive 4 annual issues of American Lutherie and get discounts on products. For details, visit the membership page. If you are already a member, login for access or contact us to setup your account.