Comments for Acoustic Guitar https://acousticguitar.com lessons, music to play, and how-tos for all guitarists Tue, 11 Nov 2025 02:38:30 +0000 hourly 1 Comment on “When I’m Sixty-Four”—Learn a Fun, Hybrid-Picked Arrangement of This Time-Honored Beatles Tune by Richard https://acousticguitar.com/when-im-sixty-four-learn-a-fun-hybrid-picked-arrangement-of-this-time-honored-beatles-tune/#comment-4796 Tue, 11 Nov 2025 02:38:30 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148277#comment-4796 What a pleasure that was!

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Comment on “When I’m Sixty-Four”—Learn a Fun, Hybrid-Picked Arrangement of This Time-Honored Beatles Tune by Paul https://acousticguitar.com/when-im-sixty-four-learn-a-fun-hybrid-picked-arrangement-of-this-time-honored-beatles-tune/#comment-4795 Tue, 11 Nov 2025 01:52:11 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148277#comment-4795 Thanks for this.
Great interpretation and arrangement.

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Comment on Carved for Sound: How the Acoustic Archtop Guitar Keeps Swinging by Ray Land https://acousticguitar.com/carved-for-sound-how-the-acoustic-archtop-guitar-keeps-swinging/#comment-4794 Mon, 10 Nov 2025 20:01:15 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148325#comment-4794 In reply to Ken Willinger.

As a collector of European archtops I can recommend the recently published ‘German Jazz Guitars: The Archtop Guitar in Post-War Central Europe’. Written by Cameron Brown and Stefan Lob and published by Unicorn, UK. It is beautifully illustrated.

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Comment on Video Lesson: Chord-Melody Made Easy(ish) on Acoustic Guitar by Francesco Maiani https://acousticguitar.com/video-lesson-chord-melody-made-easyish-on-acoustic-guitar/#comment-4793 Sat, 08 Nov 2025 09:52:50 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=121013#comment-4793 This series of lesson by Greg Ruby is a wonderful, and deeply knowledgeable introduction to the obscure but wonderful world of 30s-40s chord melody. As an extra bonus, it’s the opportunity to hear one of the most beautiful and rarest guitars in the world, expertly played: a Masterbild De Luxe from the early 1930s! Thank you Greg! I’m studying this style, and your lessons are a mandatory starting point!

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Comment on Meet Jesse Welles, Fiery Folksinger on the Rise by Christie https://acousticguitar.com/meet-jesse-welles-fiery-folksinger-on-the-rise/#comment-4792 Fri, 07 Nov 2025 02:10:02 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148362#comment-4792 In reply to Tom.

OH! I hope you made it to the Nov 4th show at the Fillmore. What a great show! There were lots of us Q tips in the audience, but it was most certainly multigenerational!

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Comment on Carved for Sound: How the Acoustic Archtop Guitar Keeps Swinging by joe braccio https://acousticguitar.com/carved-for-sound-how-the-acoustic-archtop-guitar-keeps-swinging/#comment-4791 Thu, 06 Nov 2025 19:24:13 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148325#comment-4791 Great article but You forgot John Buscarino who worked for Bob Benedetto and Augustino Lo Prinzi and developed his own Archtops that compare with any of the greats–Joe Braccio

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Comment on Carved for Sound: How the Acoustic Archtop Guitar Keeps Swinging by Rudy Pyatt https://acousticguitar.com/carved-for-sound-how-the-acoustic-archtop-guitar-keeps-swinging/#comment-4790 Thu, 06 Nov 2025 00:54:43 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148325#comment-4790 Good overview, but a couple of points are worth mentioning: Matt Munisteri recently posted a YouTube video about the L-5. But he made some interesting observations while doing so. He said Nick Lucas and Eddie Lang both made extensive use of large, ladder braced flattops, despite their association with the L-5. Munisteri said that Lucas, in particular, never made the switch to the L-5 despite holding one in various publicity and catalog photos. And, as is well known, the Gibson Nick Lucas model, in both forms was not an archtop. Matt also pointed out that ladder braced flattops have a lot of similarities to archtops: The midrange emphasis; the cutting power; the attack and decay characteristics are very similar.

This sent me down a rabbit hole buying up vintage Harmony flattops. And my experience confirms the hypothesis. A Harmony H1260 Sovereign really does have similar qualities to not only its archtop Harmony equivalent H1310 Brilliant, but to the Gibson L-50 and L-75 as well. Which brings me to my second point:

Notwithstanding the David Rawlings effect, players who are archtop curious have very few affordable options for new guitars, particularly for purely acoustic instruments. Stated differently, Gibson has wholly abandoned the market they were founded upon. And no one has filled the role Harmony, Regal, and Kay once did. The Loar brand is in financial trouble; Eastman (unless something changed very recently) stopped making acoustic only archtops, as did Godin. And while Gibson launched the Epiphone Masterbilt line about a decade ago, the marketing team pushed the plugged in sound of these guitars. And not even a traditional pickup like a DeArmond, but a piezo setup. These guitars suffered from the neither fish nor fowl syndrome: Unconvincing as purely acoustic instruments to archtop veterans; and inferior as piezo amplified guitars when compared to equivalent flattops.

The bottom line is that someone not already familiar with archtops but curious about them face the prospect of buying used—always a risk with vintage instruments if you’re inexperienced (and sometimes even if you are)—or buying an expensive luthier built instrument.

I think there’s a gap in the market for purely acoustic archtops of the kind once cranked out by Harmony, solid wood but pressed and not carved tops and backs. Epiphone indeed took this approach 10 years ago, but as mentioned, they treated the acoustic tone as an afterthought.

That said, Guild currently offers the A150 Savoy, which features just that construction and a DeArmond Rhythm Chief pickup. They also have their line of laminate arched back/solid top flattops, as does Taylor. Either company should be able to use the same tooling to cost effectively build archtop guitars. Indeed, Guild describes on their website that they came up with the arched back flattops directly from their archtop guitars.

I would love to see Guild offer the A150 in purely acoustic form, and to offer at least one such instrument to their line. For similar reasons, and again they already have the tooling, Taylor could fill that gap in the market.

Anyway, just a pet rant from an archtop player. Thanks for sharing this article!

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Comment on Gear Review: Pre-War Guitars Model-HD by Michael Parks https://acousticguitar.com/gear-review-pre-war-guitars-model-hd/#comment-4789 Wed, 05 Nov 2025 15:12:00 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=106513#comment-4789 A well-built, good sounding fake is still a fake. I have to question the ego of someone who feels compelled to pretend their new guitar is old – why? I feel just as happy playing the D-35 I purchased new in ’77 as I do my brand-new-looking 2019 M36. I don’t care how skillful you are, if you need to pretend your guitar is something it’s not, you’re a poseur.

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Comment on Carved for Sound: How the Acoustic Archtop Guitar Keeps Swinging by BMW https://acousticguitar.com/carved-for-sound-how-the-acoustic-archtop-guitar-keeps-swinging/#comment-4788 Mon, 03 Nov 2025 20:30:29 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148325#comment-4788 Good article, but deserves a followup on contemporary builders and archtop innovators like Linda Manzer, Tom Ribbecke (compliant rim), Ken Parker and others too numerous to name. The archtop continues to evolve.

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Comment on Carved for Sound: How the Acoustic Archtop Guitar Keeps Swinging by Greg https://acousticguitar.com/carved-for-sound-how-the-acoustic-archtop-guitar-keeps-swinging/#comment-4787 Mon, 03 Nov 2025 19:41:37 +0000 https://acousticguitar.com/?p=148325#comment-4787 Just wanted to mention that the early 1930s Martin archtops (C-1, C-2, C-3) did indeed have carved tops.

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