Posted on 04/23/2014 1:02:02 PM PDT by Olog-hai
Santa Cruz?
Both Hummingbirds and Southern Jumbos have mahogany backs and sides.
Both Hummingbirds and Southern Jumbos have mahogany backs and sides.
Hank Williams occasionally played a Southern Jumbo. The guitar that’s considered “Hank’s Guitar” is the Martin D-28. Neil Young owns and still plays Hank’s 1941 D-28. Hank also played a 1947 Martin D-18, and pre-war Martin D-45 that now belongs to Marty Stuart, having passed through the hands of Tut Taylor, Hank Jr., George Gruhn, and Johnny Cash (who traded a pair of Civil War pistols for it) before ending up as Marty’s, ostensibly as a wedding present when Marty married Cash’s daughter, Cindy.
“Santa Cruz?”
That was it. Incredible guitar.
Except at Mandolin Bros. of Staten Island, because MB is always an exception. I don't even remember Gruhn carrying them at the time.
It seems with acoustic guitars that you really do get what you pay for, more so than electrics. I have a Sigma acoustic (basically a licensed copy of a OO-style Martin) that cost around $180 new, which I never play because the action is terrible and no amount of fiddling with the saddle will fix it. And the main reason I haven’t replaced it yet is because I’ve yet to find another acoustic I like with a price under $3,000.
For the record, that figure is about twice what I paid for my PRS.
On lower end accoustics I’ve come to love the tone from a cedar-top more than a spruce top.
A friend of mine had a Larivee with a cedar top. Nice-looking, and nice-sounding, instrument.
And I’ve noticed that most steel-string acoustics I have checked out in shops over the last fifteen or so years play almost like electric guitars.
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