can anyone chime in on the pros & cons of Harmworth & Willis guitars? i'm talking mainly about the D-hole model. these appear quite nice for $1K price range. they claim at their website to incorporate a pliage on the soundboard. i assume these are asian made guitars but am not sure. mike harmsworth sent me pics of new 14 fret D-holes that are not yet mentioned on their website. haven't found that much discussion on this forum concerning this maker. just curious.
thanks,
ron
thanks,
ron
Comments
At that time H&W were making the guitars completely themselves according to David. Whether they make their GJ guitars themselves, I don't know, but I would presume they do.
I wouldn't be supprised that they somehow acquired David's fixtures for their excursion into producing Selmac guitars. They're logo - layout in their labels seems to be identical (cept the names).
H&W, like Hodson, was a small and strongly independent shop, doing it their own way, and both very British.
I owned a Hodson. It was eccentric, inexpensive, and very well made. Eccentric, in that he was very frugal so as to keep the price down. He was interested in pumping out good cheap guitars. H&W's look and feel is a little more upscale but only by a bit.
Both seemed to adhere to old school values of hand made quality unfettered with much elaboration, though this was 10-15 years back when H&W were only making British style acoustics and not GJ guitars.
This is just my musings based on talking to Hodson. I bet their not shopping their work to China, but I don't really know. I looked at the site but its so scant that it doesn't give any clue.
i have quite a few GJ guitars and there are some very good asian made guitars but they will never compete with european on US luthiers. However i own a Asian made GJ stlye guitar which i got for a bargin £110 pounds sterling. which although is not a patch on a eimers or killy nonnis i have t, i can say it is much better then a new asian made harmsworth and willis.
if you are looking for guitar at a budget, check out many other options because there are real bargins to be had, rather than paying good money for a sub standard new instrument.
thats my view anyway!!
I guess I was just wishing they were building them, and you know, at that price, they couldn't make them, event the Hodson's (ten years ago) were a good deal at $1500.
I didn't think about the price, but its likely a give away as to whose making them.
They were actually making the folk guitars years ago, using a big variety of woods and their own designs. They didn't make GJ guitars at all at that time. Guess they still don't and they seem to have quit on the folk guitars too.
Last year in Samois I was playing with some guys in Killy Nonis's tent in Samoureu and the guys who were sitting playing Killys and Eimers et al were well impressed with the H&W oval hole i was playing. So don't underestimate these guitars.
i and other GJ players i belive too often value some GJ style guitars at to high a cost, but that is only driven by the fact that top end GJ guitars are of such high quality, to the point where you are talking about very minor difference in sound/build/quality from £2000 to £5000 for which other guitar styles can not compete in terms of quality. But i belive because GJ is such a particular market, that many luthiers exploit this superioriy to the point of sickness and poor human compation, to exploit as much as possible from the player who will pay the price, more for street cred then artistic interpritation, and that makes me feel ill.
Lets not be snobs. you can make beutiful amazing music on a very cheep guitar. of course guitar quality can make a difference but it is more to do with the player and his expression and feel on a guitar no matter how much it costs.
for a example of this check out bereli lagrene with thomas dutronc playing swing 48 on youtube.
ok Bereli is a master but on the track i have mentioned i belive he is playing a Aria MD-20 which sell for around £180, and he makes it sing
Will
good luck in the search for a guitar.
Janet
There's a fantastic player in London who plays an Aria and makes it sing. He told me that when he was looking for a gypsy guitar he deliberately chose the Aria partly to buck the trend to buy a high end guitar but also because it sounded fine.
My latest purchase was a 70s Takeharu D hole made by Suzuki. It's scratched and dented and stinks but its loud, has a really good gypsy sound and it outplays my Dupont Busato in a jam setting.
There is a huge amount of kudos given to named guitars and I think we think that a better guitar will somehow make us better players and forget that what makes us better is practice, practice and practice.
Just my penny’s worth!