Considering an archtop and have many thoughts. Vintage or new? Brands? All I am thinking at present is acoustic that can be played and sound natural with a pickup, loud, percussive but also good for soloing, no cutaway. Since this would be for a side band that's Americana, I want Maybelle Carter's L5! I obviously have to settle for less. Money is also a concern; isn't it always? I do have a '74 Tele Custom that I can use to finance this but my wife will want some of the profits from that sale!!
I've read a lot about the new vintage Epi's, the Loars, the Godins, Gretsch, etc. All budget models but if they're good, I'm willing.
I've also been watching some guitars on Reverb: vintage Triumphs, Gibson 50's etc.
I've gotten to the point where the more I read, the less I know!
HELP!
Comments
Acoustic guitars amplified 'loud' are VERY prone to feedback and you will lose some of the acoustic 'natural' tone unless you spend some $ on electronics. If you want loud I'd go with a semi-hollowbody but I'm not sure what you mean by loud.
I’ve been the route of amplifying acoustics, including my Dupont, and know only too well the quest of doing it adequately and not sacrificIng the acoustic sound.
Many of the Eastman models have floating pickups, so you can plug in if you wish, but because they are suspended abpve the top they don't affect the acoustic sound at all. Others have pickups routed into the top; you probably want to avoid those. There's probably an Eastman for pretty much any budget.
The other guitars you mention - present day Epis, Loars, etc. are also Chinese made (except the Godins, which are built in Canada) - but generally not of the build quality of the better Eastmans. I've got a Godin 5th Avenue P90, great single coil electric sound but weak as an acoustic.
If you can afford a vintage guitar Epiphones are every bit as good as the Gibsons and generally less expensive. I prefer vintage Epis.
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Correction: Kent Armstrong upgraded pickup! My Ibanez 700 bass has Bartolini pickups!
To my ears, the challenge for an inexpensive archtop, old or modern, is the bottom end. Mediocre archtops sound thin and nasal--they go graak rather than chunk. My Eastman has much of the chunk that I hear from my '46 Broadway (which also has a bit of braak--lower than graak--in its voice, depending on the strings).