Having played a number of vintage guitars and new guitars built with "aged wood," it got me thinking about the tonal qualities of older woods. Now a days we have so many amazing Lutheirs building Selmers probably better then the originals: Shelley Park, Michael Collins, AJL, Manouche, Gallato, Dell Arte, etc. But one thing I often hear from people is that "the new ones just don't sound the same." In general I think that's true, old guitars definitely have a maturity of tone that's hard to explain. After talking with local guitar guru John Saba, I've come to find out that as wood ages it undergoes a chemical process which makes the wood consistent and even. That apparently result in more efficient vibration and better tone.
I'm sure some of the luthiers on this site could explain this better then I.
Anyway, the two top French lutheirs, Favino and Dupont, both build with aged woods. The Dupont VR is built with 40 year old wood...and I've heard that J.P. Favino builds with a stash of wood he inherited from his father, most likely just as old. With craftsmanship so high now, maybe one of the few advantages the French luthiers have is just a horde of choice wood? These guitars built with aged wood probably sound better right out of the shop then a Selmer or Favino built in the 1940s which was probably built with freshly harvested wood. Just a guess....
Anyway...it would be interesting to hear other peoples thoughts..
Comments
Sorry, I deleted my post to find the original source of my reference from the UK forum (since it gets me out of the burden of having to defend an opinion of my own, tee-hee) so here it was:
In my mind, the question is not the existence of old tone wood but how much better does it actually get by being aged beyond a certain point. My guess is an eighth inch thick piece of wood is pretty much as stable as it will get in five - ten years. At a certain point equalibrium is reached and thats it. Not to pooh-pooh the Dupont Reserve which by all accounts is a very fine guitar, but is there really an advantage to a piece that is fifty years old besides bragging rights?
Personally, I don't have the experience to comment confidently, all I know is that I'm in love with the expressiveness of my Manouche, and cannot imagine a guitar sounding any sweeter!
Cheers,
Josh
Now - to completely throw a wrench in what I just said. I recently purchased a half billet of 60 year aged Sitka spruce... didn't like it at all - shipped it back and exchanged it for the new wood mentioned earlier. In m humble and imperfect opinion - the new wood I received in exchange for the returned 60 year old wood... is vastly superior. It taps better - it's stiffer - it's more even in grain & stiffness - it's better quartered (though that has to do with the talent of the cutter)
So - is older wood better? Past a certain point (a couple of 5 or so years) I don't think so. It's true that wood turns to cellulose over time but we're talking decades and there are so many good guitars made from wood younger than that. I once had the privilege of speaking with some Amish (sp?) craftsmen who naturally age their wood billets 7 years before working it. I asked "why 7? why not 3 or 30?" The answer they gave me was simply "Because it gets more stable for about 7 years and then doesn't seem to get any better after that." Man, if you can't trust the Amish - who can you trust, right?
Aloha.
-Bob
it's almost like the difference between preamp overdrive and power amp distortion.
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There are so many things that go into making an instrument great. A great instrument is the sum all of these components and more. Ithink the most important factor is the care that an individual maker puts into each and every step. I'm sure this is the major factor in why the Vielle Reserve Duponts sound better than the instruments that are half the price. You are paying for the care and experience of the maker.
So much of great instrument making is intuitive andf experience. Juswt my 2p.
Ken Bloom