I am currently playing a Manouche Modele Jazz, purchased secondhand from Rob Brochey, which I dearly love. However, my small hands and stubby fingers are really challenged by the long scale. My previous instrument, a Dell'Arte Sweet Chorus (still for sale), being a short scale, was better suited to my hands, but I missed the extra fret access.
Who makes 14 fret short scale instruments? Shelley Park does have one such model. Anyone else?
Benny
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Comments
If you have really deep pockets, and can find one, the J.P. Favino Modele Jazz S has a slightly shorter scale (666mm instead of 670, I believe I read, although I never measured it), and a slightly narrower neck (1/16" at the nut, 1/8" at the 12th fret) than your Manouche Jazz. I still play my Manouche Jazz a fair amount, but the slightly smaller dimensions of the Favino neck make it more comfortable for me to play.
Doug
Live life and play music like it's your last day on earth. One day you'll be right- Russel Malone
Something to consider though - it may not be the scale length that's getting you so much as the neck size & profile. If you're having problems doing thumbover chords then it's likely a neck width/profile issue. But if your issue is that you're doing a lot of stretches - the worst case circumstance you'll run into is if you're doing a 5 fret stretch from the low E to the high E... in other words, diagonally across 4 frets in the first position. The difference in distance between a 670 scale (Selmer) and a 640 scale (Mac) over that distance is just over 6mm. (hypoteneuse of a triangle the length of the 1st-to-5th fret and the height of the E-E string spacing at the 5th fret... it would be a little more than that except that the Mac's fingerboard is wider which offsets it somewhat)
So, if you're doing a lot of stretches, and you're *just* missing them by a little bit, then this might be the issue. Or, if you're used to a truly short scale guitar (some American guitars are ~625mm) then maybe this is a real issue for you because a first position 5 fret stretch would be more than a centimeter longer than what you're used to.
I've thought about this a bit because I also have small hands and I play a Selmer style - and a Busato style whose scale is even longer than a Selmer. It took some getting used to but I'm fine with it now.
Bob, it would be the latter. Thumb-over chords are no problem - I've been doing those forever, long before taking up gypsy jazz. It's a stretch issue. A good example is diminished arpeggios - on the lower frets, those are a real challenge for me, even with index finger and pinky (How did Django do that? Actually, I've seen the films - simply amazing). I'm getting a little more used to the long scale, but it's hard work.
Thanks to everyone for your suggestions.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
I've just learned from Alain that Dell'Arte also makes a special order Anouman, 14 fret short scale. More info to follow ....
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles