Hi folks - I am seeking some opinions with this post.
I am 47 year old guitarist that is starting to experience some wear and tear after 37 years of playing and I am getting carpal, sore joints and back etc. I am finding that playing my Cigano GJ15 is real work and by the end of a 3 hour gig my hands are shot. Recently I tried a Godin 5th Avenue archtop (without a pickup) and was impressed by the sound (very sweet and even) and the feel (it is much, much easier to play than my Cigano). It has an old school tone to it and GJ playing sounds good on it. The only problem is that it is not loud enough to duke it out with a GJ15.
I am thinking of buying the 5th Avenue and buying a K&K archtop micing system and then playing all the gigs lightly amplified.
Now my questions: has anyone tried the 5th Avenue (the pure archtop) and what do you think?
WOuld the Godin work in a GJ context?
Is my pllan a road to ruin and disappointment?
Thanks for your feedback.
Rob
Comments
But when it comes down to it if the Godin allows you to play pain free and it sounds good to your ears, why the heck not go for it? You're talking pain here, not just a little physical discomfort. Playing needs to be enjoyable.
If you are worried that other GJ guys won't take you seriously I'd set that thought aside and just play the heck out of it.
I find that for me the set up is the critical part. I play a Cigano short, Dupont long scale, and an archtop.
The Dupont has more string tension, slightly higher action, and one simply has to put their left hand out a little further to fret the low frets. For whatever reason, I can play the shorter guitars at will, but the Dupont only for 30 minutes. This is troubling of course, cause the Dupont beats everything for tone.
I don't know why you'd find one 25.5" guitar increases your playing stamina over another except that the setup is different. Meaning the strings are either heavier or higher or both between your Godin and your Cigano.
In fact, I'd have guessed it would be the other way round due to the Cigano being a 12 fret and therefore a shorter reach to the frets. Look careful at the setups. On the quieter guitar a guy may set it up higher because you hear more including fret problems. Make sure you've got apples and apples in the setups.
AE
Thanks once again.
I have a godin 5th avenue acoustic archtop that I have lately used for gypsy jazz. Would using gypsy jazz guitar strings make this guitar sound more gypsy-like?
I'm not sure the tension would be high enough on the gypsy strings to get great volume from your archtop. Typically those need heavier tension to drive the sound. That being said, I haven't tried this myself.
I agree. I have a Godin 5th Avenue, non-cutaway with a single P90. It's a great little guitar with a cool Charlie Christian vibe. However, even with .012s, it is not a powerful acoustic instrument, and the GJ strings would definitely not drive the top enough to get a strong sound.
"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 have a lot of issues with the tendons from playing so much in my occupation. Often times I just say screw it and play my jazz on the Les Paul. Lol