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1992–1993


Kevin Ryan Mission Grand ConcertKevin Ryan Mission Grand Concert

Although luthier Kevin Ryan didn’t start building guitars until 1988, his career took an accelerated course through the first wave of the ’90s custom-guitar boom. Inspired by Jim Olson’s instruments, Ryan was one of the first luthiers to specialize in guitars for modern fingerstyle players, and his background in aerospace engineering led to a fearless approach to design and the use of high-tech tools. With its small-jumbo body, cedar top, and alternate tuning–friendly long scale, Ryan’s Mission Grand Concert created a blueprint for scores of other builders, making it a modern classic.



Breedlove CMBreedlove CM

Founded in 1990 by former Taylor employees Larry Breedlove and Steve Henderson, Breedlove Guitars embodies the innovative spirit inspired by a newly found appreciation for custom guitars. The company’s CM model, introduced in 1992, features a radically unique body style that goes beyond the usual variations on Martin- and Gibson-inspired designs. Featuring a bridge-truss system and light bracing, the guitar is voiced for fingerstyle players. The range of exotic tonewoods guitarists could choose from provided a glimpse of what small-shop guitars looked like later in the decade.



D’Addario Environmental String Packaging D'Addario Strings

D’Addario took a leap of faith in 1992 when it began ditching the individual string envelopes and heavy plastic packaging of its guitar string sets. The single, corrosion-resistant plastic string pouch inside a slim, new cardboard package kept strings fresh virtually indefinitely, resulting in consistently great-sounding strings even after years of storage. Color-coded ball ends were also introduced, making it easy for players to keep their strings organized. The new packaging also resulted in 75 percent less waste than strings packaged in the old manner. Virtually every other string manufacturer followed suit with its own variations on low-impact packaging.



L.R. Baggs Para Acoustic DIL.R. Baggs Para Acoustic DI

Few products have become as much of a performing guitarist’s standard piece of equipment as the L.R. Baggs Para Acoustic DI, which was first released as the Para EQ in 1992. Pioneering the now-common combination of acoustic guitar preamp, DI, and EQ, the unit is widely used by players of all styles. The fact that it fits into the accessory compartment of most guitar cases is icing on the cake.



Godin Multiac NylonGodin Multiac

Introduced in 1993, Godin’s Multiac Nylon established the Canadian company (which also manufactures Seagull, Simon and Patrick, La Patrie, and other brands) as one of the most innovative in the business. The guitar’s angular body and MIDI capabilities gave it a futuristic vibe, while its slim 14-fret neck made it an instant hit with steel-string players seeking a nylon-string sound. Steel-string versions and a model with a classical-width 12-fret neck followed, but the original Multiac Nylon defines the contemporary amplified hybrid nylon-string guitar.


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This article also appears in Acoustic Guitar, February 2010



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