MAIL

July 1996


I am a new subscriber who's been thoroughly absorbed by your recent editions. As the owner of an Ovation Elite 12-string and a Martin D-42, I have learned much from two recent features [Birth of Ovation, December 95, and The Mighty Dreadnought, January 96]. When the May issue arrived with Emmylou Harris' picture on the cover and feature article inside, I read it twice. Emmylou and I (along with 248 other people) graduated from Garfield High School in Woodbridge, Virginia, in 1965. One of my fondest memories is performing with her on stage at a variety show when we were seniors. We did "Freight Train" as a duet. She was a professional musician even then. I blew a turn into the chorus and she covered without missing a beat. At the time, I had a Kay guitar, my second instrument, and she played a Gibson Hummingbird.
I don't know how you can top your recent efforts, but keep trying.
Dr. Donald T. Alvey
Smithfield, Virginia

That was a nice little blurb on tenor guitars in your current issue [Great Acoustics, May]. Good research too. Usually, when I show a guitar player my tenor (a 1934 Gibson L-50-TG), they think it's a baritone uke (that's probably why I got it so cheap--$200). Most guitar players arrogantly assume that it's tuned like the top four strings of their guitars. Wrong! I've even had some say they know someone who can put a "real" neck on it or that I'm not a real guitar player. I like it just the way it is, and so do many listeners.
EZ Marc (the Ten-Fingered Tzar of the Tenor Guitar)
*City, state TK

Your excellent review of travel guitars [Road Warriors, April 96] only missed one thing: the availability of left-handed models. I have a classical travel guitar from Outbound; the left-handed option was available with no extra charge.
Allison Terry
Kent, Washington

Thank you for the excellent coverage of my concert guitar [Great Acoustics, April 96]. The comparison of my guitars to [Greg] Smallman instruments is flattering, but I would like to highlight the differences between our instruments. I believe the Smallman innovation of lightweight lattice bracing is probably the greatest development since the advent of fan strutting by Torres. It has led to the reevaluation of many of the old ideas regarding sound production in guitars. Smallman is pushing the limits to see how much response a guitar can achieve, and in the process he is redefining the sound of the guitar as we know it. There is room, however, for those luthiers still pursuing a traditional tone to take advantage of these innovations and apply them to their building styles. By thickening the edge of the soundboard in relation to the ultra-thin Smallman style, lattice bracing can produce excellent results. My guitars are built in this way, and they retain the structural integrity and tone of a traditional instrument but are substantially more powerful when compared to traditional guitars.
Jim Redgate
Adelaide, Australia

Regarding your recent issue featuring Melissa Etheridge [Unleashed, March 1996], why her? Dont we get enough of her on FM radio, VH-1, all of the awards shows, tribute albums, etc.? If I want to see Melissa Etheridge with her legs spread apart on a couch, Ill buy Rolling Stone.
Bill Clayton
Ballston Spa, New York

The article on Django Reinhardt (February 1996) was great. I was especially interested in the part on Stochelo Rosenberg. I am a great admirer of the Rosenberg Trio, and there are a few things you should know. Stochelo doesnt play the Favino anymore. He has been the proud owner since 1993 of Selmer No. 504. The former owner, a Dutch musician, bought the guitar before the war from Django Reinhardt himself when he was in Amsterdam. They say he paid 85 guilders for it.
Mary Honcoop-Versteeg
Ijsselstein, Holland

I found the top ten songs that music store owners hate [No Stairway, Jump Street, December 95] to be quite amusing. I play about half pretty fluently and have at least dabbled in the others. What this really means for the rest of us, I think, is that these are ten of the most interesting and inspiring songs of this era.
Pat Daley
Newburgh, New York

Shame on all those sissies who cant take a joke [No Stairway]! Hang em up by the G string I say. I am guilty of playing almost all of the songs mentioned (Blackbird, Embryonic Journey, etc.) each time I try out a new guitar, so I thought the article was right on target.
Mike Nibert
Taylor, Michigan

As a customer of Gryphon for 20 years, Id like to comment on the letters regarding Michael Simmons No Stairway. The letters printed have missed the point. Words like critic and snob do not fit in a description of Michael. His article was meant to be a light-hearted viewpoint from a sales perspective, not critical of customers. Ive had many opportunities to view Michaels customer relations. I can assure you that a prospective customer has no better friend than Michael. Hes as much a teacher/philosopher as a salesperson, and hes greatly appreciated.
Steve Adkins
Santa Clara, California

Thanks for a continuously great magazine and the coverage on all the great guitar people. Being originally from Europe, it still amazes me how American musicians who enjoy a great following in Germany, Denmark, and England are virtually unknown in this country. The guitar player Woody Mann seems to be exemplary of this phenomenon. A consummate songwriter and fingerstylist who draws from the vast scope of American music, his records are hardly available here, and it is almost impossible to catch him playing live concerts in the U.S. In cases like his--and with a lot of other contemporary acoustic musicians who are not labeled too easily--I have the feeling that Europe opens its ears more willingly than the U.S. But that seems to have been the case throughout the history of blues and jazz.
Holger Hoetzel
New York, New York

Was picking up a copy of your magazine worth it? Several years ago, after the passing of a relative, I was offered an old, beat-up flamenco guitar with the ultimatum that it would go out with the refuse if I did not accept it. I reluctantly accepted and let my children play with it in the rockin room, as they call it. The guitar was on the short list for our annual spring garage sale. Imagine my shock after reading your magazine and discovering through one of your advertisers that the neglected flamenco is a 1965 Arcangel Fernandez with a current resale value of between five and eight thousand dollars! Since then I have used your magazine to locate and discuss plans with your advertisers for the future of the guitar. My children are a little upset. Now when they go into the rockin room, they just look up at the wall and stare at the Arcangel. Sometimes we all stare at it together.
Mike Lo Primo
Holbrook, New York

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