Our search for the world's finest tonewoods is a chance to explore a universe of tonal possibilities. Responsible procurement, careful preparation, and skilled craftsmanship are required ingredients in the guitar building process. Like guitars themselves, wood is our passion.
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Macassar Ebony
Indonesia Limited Editions, Custom Models
Another dense hardwood, Macassar boasts a lot of presence and is typically clear and loud with a broad dynamic range. It seems to be a wood that is uniquely responsive to different playing styles. It has a strong bass and lower mids; clear and transparent highs that respond like an accelerator pedal as you move your right hand closer to the bridge and dig in a bit; and a slightly scooped midrange.
Macassar likes to be played hard, and tends to take a slightly longer period of playing time to open up. When it’s used with a softer top wood like cedar or redwood, it makes a balanced instrument. When topped with Adirondack spruce it becomes an all-out cannon. Some players tend to pull more brightness out of the wood; others, like Bob Taylor, tap into its darker side.
“To me, Macassar has a great ‘low-fi,’ old Gibson vibe,” Bob says. “It’s dark, it’s dense, it’s heavy. It’s killer for a very manly, old school strum. We put a super clear ‘finishing salt’ on its tonal flavor using our style of construction to brighten it up, but to my ear the tonal beauty of this wood is the low-fi vibe. I love the sound. I bought one.”
Goes Well With
Old-school strummers and players with a heavy picking hand who like a thick old school sound; players who struggle to get enough brightness and articulation from traditional woods.
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| What about Brazilian? |
| Over the last few decades, Brazilian rosewood has maintained its reputation as a prized tonewood for several reasons: Its heritage traces back to the much celebrated pre-war era of guitar-building; it often has a striking visual appeal and a clear, full tone with complex overtones and ample dynamic range; and the supply remains scarce due to an export embargo imposed in the late 1960s as a result of overharvesting. “Brazilian is just kind of over, even though, ironically, there’s lots of it in Brazil,” says Bob Taylor. “You just can’t get it out. It’s difficult to obtain the proper legal certification. Even if you pull out fence posts or stumps from long-ago-harvested trees, obtaining them in a perfectly legal, above-board fashion, you’re probably not going to be able to get the legal paperwork to export it.” It’s gotten to the point where guitar companies in other countries, who own legally obtained Brazilian but don’t have adequate paperwork, have found their wood impounded indefinitely by government officials. On top of that, much of what is legally accounted for isn’t of the highest grade, yet its rarity has made it prohibitively expensive. Is it a great tonewood? Yes. Is it worth the current headaches associated with trying to legally obtain it? Probably not.
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