NazNomad":1zbd9xcc said:
profchris":1zbd9xcc said:
NazNomad":1zbd9xcc said:
Also, with a little experience and the entire contents of the StewMac catalogue at your disposal, most woodworkers could produce a high quality guitar. #controversialcomment.
Try it and see!
If I could afford to buy all the StewMac gear, no problem. I've made perfectly acceptable guitars without all those gadgets. I challenge anyone to notice the difference in sound.
I honestly think that if you can make a perfectly acceptable guitar without the StewMac gizmos, they won't help you make a better one (other than perhaps cosmetically). The steps up to excellent come with the experience of making more (don't think I'm saying you don't have that experience, for all I know your "perfectly acceptable" might be modest understatement).
For me the test is whether a professional musician picks up the instrument and then wants to keep on playing it. I've been fortunate to have that happen a couple of times, though as I don't make for sale only a couple of my instruments are used by professionals, both presents to friends but still used to perform, which they didn't have to do.
As a semi-pro musician myself (more semi- than pro, though) I can feel the difference between an instrument which
wants to be played, and helps you give the best possible performance, and one which is just OK. These latter are perfectly usable, but need more work put in to achieve that good performance. Talking to professionals, they seem to recognise the same thing. None of us can define quite what makes such an instrument but we all know it when we play it. I've seen an instrument passed round a group of professional players, to general nods of "That one's got it".
Of course, 99% of buyers are not professional musicians, and for most of them (I'm told by builders) cosmetics are key. Not only will they not perform better with a top quality instrument but might even sound worse - a really good guitar requires a high level of skill to control. It allows you to do amazing things musically, but only if you can manage it. Think racing car. But plenty of abalone binding and a high gloss finish impresses everyone else, and here the StewMac kit makes a difference.
Maybe the analogy is with a high quality tool. An unskilled woodworker will do little better with a top-class plane than with a lesser one. The skilled woodworker can cope with a mediocre plane, but does his or her best work with a quality one.