A great deal later than intended, here, finally, is the entry about the Yamakai YD-35. As mentioned in the previous post, this is another alternatively braced model from Yamaki, somewhat of a brother to the YW and YM models. The YD series was a little different to the YW and YM though, offering a far samller range: a YD35, YD50, and a YD80 were the only options, at ¥35,000, ¥50,000, and ¥80,000 respectively.
Visually these are quite different to the YW and YM models, from the lighter pickguard, to the Martin D45 style torch inlay on the headstalk. Further D45 influences can be seen in the fingerboard position inlays; the gradual shift from snowflake inlays up to the 12th fret, to the cat's eye(s) inlays from the 12th fret upward. The soundboard is a fine spruce top, likely Ezo spruce (Picea Jezoenis - a native Asian evergreen, the Eastern counterpart to Western Sitka Spruce), with a simple abalone rosette, an ebony bridge. The top also features double cream binding onto Indian rosewood sides, and a 2-piece Indian rosewood back, with a centre strip in detailed wood mosaic. Onto the body is a 3-piece mahogany neck, with a cream bound ebony fretboard featuring the aforementioned inlays in mother-of-pearl. Continuing up to the headstalk sees a rosewood veneer, with mother-of-pearl and abalone inlayed Yamaki & Co. Est 1954 and the D45-syle torch. The machines are high quality Yamaki-branded Gotoh units which are exceptional. Internally is clean and tidy as normal, with the model and serial number branded on the neck block.
Tonally this is much bolder than the YW or YM models, great volume but pronounced bass response, which further leans towards the guitar being modelled on the D45.
Here are some photos:
You can find the whole album to view here
Next will be another Yamaki, earlier in their time line to the early 70s, with the F series.
vintage japanese acoustics
Thursday, 5 January 2012
Thursday, 22 September 2011
Yamaki YW-35
Finally, another entry on one my favourite brands; Yamaki. Away back in October last year i wrote about the YW-50-12 model, where i discussed the back story of the Yamaki brand, so please revisit that entry for the company history. Here, we will look at the Yamaki YW-35 model.
Like the YW-50-12 before, this YW-35 (originally sold at 35,000 Yen), sees the Yamaki Western design body. This YW model ran along side the YM and the YD models at the same time (mid 1970s to early 1980s), with each model having a slightly different bracing design and features. This is also the case with Tokai around the same time in their Cat's Eyes series of guitars, seen with their CE, CE-CF, and CE-D models, with each suffix defining what era of Martin design the guitars bracing was based on (CE = pre-war, CE-CF = post-war, CE-D = modern). Whether in the Yamaki case, these work around the same concept and eras, i really amn't sure, but their is no escaping the Martin-basis in all their models.
Looking at the features of this YW-35, we find the soundboard is solid red-cedar. Yamaki were one of very few brands to use cedar soundboards on their dreadnought guitars, thought its use was common-place in the quality nylon strung guitars crafted in Japan at the same time. Re-known for being a warmer, softer tonewood, the use of cedar here gives this guitar a slightly different tonal character to that of some of the spruce-topped Martin based designs; highly responsive, and slightly darker, this does work wonders when matched to some pure bronze strings; their natural brightness counter-acts the overly dark and muddy realms cedar can be subject to, giving a complex and lively voice, particularly when fingerpicking. Cedar is known to open up alot quicker than spruce as well, though on a 40 year old guitar, i think plenty time has passed for both to have become more complex with age. Simple cream and black rings form the soundhole rosette, with a similarly simple purfling around the edge of the cream binding to the sides. The sides are made of Indian rosewood, whilst the back has the Martin D-35 style 3-piece back of Indian rosewood, darker cuts used on the outer flanks, with a more red-rich cut used in the centre. Wood mosaic purfling is used down each seam. A rosewood bridge and bone saddle are also found. The neck is 3-piece mahogany, with quite an antique stain that shows the grain nicely. The rosewood fingerboard features snow-flake mother-of-pearl inlays and cream binding. The headstalk is Martin shaped, faced with a rosewood veneer and Yamaki written in gold script across the top. Tuners are Yamaki-branded quality Gotoh models. Internally is the usual case for Yamaki, with the model branded on the neck block, whilst Yamaki Co. Ltd, Since 1954, Made in Japan is embossed into the wood of one back seam braces.
Yamaki do make some of the best sounded guitars from the era in Japan. Richer, fuller, more complex than a good deal of its cohorts at the same price bracket from the time, they really are worth searching out.
Here are some photos of this YW-35:
Not the best set of photographs i have taken with this guitar due to lower light conditions. I'll need to retake them on a better day.
Next up is another Yamaki model: a YD35.
Like the YW-50-12 before, this YW-35 (originally sold at 35,000 Yen), sees the Yamaki Western design body. This YW model ran along side the YM and the YD models at the same time (mid 1970s to early 1980s), with each model having a slightly different bracing design and features. This is also the case with Tokai around the same time in their Cat's Eyes series of guitars, seen with their CE, CE-CF, and CE-D models, with each suffix defining what era of Martin design the guitars bracing was based on (CE = pre-war, CE-CF = post-war, CE-D = modern). Whether in the Yamaki case, these work around the same concept and eras, i really amn't sure, but their is no escaping the Martin-basis in all their models.
Looking at the features of this YW-35, we find the soundboard is solid red-cedar. Yamaki were one of very few brands to use cedar soundboards on their dreadnought guitars, thought its use was common-place in the quality nylon strung guitars crafted in Japan at the same time. Re-known for being a warmer, softer tonewood, the use of cedar here gives this guitar a slightly different tonal character to that of some of the spruce-topped Martin based designs; highly responsive, and slightly darker, this does work wonders when matched to some pure bronze strings; their natural brightness counter-acts the overly dark and muddy realms cedar can be subject to, giving a complex and lively voice, particularly when fingerpicking. Cedar is known to open up alot quicker than spruce as well, though on a 40 year old guitar, i think plenty time has passed for both to have become more complex with age. Simple cream and black rings form the soundhole rosette, with a similarly simple purfling around the edge of the cream binding to the sides. The sides are made of Indian rosewood, whilst the back has the Martin D-35 style 3-piece back of Indian rosewood, darker cuts used on the outer flanks, with a more red-rich cut used in the centre. Wood mosaic purfling is used down each seam. A rosewood bridge and bone saddle are also found. The neck is 3-piece mahogany, with quite an antique stain that shows the grain nicely. The rosewood fingerboard features snow-flake mother-of-pearl inlays and cream binding. The headstalk is Martin shaped, faced with a rosewood veneer and Yamaki written in gold script across the top. Tuners are Yamaki-branded quality Gotoh models. Internally is the usual case for Yamaki, with the model branded on the neck block, whilst Yamaki Co. Ltd, Since 1954, Made in Japan is embossed into the wood of one back seam braces.
Yamaki do make some of the best sounded guitars from the era in Japan. Richer, fuller, more complex than a good deal of its cohorts at the same price bracket from the time, they really are worth searching out.
Here are some photos of this YW-35:
Not the best set of photographs i have taken with this guitar due to lower light conditions. I'll need to retake them on a better day.
Next up is another Yamaki model: a YD35.
Wednesday, 21 September 2011
Bluebell BW400
Bluebell are a new brand to discuss on this blog. Branded very much in the vain of Cowboy and Westerns, with original Japanese adverts showing the Bluebell brand in SALOON style italics, and some plaid shirt luthier hand sculpting the neck of a mandolin, whilst some old moustached fellow in a Stetson strummed some country chords, they aimed to capture squarely the country and bluegrass flatpickers in native Japan. Interestingly with Bluebell, the brand used a large variety of guitar factories to construct their models over the period of the early to late 70s; which factory dependant on the model type and price bracket. Some top end Bluebells were made at the wonderful Tama factory, varying between Martin-based designs to Gallagher-based models (the only brand to have Tama-made guitars in this style i believe), though given the small number of luthiers at the Tama plant, i imagine some of the other top end models were made at a selection of these others; Fuji-Gen, Blue Bell factory, or by Suzuki Violin Co. Ltd. Usefully, each soundhole label indicates the factory of manufacture. They also made a fine line of flat mandolins and banjos.
In this entry, we look at a Bluebell BW400, made at the Suzuki Violin Company guitar plant. The Suzuki Violin company have quite a history all by themselves, which i will save for either a Suzuki or ThreeS branded guitar to regale, but they are one of these brands slightly better known in Western markets, with quite a following of collectors, with a strong reputation for quality instruments. This Bluebell BW400 is a delight, tonally amongst the best in the collection, whilst its materials and construction are excellent.
Featuring a very nicely grained quarter-sawn solid spruce soundboard, with some bearclaw figuring and cross-grain silk (the general belief is that these features are a sign of very mature wood, grown in a natural forest rather than a farmed forest), this is high high quality. Unlike quite a few others, this doesn't have an abalone rosette around the soundhole, but just simple tri-line rings that adds some understatement to this model. The purfling around the edge of the binding is likewise. The sides are Indian rosewood, whilst the back is a 3-piece design, again in Indian rosewood, with the outer flanks bookmatched, each seam with the same simple purfling as seen elsewhere on this model. It is quite suprising to see this modesty, where use of Mexican shell and abalone and wood mosaics are much more common, though i feel it reinstates the simple bluegrass theme this brand was based around. The neck is a quite beautifully figured mahogany 3-piece, in a chunky C profile, with a bound rosewood fretboard with simple mother-of-pearl dot position markers, and an ivory-coloured heel cap. The headstalk is again a simple Martin-style design, with a rosewood veneer and cream binding, and Bluebell in the aforementioned SALOON style script in gold. The tuners as usual at this level, are high quality nickel Gotoh models, all engraved with the Bluebell brand script. Back to the body, and we find the bridge is rosewood, with a bone saddle. I should state that plastic saddles are much more the norm on most of these guitars, and that i always install a new bone one it is place if one hasn't been installed already. Such a simple upgrade you wonder why its not the norm anyway! Internally this is clean, with Martin X-style bracing and cedar kurfling. The soundhole label is in place, stating the model number BW400, the factory of construction as Suzuki, the handwritten model number, with the last two digits indicating that this is made in 1979, and that it has passed their quality control tests of tone and construction. Always so thorough.
As i mentioned at the top of this entry, this is amongst the best sounding of the Martin-designed guitars in the collection. Loud and rich, excellent base response and note sustain, it really is wonderfully suited to flatpicking bluegrass; a convincing idol of a Martin D28.
Here are some photographs to enjoy:
The full album can be viewed here.
In this entry, we look at a Bluebell BW400, made at the Suzuki Violin Company guitar plant. The Suzuki Violin company have quite a history all by themselves, which i will save for either a Suzuki or ThreeS branded guitar to regale, but they are one of these brands slightly better known in Western markets, with quite a following of collectors, with a strong reputation for quality instruments. This Bluebell BW400 is a delight, tonally amongst the best in the collection, whilst its materials and construction are excellent.
Featuring a very nicely grained quarter-sawn solid spruce soundboard, with some bearclaw figuring and cross-grain silk (the general belief is that these features are a sign of very mature wood, grown in a natural forest rather than a farmed forest), this is high high quality. Unlike quite a few others, this doesn't have an abalone rosette around the soundhole, but just simple tri-line rings that adds some understatement to this model. The purfling around the edge of the binding is likewise. The sides are Indian rosewood, whilst the back is a 3-piece design, again in Indian rosewood, with the outer flanks bookmatched, each seam with the same simple purfling as seen elsewhere on this model. It is quite suprising to see this modesty, where use of Mexican shell and abalone and wood mosaics are much more common, though i feel it reinstates the simple bluegrass theme this brand was based around. The neck is a quite beautifully figured mahogany 3-piece, in a chunky C profile, with a bound rosewood fretboard with simple mother-of-pearl dot position markers, and an ivory-coloured heel cap. The headstalk is again a simple Martin-style design, with a rosewood veneer and cream binding, and Bluebell in the aforementioned SALOON style script in gold. The tuners as usual at this level, are high quality nickel Gotoh models, all engraved with the Bluebell brand script. Back to the body, and we find the bridge is rosewood, with a bone saddle. I should state that plastic saddles are much more the norm on most of these guitars, and that i always install a new bone one it is place if one hasn't been installed already. Such a simple upgrade you wonder why its not the norm anyway! Internally this is clean, with Martin X-style bracing and cedar kurfling. The soundhole label is in place, stating the model number BW400, the factory of construction as Suzuki, the handwritten model number, with the last two digits indicating that this is made in 1979, and that it has passed their quality control tests of tone and construction. Always so thorough.
As i mentioned at the top of this entry, this is amongst the best sounding of the Martin-designed guitars in the collection. Loud and rich, excellent base response and note sustain, it really is wonderfully suited to flatpicking bluegrass; a convincing idol of a Martin D28.
Here are some photographs to enjoy:
The full album can be viewed here.
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