The story behind the world`s most frequently copied guitar.
Transcription
The story behind the world`s most frequently copied guitar.
www.musictrades.com FEBRUARY 2016 $3.00 The story behind the world’s most frequently copied guitar. MARTIN The MosT Copied GuiTar How a battleship designed to project British Imperial might inspired a Pennsylvania guitar maker, and why, a century later, his wood and steel “Dreadnought” ranks as the world’s most copied guitar F The Dreadnought has evolved over the past century. The contemporary D-28, at left, has a 14-fret neck and a solid peg, unlike the original Ditson model, at right. However, the basic dimensions, bracing, and body profile remain largely unchanged. MUSIC TRADES February 2016 aced with a growing military threat from Germany at the beginning of the 20th century, the British scrambled to develop a new type of warship that would give its Navy a decisive competitive advantage. The result was the HMS Dreadnought. Launched in 1906, the 18,000-ton behemoth was equipped with the world’s first steam turbines, massive 12" turret-mounted cannons, and was described by First Sea Lord Jacky Fisher as a “symbol of British Naval supremacy and the indomitable spirit of the Empire.” Today, Lord Fisher would no doubt be startled to find that his massive battleship had all but faded from memory, and the term Dreadnought had become synonymous with a large-bodied acoustic guitar. In an equally unexpected historical turn, Dreadnought guitars also figured prominently in 1960s-era anti-war protests. How a symbol of British military might was co-opted by the guitar industry is a story of creative design, good fortune, and 185 years of exceptional craftsmanship. The large-bodied acoustic guitar that came to be known as the Dreadnought, was first developed 100 years ago by the Martin Guitar Company. In addition to designing the guitar, Martin also coined the Dreadnought name, and made the instrument world famous. The Dreadnought was introduced when the guitar industry was small, and the thought of trademarking designs or product names never occurred to local craftsmen like C.F. Martin. As a result, over the past five decades, the design and nomenclature have been adopted by virtually every other guitar maker in the world. In acoustic guitar catalogs from brand A through Z, you can find faithful “dreadnought” reproductions, making Martin’s original design the world’s most copied instrument, with the possible exception of the Stradivarius violin. C.F. “Chris” Martin IV, the sixth generation to head his family’s guitar business, is resigned to the fact that the rest of the industry has adopted his great-grandfather’s design. “I guess we’re flattered by all the copies,” he says. “But what really amuses me is that there are Dreadnought copies at every price point. You can buy a Dreadnought copy from China for $100, and you can buy one that costs more than an original Martin.” MARTIN The MosT Copied GuiTar What accounts for the success of the Dreadnought? Martin says, “It’s a combination of things. Its size has a visual presence. When a performer straps one on it makes real statement. Tonally, it really projects. And, the sound complements vocals well.” However, the attributes that make Dreadnoughts of all brands in such demand were not immediately apparent to the Martin craftsmen working in Nazareth in 1915. The first Christian Frederick Martin immigrated to the U.S. in 1833 to escape an oppressive German guild system. He had spent two years in Austria apprenticing with noted guitar maker Johann Stauffer and planned to practice his new craft when he returned to his home town of Markneukirchen, Germany. His plans were dashed when the local instrument makers’ guild dubbed him a “furniture maker” and prohibited him from building guitars or any other musical instruments. In frustration, he and his family sailed for New York, where he established a retail store and guitar workshop in lower Manhattan. Martin’s initial business was reasonably successful, but having grown up in rural Germany, he and his family couldn’t adjust to urban living. After a particularly painful Christmas in their walk-up apartment, in 1839, he packed up and moved west to the rolling hills of Nazareth, Pennsylvania. The company has been there ever since. Although the current factory bears little outward similarity to the original workshop, it’s separated by only a few blocks, and in 183 years Martin has had only three factories. The first C.F. Martin’s most notable innovation was the now widely copied Xbracing pattern, first developed in 1843. Books have been written about C.F. Martin’s attention to detail, his fixation on quality, and the company slogan, “Non Multa Sed Multum,” translated from the Latin to mean, “Not Many But Much,” or colloquially, “not the biggest but the best.” Less noted is the fact that he was a hardnosed businessman who was very attentive to the needs of his customers. C.F. Martin passed on his “serve the market” mantra to subsequent generations. By the early 20th century, his grandson, Frank Henry Martin, was tailoring private label models for leading retailers including Wurlitzer, Southern California Music Company, and the Ditson company. When Frank Martin received a letter from Ditson store manager Harry Hunt with a proposal for six different guitar shapes, including an extra-large model, he was quick to respond. The recently concluded 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco had created a nationwide fascination with all things Hawaiian, and Hunt wanted to capitalize on the fad with a line of guitars suitable for Hawaiian music. He spec’ed out a complete family of guitars that included an “extra-large bass guitar” model that was bigger MUSIC TRADES February 2016 Although the Dreadnought remains instantly recognizable, production methods have evolved dramatically. Instruments are still assembled by hand at Martin’s Nazareth plant, but some laborious tasks, like buffing, that were once done by hand (below, circa 1912) have been handed over to robots. MARTIN The MosT Copied GuiTar than anything Martin had ever built before. The “extra-large” model was designed with a high nut and saddle and a fan bracing pattern, so it could be played in the Hawaiian slack key style. Roots In HawaII Building Hawaiian-style instruments was nothing new for Martin’s team of German immigrant craftsmen. Six months before building the first 12-fret Dreadnought, Martin had built a large-body custom guitar for the renowned Hawaiian musician Major Kealaka’i. This guitar shared many of the dimensions of the Dreadnought and could even be considered its predecessor. The Major toured the world with his Martin, performing throughout Europe. With the Hawaiian craze in full swing, Martin also produced thousands of ukuleles. It even made a special line of koa wood guitars for the Southern California Music Company. For Ditson’s “extra large” guitar, Martin slightly modified the body shape of Major Kealaka’i’s guitar, giving it a thicker waist. The Ditson family of guitars made their debut in 1917. An avid history buff who kept a copy of Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire at his bedside, Frank Martin gets credit for selecting the Dreadnought name. According to family lore, thought the battleship designation conjured images of majestic size and power. Despite the inspired name, response to the Ditson line was tepid. By 1921 only 500 Ditson guitars had sold, and just 14 of the Dreadnought models were built. Results were sufficiently disappointing that the following year Ditson shelved its own product line and went back to selling regular Martin branded guitars. The Dreadnought model went out of regular production, and between 1925 and 1930, the company built only a handful for special orders. The first C.F. Martin carried on the Viennese guitar-building tradition he learned from Johannes Stauffer and designed his guitars for gut strings. From 1833 through the mid-1910s, gut strings were standard on all Martin guitars, including the Ditson models. Steel strings only began emerging in the teens to accommodate the slide-style playing of Hawaiian music and in response to musicians who were clamoring for more volume on stage. Andres Segovia’s historic 1928 U.S. concert tour accelerated this shift. The virtuoso’s dazzling performances convinced audiences and guitarists that the Spanish style fan-brace pattern was perhaps better suited for gut strings than the Martin Xbrace pattern. Although Martin had offered steel strings as an option for several years prior, after the Segovia tour it began transitioning all its standard instruments to steel strings. The shift to steel strings coincided perfectly with a cuttingedge new technology: the radio. Affordable radios hit the market around 1925, and within a few years, there were radio stations playing music nationwide. Record companies initially viewed broadcasters as a mortal threat to their business and pushed for regulations prohibiting playing records on the air. This led to live performance broadcasts, and musicians soon MUSIC TRADES February 2016 The Dreadnought was inspired in part by Major Kealaka’i, the Hawaiian virtuoso who place a special order for Martin’s first large-bodied acoustic (inset). Subsequently, it found favor with Gene Autry (top), the original singing cowboy; with Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young, on the stage at Woodstock; and with contemporary artists such as the Avett Brothers. MARTIN The MosT Copied GuiTar discovered that nothing came across the airwaves better than a steel-string Martin. PeRfect foR tHe RadIo Sears Roebuck established the 50,000-watt WLS (for World’s Largest Store) station in Chicago, and its most popular program was the Saturday night “Barn Dance,” which made Gene Autry a star. In 1925, one of the WLS producers moved to Nashville and offered up similar programming under the “Grand Ole Opry” banner. The Opry bills itself as “The Show that Made Country Music Famous.” It can also take indirect credit for reviving interest in Martin’s Dreadnought. The growing interest in cowboy and country music, fueled by Opry broadcasts, led to demand for a larger, louder guitar. Initially the Martin company seemed uninterested in building bigger guitars. In a 1929 letter to a dealer, Frank Martin said that anything larger than the 000 body style would upset the “tonal balance” that had been the hallmark of Martin guitars for decades. The company archives contain numerous other letters from Martin representatives denigrating the Dreadnought because it was too “bass heavy,” “overpowering,” and “awkward.” By 1931, the company apparently had a change of heart. Maybe it was because of growing demand. Or maybe it was because business had gotten so bad during the Depression that the company was desperate for orders. Whatever the reason, in early 1931, Martin re-introduced the D-1 and D-2, based on the original Ditson Dreadnought body shape, but with X-bracing and steel strings. By year-end the instruments were renamed the D-18 and the D-28. A total of eight Dreadnoughts were sold in the first year. The next year was not much better, with sales of just nine guitars. Dreadnought demand picked up markedly in 1933 when country star Gene Autry ordered a custom Dreadnought, decked out with abalone trim and his name boldly inlaid across the fingerboard. Autry was a top grossing movie and music star at the time, and images of him with his guitar sparked demand for elaborate, abalone inlaid instruments. Martin responded by introducing the D-45, its most ornate instrument. By 1941, the last year of production before the outbreak of World War II, Dreadnought sales topped 700 units. Pre-war D-45s are among the most coveted vintage guitars today, as only 91 were built. In the years following World War II, as the guitar became the focal point of popular music—first with the folk music boom in the ’50s, and later with rock ’n’ roll—players gravitated towards the Martin Dreadnought. They loved the way it complemented vocals, its tonal projection, and the exceptional Martin build quality. The Woodstock Festival in 1969 effectively cemented the Martin Dreadnought as the guitar to have. Over three days, performers including Joan Baez, The Band, Canned Heat, Arlo Guthrie, John Sebastian, and most significantly, Crosby, Stills, and Nash dominated the stage with their Martins. Within a year, Martin annual production topped 20,000 units for the first time in company history. Other guitar makers took note and soon began producing copies. First it was U.S. makers such as Harmony and Kay that addressed the entry-level market. Later, Asian manufacturers flooded the global market with their Dreadnought copies. tHe Most coPIed GuItaR Production methods have evolved considerably over a century of Dreadnought production. Computer-controlled lathes and shaping devices are used throughout the Martin plant to produce ribs, purfling, and other wood components. Robots are now used to buff guitars, replacing hours of tedious physical labor. But, the selection of choice woods is still a process that requires a well trained eye, and guitars are still meticulously assembled by hand. Contrary to purists, Chris Martin says the introduction of contemporary production methods are in keeping with the Martin tradition. “We adopted steam driven machinery early on, and we have correspondence in the files with auto makers asking about how we could speed up the finishing process.” He adds, “The automation we use creates a more consistent product, and a much better working environment.” For all the changes, however, the Martin dreadnought at 100, remains unmistakable. Current production is at levels undreamed of only twenty years ago, reflecting a robust worldwide demand. Apparently, there are guitarists around the world who agree with Stephen Stills, who says, “Martin guitars are masterpieces of carefully chosen woods and handcrafted elegance…they give voice to our very souls.” Chris Martin is a bit more prosaic. “They’ve copied our shape, which is pretty easy, but I haven’t seen any guitar that matches our tone. That belongs to us.” NAMM Booth 5454 www.martinguitar.com MUSIC TRADES February 2016 MARTIN The MosT Copied GuiTar Two famous Dreadnoughts: The British battleship of the same name in 1906, and the Martin D-45. MUSIC TRADES February 2016 Solid wood. No compromise. The Dreadnought Junior is everything you’ve come to expect from Martin Guitar...and more. Discover your new favorite guitar. #DreadNot