Rick, My reference to the "real" world in my previous post was not at directed to the sales market for guitars, but simply the actual tone of the guitars themselves without being plugged in even though most have some sort of electronic assistance installed. You have to admit that when even the most avid electronic players of acoustic guitars like David Crosby and Jackson Browne and others get in the studio with those wonderful guitars that have all of the best pickups installed so that thousands and thousands of ears can hear what they are playing go into the studio, the pickups aren't as important any more and the expensive and efficient microphones come out and are very carefully placed around the instruments to catch something completely different.....the "real" sound of the instruments. If it wasn't that important that guitars sounded great on their recordings that will be heard by multiple numbers of people who will hear them live, they'd just plug in and throw them to a track on the recording.
I have to say, though, that many players who buy a guitar with a pickup in it only occasionally use them or simply buy, not because the pickup was there. They buy a guitar that they like, many times, that just happens to have a pickup onboard.
With the effects of the room, the system and speakers and then the processing necessary to make the guitars work at the volumes needed all taking a toll on the final tone of the guitars live, it never really does the "real" thing much justice and that's just a well proven fact. I've been to so many concerts where the acoustic tone was very good, but I also understand where it is always falling short of what can be achieved or captured in the studio and why, so it's not a problem or disappointment, just and excepted and accepted occurrence in live music. I've seen and heard Jackson Browne, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Bob Dylan and lots of other great acoustic players with some of the finest acoustic guitars ever made in live situations and have always loved the tone that they've gotten, but still enjoyed the more refined tone of the guitars on their recordings that just exhibited more of the true tone and character of the instruments. But even then, I would venture to say that I'd likely enjoy the tone of those same guitars while listening to them being played across the room from me in a completely acoustic environment. I agree and am fully aware of the general sales of guitars with electronics and pickups in proportion to those without. I install pickups in almost 75% of the guitars that I build, but I still build with the acoustic end of the guitar's tone at the forefront of my efforts. I have, on the other hand, built guitars that were intentionally directed completely to a plugged in application for both live and studio use. They had very little ambient or acoustic output or volume but sounded great plugged in on stage and on tape while standing up under very high sound pressure levels without feedback problems.
I have always loved the look of your guitars because of the path that you've bravely taken away from traditional appearance while still incorporating just enough to keep the purist interested and willing to pick them up and give them a try. I also agree that many players who may just end up loving your guitars need to be attracted enough to them by appearance to give them any consideration.
The heavy strings necessary to achieve tension sufficient to create decent tone and volum on a shorter scale have sounded clunky and almost dead to me when we've tried that here, too, but it allowed the player to enjoy the baritone like lower registers with zero playing adjustment as the ergonomic end of things stayed the same. I do like the tension of the strings on a baritone with a 28" or 28.5" scale length, but personally, don't care to have to stretch to play the things.
Anything a customer has wanted from me concerning scale length has always been fine with me since they're th one who will play the guitar when it's complete. I just always try to explain to them the characteristics that will likely present themselves with different scale lengths to allow theme to make a more educated decision when we get ready to lock in the details of their commission.
I currently have several guitars with shorter scale lengths in my shop ranging from a very short 23.750" to a personal favorite of mine at 24.875". Two others are at a traditional 000 length of 24.9", but it's always whatever they want and I wouldn't think to try to tell them what's right for them or not right, for that matter.
I'm not an acoustic purist by any means and 90% of my playing time is enjoyed with a Strat, Les Paul or Parker Fly plugged straight into an amp. I love to sit a play an acoustic that I or any other builder has created, but my situation demands that i play an electric. When I do play acoustic...it's plugged in most times, too.
I love the concept of your tilt neck and floating board too. Very practical and obviously functional innovations. Good stuff and i agree that a player sometimes grasps the benefit of such things before other builders just because they are willing to. Believe me, other builders get it, but don't want to validate it since they didn't come up with it....no matter how good it is.
Thanks for your time...and wise input, Kevin Gallagher/Omega Guitars
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