I read Ervin's article, and felt like I was at the wrong end of a wagging finger. I also felt like Ervin is somewhat out of touch with the innovations and experimentation (and the creative spirit fueling them) going on in lutherie. It seems to me there are plenty of hippie craftsmen still around, that is, those of us that did not drown in our vomit or OD on mood altering substances. We're just older now! And some of us have embraced tools with moving parts. Many of us have built wooden utilitarian objects (like cabinets and furniture) and not just art objects. In that world, we found that repetitive operations had a more consistent outcome when we built jigs. So, we built jigs. When interests wandered into lutherie, the wisdom of jig-making was not forgotten (except by those hippies that had the most powerful Humboldt sin semilla.) If someone is building a single guitar, or is primarily concerned with, as Rick Turner said, the act of guitar making (the journey), then by all means, build the entire guitar with a dozuki, scrapers, planes, chisels, and knives. But for those who are at least as interested in the destination (the guitar), or who plan to build a few, jigs and power tools make a lot of sense. And, regardless of the level of the master luthier that wags a finger at me, I'll still enjoy the guitar.
Millions of acoustic guitars will be sold this year, maybe a couple thousand would qualify as (mostly) "hand built", and maybe a couple of hundred of those will be "hand built using only hand tools." That final group of guitars will either be purchased at a huge premium by collectors or very affluent players, or will stay with the luthier or within the luthier's circle of friends. However romantic the notion, Luddites building guitars for resale is counter to business logic. And, the addition of the skills necessary to properly use power tools and to build jigs does not negate the skills of using hand tools - they go hand-in-hand.
Ervin waxes on, "...
there is, everything considered, rather little focus -- at least in print or on tape -- on anything touching on things like fruition/achievement, the learning curve, maturation, the larger perspective, context, or any sense of culmination, personal expressiveness, creative pleasure or spiritual satisfaction, and meaningful pursuit of quality." Maybe it's not leaking out into industry publications or on the how-to DVDs, but visit any of the luthier forums, or better yet, visit any of the luthiers active on these forums and you'll see that is not at all true. There is a great deal of all of those aforementioned attributes, and a huge amount of passion.
Just for the record, when Ervin states "...
the most significant innovations...Bill Cumpiano's ergonomic tapered-body designs...", wasn't that
Linda Manzer's innovation?
It is my understanding that Ervin Somogyi creates some of the finest sounding guitars on the planet, period. So, I certainly don't see him as a pretender to the throne. However, that particular article seemed a lot more like the thoughts of a wistful and somewhat tunnel-visioned grandpa than an industry spokesman.
Rick Turner wrote:
...Many of the folks who so romantically advocate doing things "by hand" are dedicated amateurs, who, if they were to sell their guitars would wind up making barely over minimum wage. The act of guitar making is an end unto itself; it's a wonderful hobby and so there's no necessity of working quickly, efficiently, and making a living out of it.
At the other extreme is a guy like Ervin who gets so much money for his guitars that he can afford a very philosophical point of view with regard to the nobility of hand work.
Most of us are caught somewhere between these two extremes. ...I am still stuck thinking of guitars as tools for musicians, not pieces of art. I'm not an artiste, I'm a toolmaker making his living at it. High falutin' concepts of the moral high ground achieved by Zen craftsmanship are not in my ken...
I agree.
Dennis