#46
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See post 41
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NOT from Queen - he's much cleverer I am English, so are all my spellings Two guitars I'm happy with . . . |
#47
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A king says to the peasants that steak and bread aren't about which is superior to the other, they're just different.
Interestingly, when it comes to meal times the king always chooses steak. |
#48
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Maybe, but my steak is the regular D-28.
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"I used to try to play fast, and it’s fun for a minute, but I always liked saxophone players. They speak on their instrument, and I always wanted to do that on the guitar, to communicate emotionally. When you write, you wouldn’t just throw words into a bowl. There has to be a beginning, middle and end. Same thing with phrasing on the guitar" Jimmie Vaughan |
#49
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I had Bryan Kimsey, at his discretion, lightly shave the braces while he was in there doing some other work. I mention that in the interest of full disclosure.
However, what he did was VERY light shaving - not scalloping. He said there was really no reason to do anything much to change the sound. This was pretty much on the level of changing saddle or nut material or radical string change difference - not scalloping as in the way an HD-28 is scalloped. I allowed it in the first place because I'm a tinkerer & neither guitar is original anymore nor going anywhere until I take the dirt nap. Again, once you no longer have to ask simple things like what size allen wrench a Martin uses, or what size braces are on a Martin OM, we can perhaps have more to discuss. But at this point I've addressed what the OP asked & I'm outta here. Go argue with the kids at Guitar Center. I suspect in the future folks can look back at this thread like dozens of others you written in, where you've realized you were imprudent in what you wrote and deleted post after post after post... Wise move, no doubt. Last edited by kydave; 08-29-2014 at 05:05 PM. |
#50
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I owned a wonderful vintage D-28 that was stolen out of my home on New Year's Day 1981. I grieved so much, I couldn't bring myself to buy another Martin Dread for ten years, so I went for a 00-18 instead (my playing at the time had progressed more to fingerstyle). The 00-18 was wonderful and balanced in tone, but when my playing when back more towards strumming I needed a Dread.
I acquired a gem of a used HD-28 (mid-Seventies vintage) about 20 years ago. I love the look of the herringbone trim, etc., so I'm sold. They are BOTH wonderful guitars. Wish I had that first one back. I love when the spruce turns golden on top after a few decades. I love that these things are handcrafted works of art, and then, on top of that, produce sounds that soothe the soul. |
#51
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Quote:
Let's suppose Martin did the same with the D-28... would anyone care? I almost think so! It amazes me that so few forum members have mourned the passing of the straight-braced D-18. Choice is a good thing, let's hope that Martin does not give the D-28 the same funeral. But I do realize that it all probably comes down to sales and economics... in the mean time, I'm still playing my plain-Jane D-18. |
#52
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Lol I know the feeling I just bought a 2009 D18 used but basically brand new for a good price and the attitude I feel here is if it's not a new D18 who cares but this guitar sounds and feels absolutley wonderful
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#53
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Quote:
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"I used to try to play fast, and it’s fun for a minute, but I always liked saxophone players. They speak on their instrument, and I always wanted to do that on the guitar, to communicate emotionally. When you write, you wouldn’t just throw words into a bowl. There has to be a beginning, middle and end. Same thing with phrasing on the guitar" Jimmie Vaughan |
#54
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Martin makes all the 28 models because they are different; not good, better, best, they all have their fans.
My favorite when I could play dreads was the HD-28V, some models are more expensive some are less expensive, price does not equal tone and tone preference is personal. The OP asked better or different.........different !~!
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Rich - rmyAddison Rich Macklin Soundclick Website http://www.youtube.com/rmyaddison Martin OM-18 Authentic '33 Adirondack/Mahogany Martin CS OM-28 Alpine/Madagascar Martin CS 00-42 Adirondack/Madagascar Martin OM-45TB (2005) Engelmann/Tasmanian Blackwood (#23 of 29) |
#55
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Quote:
As you said though, there are plenty out there. Martin made the straight braced D-18 from late 1944-2011. My preferences generally tend toward scalloped guitars, but I've got a few old straight braced D-18's that hold their own well enough. What I'd really like to see Martin do is move a few straight braced models toward the lighter tapered bracing of the immediate post-war production. You'd retain the crisp, snappy sound, with just a bit more responsiveness. |
#56
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There's preference and there's suitability. The choice might be better made based on what you play, how you play, and in what context you play. Backing a full bluegrass band? Probably favor HD-28. Playing duets trading lead and rhythm with a mandolin player? Probably favor D-28.
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#57
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Is the Martin HD-28 better or just different compared to the D-28?
Which is better is too subjective to answer. It depends on the player.
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Guitars: 2008 Martin M-38 1978 Hohner HG-320 Original Martin Backpacker Little Martin Lotus Dread (1st guitar) |
#58
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I think maybe you misread what I posted. I was talking about anyone and everyone's opinion on two guitars, not just a single person. Yes, you are right not everyone will agree which is better, and that is OK. That is what I believe I was saying.
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Strummin' and fingerpickin' since 2004 2013 Martin Custom OM-18 2012 Martin 0-28vs 2012 Martin LX1 2012 Telecaster Ltd. Edition Ash Body 2003-ish Takamine Jasmine (first guitar I ever played/learned on) |