Chasing Your Grail

Musically, I am still hooked and just hypnotized by the sound of the guitar itself. I mean, a guitar sounds good if you drop it on the floor.”
— Leo Kottke

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One of the things I like the most about guitar is its many facets.  I’m inclined to agree with Kottke—there’s just something magical about every sound a guitar makes. Every guitar design has a purpose in mind, but musicians, being artists soon move beyond those boundaries. As much as its originally intended function is the point of the design exercise, a guitar’s range is not limited purely to its original intent—but rather, the imagination of the player. Jeff Beck has raised the random sounds of an amplified guitar to high art, while Hendrix and Pete Townshend made some glorious noise experimenting with the percussive capabilities of the guitar as well. In the 1980s, Steve Stevens asked me to incorporate a toy ray-gun into the circuitry of one of his guitars in order to expand its vocabulary and Paul Gilbert used a cordless drill to pluck his strings with Racer X. Today, players like Jim Campilongo continue to coax both the classic and the histrionic from their guitars despite what we, as builders, intended in the first place.

Then there is the visual aspect of the guitar, both as an homage to the past and its shock value in the present. Of course, almost every possible variation has been done by now; mirrors, lasers, flamethrowers, flashing lights and so on. I’ve been guilty of partaking in more than my share of sight-gag instruments over the years, but is guitar-building an arms race? I don’t see it that way—just as I don’t think guitar soloing should be an athletic competition where the most notes win the gold.

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So where does this leave us as builders? Should we continue to mimic the designs of the past relying upon innovative players to reapply our creations to new frontiers? Or, should we attempt to break the mold and hope that musicians respond to the challenge?

The Ultimate Hamer Guitars: An Illustrated History

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Jol

Jol Dantzig is a guitar builder, designer, writer and filmmaker. He has worked for Gibson, Fender, Guild, Ovation, Gretsch, and was a founding partner of Hamer guitars—one of the first boutique custom guitar brands. Dantzig’s work has been played by hundreds of artists including Sting, Steve Stevens, Larry Coreyell, Dug Pinnick, Billy Gibbons, Keb Mo’, Nick Lowe, KK Downing, Glenn Tipton, John Abercrombie, Glen Campbell, Rick Nielsen, Kenny Vaughan, Lita Ford, James Honeyman Scott, Elliott Easton, Andy Summers, Peter Frampton, Martin Barre, Lyle Workman, Brad Gillis, George Harrison, Jeff Ament, Dweezil Zappa, Jeff Tweedy, Nancy Wilson—and many others.

4 thoughts on “Chasing Your Grail”

  1. I vote for some of both! Push the boundaries on innovation and encourage new artists to rise into a new form of artistry. But also make some guitars to push the boundaries of filling the existing mold with the best instruments that are available in order to give other artists the joy of innovating with the best.
    The bottom line: You’ve raised an important and interesting question, but I don’t think you should have to choose. You just have to be willing to make more than one guitar.

  2. I’m sure that whatever you do, it will be worthy of our admiration. There has been almost zero interest in modernizing the guitar, synth-guitars are a joke and weirdo body shapes are a cliche for the drop tuned angry haters. Keep it classic but with your flair for the details we love. Just don’t make another copy Les Paul guitar, the world doesn’t need another one of those unimaginative clones!

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