Little Guitars (review)

Ashurbanipal

Well-known member
In '08 I went on a research trip for five months, and, like a prize fool, didn't think to invest in some kind of travel guitfiddle to keep the fingers prim and trim, and the soul tranquil. Five months without leaves you quite :boggled:. Determined not to let this happen again, decided to make an appropriate investment. I wanted something that would also give me incentive to play it at home, rather than having it sit packed away when I'm not away.

After some searching I decided to target the Taylor Baby, Martin LX1 and the Mini Maton, so yesterday I went down to the Acoustic Centre (Australian members from Melbourne would know it) and tried out a few things - a Martin LX1, mahogany Taylor Baby, and two Mini Matons (EML and EMS).

The main problem with small guitars is tone and volume vs. size but I was surprised at how generally good they sounded acoustically. However, the Maton has a smaller body than the Taylor and Martin and I think it suffered somewhat from this - the top string sounded a tad thin and the lowest string didn't quite balance with the middle four. However, these guitars come with a pickup and I suppose they're made more for being plugged in (smaller body would help reduce feedback), which I didn't test out because I'm interested in a purely acoustic sound. They are very cute and well made though, so probably a player with different requirements might find them a treat. Good neck feel too.

Switching to the Taylor brought with it a volume lift and a more balanced sound across the strings. Very clean construction (solid mahogany top, neck, laminated back and sides) and not a heavy mahogany visual overload like some of those Martin 15 series guitars, which look quite dark. It was a good player overall but I didn't connect with it, I felt it was somewhat lacking in tone, and the neck was a bit too slim.

Then I went to the Martin and was startled by the midrange and overall warmth of the tone, as well as the intonation - virtually spot on. This thing has a laminate neck, back and sides, and a solid spruce top. Neck is of generous depth with a V-ish profile. I'm mostly a thumb behind the neck player so this suited me fine, though something like a D profile would've been even better. Like the Matons and the Taylor it's satin finished and cleanly put together (except for some slightly rough internal struts), with a fairly low action and no fret buzz. Push it with a plectrum and it gets surprisingly loud; down to DADGAD, more resonance. The tone is kind of similar to a parlour guitar in terms of midrange emphasis, which I liked better than the "smaller guitar = smaller tone" of the others. It also has what look like Martin branded Gotoh tuners, which have a good feel to them.

The good thing about all the guitars that I played is that they come with 12 gauge strings, which helps a good deal, I would imagine. For me, the Martin was the winner and I took it home today. They had another one on the rack today which I also tried out and there wasn't really any difference between them.

So, the Martin, for its size, is quite a toneful little package (comes with a well padded gig bag too). Worth checking out if wanting something for travel or even as a beater with good tone and volume.

Some pics to prove that it happened :).
 
Re: Little Guitars (review)

That really is a laminated neck... I've seen a lot of layers but that is just... wow...

Any idea on how it will hold up? I imagine it's pretty strong.

How do you like it? Any idea as to it's contribution to the overall sound?

Nice score.
 
Re: Little Guitars (review)

i've fooled around on a few of those Martin minis... kind of cool....

i for yeras have been wanting to make a small travel sized electric but with a full sized scale neck... just a smaller body and headstock... maybe the shorter 24 3/4 Gibson style scale.. body made out of light basswood
 
Re: Little Guitars (review)

I think that's why it's laminate, so it can cope with temperature/humidity changes associated with switching between different locales, and keep the cost down. Theoretically it should move very little. If it were to split, I imagine it would be more likely to happen along the joins, which is easier to repair. If you're worried about the solid top, there's also the all laminate LXM, which too seems to have been received quite favourably, but you can't beat a solid top :).

As for the effect on sound, the laminated parts are negligible. The most important determinant of an acoustic's sound is the top. The father of the classical guitar, Antonio de Torres, made a guitar out of papier mache with a solid top to illustrate this point. Even today, a number of high end classical makers use laminates (though not as many as on this Martin) for the back and sides so that the tonally integral sound-board has to do more work, or they make exceptionally thick back and sides.

Given the size of the LX1, this factor has also a considerable effect on the sound too. The day before yesterday when I went just to think and play someone played a Martin DX1 (laminated dreadnought with a solid top) and it sounded pretty good. Ultimately it's about listening to your ears, not your head :).

So I'm very satisfied overall with the full sound, excellent intonation, tuners, bare bones aesthetic. The scale length is 23" so it doesn't feel cramped. Naturally, the bass response is tighter than on a full size guitar, but the midrange response here adds fullness. I've never owned a steel string before so it was important for me to get something that I would have the incentive to play at home.
 
Re: Little Guitars (review)

Glad you like it. I gotta tell you, stuff like this shows me how prejudiced I really am, thanks for showing and explaining and congrats on a good purchase.
 
Re: Little Guitars (review)

No problemo :). Guitar players are an interesting breed of human with respect to their prides, prejudices and predilections. Before I went in to play these small guitars I thought that their tone would be mediocre at best because of the smaller tonal surface area (and I was prepared to go along with it), but was proved wrong!

Folk should also note that spruce generally needs to be played in so its tone develops, that's why sometimes new spruce top guitars sound a bit stiff and lacking in overtones. Worth keeping in mind when trying out spruce topped guitars.
 
Re: Little Guitars (review)

Not just Spruce in general, but most acoustics in general benefit greatly from being played often. My uncle has an all maple Alvarez that he's had for 10 or 15 years that he absolutely hated for the first few years he had it. Now that it's older and broken, it's one of the sweetest sounding acoustics I've heard to date.
 
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