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Join the cigar-box guitar community! Be a maker! It's not difficult, nor costly.it used to be a common thing back in the day of WOOD cigar boxes to use them for both making ship models and something called CIGAR BOX BANJOS for the kiddies to play on.
A few other factors intrude. Bracing. Finish. Shape of body and soundhole(s). Neck and string materials. Electrification -- that's a whole 'nother subject itself. And resonators...for an actual instrument, the TYPE of wood is what matters. then the quality of the wood, then the thickness.
I remember reading that one theory about Stradivarius is that he used reclaimed wood for his violins. The wood had been floated down a river but sank before it got to where it was supposed to go (for building fortifications, I think). When the wood was recovered and dried out, it resulted in better tone.
Last I read, Strads were of wood grown during a Little Ice Age, with close and dense grain. But I also read that top concert pros can't distinguish a Strad from a good modern fiddle. And that great Joshua Bell played a Strad on a subway for 45 minutes and only made US$38. Go figure.I remember reading that one theory about Stradivarius is that he used reclaimed wood for his violins. The wood had been floated down a river but sank before it got to where it was supposed to go (for building fortifications, I think). When the wood was recovered and dried out, it resulted in better tone.
Last I read, Strads were of wood grown during a Little Ice Age, with close and dense grain. But I also read that top concert pros can't distinguish a Strad from a good modern fiddle. And that great Joshua Bell played a Strad on a subway for 45 minutes and only made US$38. Go figure.
I'll admit to craving something like a viola d'amore, which has frets and guitar tuning, and sympathetic strings resonating inside. I've built hollow fretboards in mountain dulcimers; fitting sympathetic strings in there ain't no big thang. I just need to make space in the workshop and get at it: 'ukulele d'amore, right.
Actually that's 'ukulele d'amore, pronounced OOH-koo-LAY-lay da-MOH-ray, with a glottal stop up front. I'd be playing Bach, blues, Beatles, and bossa nova on it. I've dreamt of a mandola d'amore -- then I'd wail on surf and Celtic music. And a little swing.A ‘ukulele d’amore’!! I’d want to hear that sound. Playing Purcell fantasias and Dido’s Lament... *swoons*
I've been a busker with guitar. Bell made more than I ever did. But he rehearsed.