Friday, July 4, 2025

My New Guitar

 

In the early 1970’s Richard Brune, master Luthier and my longtime friend, made me a cedar top classical guitar. My situation was a little difficult, since I play left-handed. I had been wanting a new guitar for some time and Richard had been more than kind to give me guitars to take home and try out. Of course this meant restringing these guitars left-handed. I took home various guitars, even some valuable ones like a Fleta and a Hauser!

None were quite right for me, mainly because they were built and set up for a right-handed player and so the feel wasn’t always quite right nor the intonation. At some point Richard said to me, “I think I can make you the guitar you want.”

Richard made me that guitar—a Fleta inspired cedar-top guitar with Indian rosewood back and sides and a beautiful sound hole rosette of roses. Then, in 2017, Richard made me another guitar, this time with a Spruce top. Both guitars sound beautiful, really world class and concert worthy, and both guitars play beautifully and perfectly in tune. I can’t stress enough how difficult it is to make a concert level instrument, let alone a left-handed one when 99% of the guitars you make are right-handed. I’ve played other guitars that have been converted to left-handed, and they just have never played or sounded right. Richard not only has great knowledge, but he also has an inherent instinct and a feel for his work that cannot be taught or adequately explained.

More recently, in January of 2025, I began a conversation with Richard about a new guitar, another cedar -top guitar, with Brazilian rosewood back and sides, and a shorter scale length than my other guitars. Work then began on that guitar, but only after taking some very precise measurements of my other classical guitars—the two that Richard had made and my traveling guitar, a shorter scale converted Players model guitar from Kenny Hill. Measurements were taken of the scale, the distance between the strings, the width of the strings at both the nut and the bridge, the height of the strings at the 12th fret, and depth of the sounding box of the guitars.

Richard had me do this with a card and a pencil, tracing and drawing on the card rather than writing down measurements. He said this would be more accurate. When I finished doing this with each of the three guitars, I mailed him the cards. Actually, I sent him the cards twice, the first cards arrived after he received the second set, apparently, the first mailing had been lost or delayed for a while. After Richard received the cards, he emailed me the following:

“I had extrapolated between the original 3 different action sets and arrived at a neutral action setting of 3mm for the first and 4 mm for the 6th. The one that just arrived measured at precisely those numbers, and the spacings likewise agreed. The second set you sent was much clearer and more precise. I’ve got them all together with the notes I took, so everything is now well defined.”

Just a reminder, mm means millimeter, a very small measurement indeed equal to 0.0394 of an inch.

We finally decided on a scale length 25 1/2” which works out to 647mm with compensation. Richard told me that it’s the same scale as used by Antonio Torres and Hermann Hauser Sr on some of their guitars. In the 19th century Spanish makers were still using English inches and Hauser was copying them.

So, work began on the new guitar, and I asked Richard, in a pretty offhand manner, if he would send me an occasional picture of the guitar in progress. What he did far exceeded anything I could have imagined, not only some very detailed photos, but descriptions and explanations that left me with a whole new level of appreciation for master luthiers and the guitars they produce.

A group of wood pieces on a blue matA wooden guitar with a hole

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 

The next pictures show the process of bending the wood for the sides of the guitar.

Everyone is fascinated by the concept of the sides being bent. I do this over an oval section of sailboat Spinnaker pole heated with a blow torch. If you look at the time stamp on photo 1 vs photo 2 you will see this takes me about 7 minutes/side, and a similar amount of time to bend the 4 purfling strips which will go around the 4 outside corners of the complete body. After 800 or so guitars I’ve gotten the process down pretty well in my hands. The bent sides fit the mold without gaps or forcing. I have no idea how hot that pipe gets, but it’s hot enough to allow the wood to form without cracking or scorching. I’ve been using this system since day 1, 1966.” – R.B.

A wood and metal object on a table

AI-generated content may be incorrect. A wooden strips on a table

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A curved wooden strips on a white surface

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

The back is a complex subtle dome in both directions with 6 brace end mortises to be cut into the interior linings. It is completely hand fitted in all dimensions to produce the uniform arch both across and along the back. Gluing with hide glue has to happen very quickly while the glue is still warm and liquid, so everything is pre prepped, clamps arranged and phones taken off the hook before embarking. The clamping happens in less than 60 seconds, the prior prep work and fitting take nearly a day. After it dries overnight the overhang gets trimmed off.

The pre-bent purflings and inlays are glued into the grooves around all 4 corners using a special very strong masking tape to clamp them while the hide glue sets. After a full day of drying the purflings are scraped and sanded to the top sides and back and the body receives the initial clean up sanding. While it’s drying I will carve the neck.” – R.B.

A woodworking tool on a stand

AI-generated content may be incorrect.A guitar shaped object with yellow tape around it

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 

    

 I knew at this point we were getting close, and I was getting more and more excited. Close, but still some very important work left to do, especially the carving of the neck, for if the feel of the neck is not right, the musician will never be comfortable with the instrument—and remember, because I play left-handed, the luthier can’t really feel the neck in the way he would for a right-handed player.

Richard continued to update me.

The French polish is completed so now the bridge is place precisely in it correct position (measure 10 times, cut once…) and scored very carefully around all 4 sides. The French polish is scraped and chiseled away to the bare wood underneath and the bridge glue surface is given a final scraping to energize the surface before gluing with strong hot hide glue and 3 clamps.  After several days the bone nut and saddle will be fitted, and the instrument will be strung and left to settle to tension before final adjustments.” – R.B.

A close up of a guitar

AI-generated content may be incorrect. A guitar on a stand

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 

The guitar arrived soon after that. I couldn’t wait to tune it up and play it!

A guitar on a stand

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 Right out of the box, it looked, felt, and sounded great. The shorter scale was just perfect, the set up was world class. The guitar had everything, balance, sustain, intonation, and the sound was unique, different than any of my other Brune guitars.

I have been playing the guitar every day, exposing it to all of my repertoire, from Bach and Scarlatti, Albéniz, to Villa Lobos, and Toru Takemitsu. With each piece, over multiple playing, I have heard new things, realized new possibilities, and, for me, what tells me the most about an instrument, is that it makes me dream and want to hear it more and more.

In the weeks since, I have noticed slight changes. Everything that was there in the beginning has become even more so, especially regarding the strength of its harmonics and fullness of its ponticello. In short, I’m discovering something new every time I play my new instrument.

And finally, as a result of Richard’s photos and explanations, I now look and listen to every new guitar in a different way, with more appreciation for the knowledge, intuition, talent and most especially love that goes into creating a world-class concert guitar.