Major Jazz Guitar Manufactures (guitars.shtml) | Updated: 25-Aug-2008 - 11:48
Major Manufactures - Companies that push a lot of instruments and have a dealer network. Most have custom shops and off-the-rack guitars for under a $1000 that can get one started playing jazz. Just remember, you usually get what you pay for.
I have included some manufactures that have seven string guitars but that are not archtop guitars. Could be a cheap way to try out a seven string. This is the route that I took for experimenting with 7 string guitar. I've also listed manufactures of guitars that one can still find used. But might not be making new guitars or are out of business.
A web site that lists the Manufacturers' Suggested Retail Price ( MSRP ) for guitars.
Manufactures Listed
Misc Manufactures Guitar Links
- Guitar Links - Miscellaneous guitar links
- Cheesy Guitars
This site is dedicated to vintage instruments made in Europe and Soviet Union during the "communist" years. The first reason we've made this site is that there's no information about these guitars, no pictures and no reviews. But they exist, and they definitely worth checking out.
The following guitar companies all mass produce guitars that are suitable for playing jazz. Some produce laminated archtop entry level guitars and some even have custom shops that spin out carved archtop guitars that rival the custom builders.
Several companies offer models for under one grand that will get you started. Get the best guitar you can afford. It DOES make a difference. Just play one of the higher end models or a custom model and feel and hear the difference. Which can be bad in a way. Then you'll really want one.
Visit a guitar show in your area and look in the local trade rags. In my area their is a local paper call "Tradin' Times" that has a Musician's Grapevine section where you can list instruments and equipment for sale and look for musicians. This is mostly rock oriented guitars for sale, but their are some guitars that are suitable for jazz that show up form time-to-time. Amplifiers and sound equipment are also listed for sale. These type of papers are usually found at your local convenience store. (aka 7-11, Wawa, Turkey Hill. Mini-Mart, etc...)
Also search the web. Their are several sites that list instruments for sale or will search the vintage market for you.
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United States:
Kaman Music Corporation
PO Box 507
Bloomfield, CT 06002-0507
email: info@hamerguitars.com
www.kamanmusic.com
Hamer Canada:
B & J Music Ltd.
2360 Tedlo Street
Mississauga
Ontario, Canada L5A 3V3
email: bjmusic-kmc@kaman.com
Hamer UK:
Soho Soundhouse
114-116 Charing Cross Rd.
London
WC2H 0DT
United Kingdom
020-7379-6766
020-7379-0093
email: info@sohosoundhouse.com
www.sohosoundhouse.com
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(From the Afri-Can website)
The forefather of the tin can guitar was called a Ramkie. This was a
form of long necked plucked lute, which had three, then later four
strings and tuning pegs. This instrument was made and played by tribes
in the Cape region of South Africa during the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries It was not originally a copy of the guitar although in its
later development it acquired certain guitar features, notably a capo
tasta. The earliest description of the Ramkie came from O.F. Mentzel, a
resident of the Cape during the period 1733-41 who witnessed the
Khoikhoi tribe making and playing the instrument. The accounts of early
travellers in the region associate the instrument with the Khoikhoi.
However, a man by the name of Thompson, witnessed a Bushwoman playing a
Ramkie in 1823 at a place Bloem Fonteyn in the Roggeveld, in central
Southern Africa. The kind of music produced on the instrument was
repetitive chord playing, with finger-stopping, which frequently
accompanied dancing. Later specimens acquired tin-can bodies, which
replaced the earlier half gourd and gut-string construction. Today the
Ramkie is obsolete, having been replaced by the western commercial
guitar and “homemade” versions. It is generally accepted by
historians that the South African guitar has been around for much
longer than anyone imagined and predates even the colonial influences.
It is worth noting that this instrument is descended from an original
South African instrument and is not just a homemade copy of the western
guitar, which it has become.


The Joe Pass Emperor II is a great guitar for someone
just getting into jazz guitar. Inexpensive ($699 - $729) and also available in
a left handed model($729). Features include a laminated maple neck and
body; solid rosewood bridge; gold tuners and tailpiece; multiple
bound body, neck.gif)
As a teen living in Nazareth, I became fiercely inspired by meeting many of Martin’s finest craftsmen. My desire to learn how to make guitars became a reality after my introduction to Dick Boak. In the ensuing years Dick and I renovated the “Church of Art” in the center of Nazareth, and we built many unique experimental instruments. In addition to being Dick’s residence, the “Church of Art” was a guitar studio, concert hall and art gallery. It was a great inspiration to me while I was perfecting my craft as a luthier. This is where I constructed my first guitar in the mid ‘70s. Though he doesn’t reside there any more, Dick still owns the “Church,” and I presently teach my archtop design and construction classes there.