The
Guitars That Inspired Mama Bear's
AGE™ Algorithms
In the order they appear on Mama Bear’s Target Instrument control, below are the 16 "virtual acoustic guitars" you get with a Mama Bear. Click on any title to open and view detailed instrument descriptions, reclick or click on another title to close. The last selection details the meticulous recording process that went into gathering these samples for use in the algorithms.
In the order they appear on Mama Bear’s Target Instrument control, below are the 16 "virtual acoustic guitars" you get with a Mama Bear. Click on any title to open and view detailed instrument descriptions, reclick or click on another title to close. The last selection details the meticulous recording process that went into gathering these samples for use in the algorithms.
1) Parlor
Lowell Levinger’s pre-Civil War Martin
“lady’s size” guitar with
Brazilian rosewood back and sides, spruce top,
and Spanish cedar neck. The problem with this
guitar is that it sounded almost too big! We
really had to work to record this guitar to
sound like a parlor guitar. The instrument is
unbelievably light, and incredibly responsive.
This is the one that hangs on the wall by
Lowell’s bed and has for over 25 years.
2) Small Body Fingerstyle
This guitar is a Martin 5-21-T tenor guitar and
dates from 1933. The size 5 still used today
occasionally for Martin sized six strings. For
some reason, Martin made a lot of them in 1933
with practically none of this model before or
after. It, too, has Brazilian rosewood back and
sides, an Adirondack spruce top, and a mahogany
neck with ebony fingerboard. This is from what
is acknowledged to be the “Golden
Era” of C.F. Martin Guitars. This guitar
is owned by Jessica Turner, and came from famed
ukulele collector Chuck Fayne.
3) Small Body Blues
Late 1920s and early 1930s Gibson small bodied
steel strings fall into the “L”
model prefix designations, as confusing at that
might be, since the “L” designation
had previously been used for archtops like the
L-4 and L-5. One of the fascinating things
about Gibson is their historical utter lack of
consistency in either model numbers or
specifications for model numbers. Just when you
think you know vintage Gibson guitars, along
comes the exception to the rule: and that is
the rule
The Kalamazoo-based company cranked out thousands of these simple little guitars, many of which found their way into the hands of bluesmen such as Robert Johnson. The ladder braced top produces a sound that already sounds like a 78 rpm record, so if you’re after an old country blues sound, this is it. The one we recorded is an L-00 from around 1932 and is the 12 fret version.
The Kalamazoo-based company cranked out thousands of these simple little guitars, many of which found their way into the hands of bluesmen such as Robert Johnson. The ladder braced top produces a sound that already sounds like a 78 rpm record, so if you’re after an old country blues sound, this is it. The one we recorded is an L-00 from around 1932 and is the 12 fret version.
4) Mahogany Orchestra Model
Martin OMs are considered by many to be the
ultimate fingerstyle model guitars with
instruments of this style from the 1930s going
for tens of thousands of dollars. The OM was
the first 14 fret-to-the-body guitar made by
Martin, and the originals were only made from
1930 to 1933, being replaced in 1934 by the
reissue of the dreadnought OMs are renowned for
their power and great balance between treble
and bass along with superb note definition. If
there is a steel string “classical
guitar” then this is it.
In recent years there has been a tremendous resurgence of interest in 14-fret long scale OMs, including several artist models. Guitarist Laurence Juber worked with C. F. Martin Vice President Dick Boak and the Martin Custom shop to design a modern cutaway OM with an Adirondack spruce top and mahogany back and sides; this model is the OM-18-LJ and ours was recorded at LJs studio with a pair of Schoeps CMC-5s with Mark IV capsules. The dry tone and full response comes through beautifully in this setting.
In recent years there has been a tremendous resurgence of interest in 14-fret long scale OMs, including several artist models. Guitarist Laurence Juber worked with C. F. Martin Vice President Dick Boak and the Martin Custom shop to design a modern cutaway OM with an Adirondack spruce top and mahogany back and sides; this model is the OM-18-LJ and ours was recorded at LJs studio with a pair of Schoeps CMC-5s with Mark IV capsules. The dry tone and full response comes through beautifully in this setting.
5) Rosewood Orchestra Model
See above for OM background. This is another
Laurence Juber model, but it’s the
OM-28-LJ featuring Adirondack spruce top and
Brazilian rosewood back and sides. Just as with
the difference between D-18 and D-28, the sound
is a taste more lush and reverberant than from
it’s mahogany brother.
6) Boutique Fingerstyle
When you’ve got a Claxton, a McAlister,
and a Traugott all in the same room, you have
an embarrassment of riches from three of the
top steel string small shop builders working
today. All three have at one time or another
done work for Santa Cruz Guitars, and they have
continued on in the Monterrey Bay area. The
final choice was to use the Traugott guitar
model as it translated best into a model that
really exemplifies what is great about hand
made guitars. Interestingly, this algorithm was
used by classical guitarist Mesut Ozgen when
premiering a new composition by Yale Guitar
Department head Benjamin Verdery. Ozgen used a
D-TAR Timber-Line pickup with a second custom
pickup we made that went under the string nut
of his Gil Carnal lattice braced classical
guitar through a Solstice blender/mixer and
Mama Bear. The sound was magnificent, and
showed that nylon strings played through a
model of a steel string guitar body can work in
unexpected ways.
7) Slope Shouldered Dreadnought
The J-45 and J-50 series of Gibsons are among
the great enduring models much sought after by
fingerstyle blues players. Our recording was of
a 1944 “banner peghead” model that
features a gold decal scroll on the peghead
saying “Only a Gibson is Good
Enough.” A similar instrument was Buddy
Holly’s favorite song writing guitar, and
D-TAR engineer Rick Turner got to restore that
guitar to playing condition in 1989 for
actor/singer Gary Busey who bought
Holly’s leather covered guitar for
$250,000. That particular instrument had the
odd distinction of having a J-45 neck on an SJ
decorated body, a war time artifact from when
Gibson was just putting together anything they
could ship and not worrying at all about
sticking to specifications.
8) Grand Auditorium
This size guitar is just under modern jumbo
specs, and is equally useful for a strummer or
fingerstyle player. We chose Laurence
Juber’s custom Taylor Grand Auditorium
with mahogany back and sides and cedar top.
This is one of the finest Taylors we’ve
encountered with a big, yet clear tone and
power to spare. A great guitar from the leader
of the resurgence of factory made modern guitar
quality in the US.
9) Slope Shouldered Jumbo
In the mid-1930s, Gibson quickly responded to
Martin’s reintroduction of the
Dreadnought models by doing their own take on
the shape, altering the upper bout slightly and
rounding off the slopes of the shoulders. One
of the most successful of the early Slope
models was the Roy Smeck Stage Deluxe,
originally made as a Hawaiian lap style guitar.
Many of these have been subsequently modified
for “Spanish style” playing, and
the guitar we chose was a 1936 Smeck with
spruce top and mahogany back and sides. This
shape would now be called a slope shouldered
dreadnought, but this is basically a very deep
bodied version of what would become the Gibson
SJ "Southern Jumbo."
10) Mahogany Dreadnought
The Martin D-18 gets it’s own particular
spice from the use of Honduras mahogany for
back and sides. This gives a more immediate
attack and a bit of a drier sound to the
guitars. A great example of this was Clarence
White’s choice of using a D-28 for
chordal and bass run backup with the Kentucky
Colonels, but when it was time for him to play
his incredible leads based on traditional
fiddle tunes, he went over to a D-18 as the
fast 16th note passages were cleaner coming
from the D-18. Our example is a 1944 model from
Lowell Levinger. It's beat up in the most
beautiful way imaginable; you just know it's
got thousands of hours of music in it.
11) Rosewood Dreadnought
When it rains it pours… We were able to
record two 1934 Martin Herringbone D-28s from
the Levinger collection and a 1940 "bone" from
Alan Kozlowski. 1934 was the first year these
Bluegrass cannons were made and they featured
bar frets in their ebony fingerboards. The
Brazilian rosewood from this time period is as
good as ever was built into a guitar, and the
tops were medium grained Adirondack
“Red” spruce, a top wood that can
now cost more than these guitars cost when they
were new. With price tags often well in excess
of $50,000, the “Pre-War
Herringbone” has become one of the most
sought after guitars ever made, and we got to
build our digital version from a choice of
three!
12) Super Jumbo
The King of Kings of jumbo guitars: and the
King played one! We got to record a couple of
mid-1960s Gibson J-200s, but the one that
really worked for this project was a relatively
recent Bozeman-made model owned by an employee
of Seymour Duncan. Here’s the human
interest part of the story: we had to get the
guitar out of pawn in order to record it. Sound
familiar? This is a story, versions of which go
way back in the history of recorded music, is a
classic folk tale, and they happen even now.
13) Hollow Body Archtop Jazz
Once again, we were blessed with the difficult
choice of choosing from several outstanding
acoustic archtops. After recording a 1924,
first year if issue Lloyd Loar signed Gibson
L-5 and a 1947 L-7, our winner was a 1928 block
inlay “baby body” Gibson L5 similar
to the one made famous by Mother Maybelle
Carter.
14) Gypsy Jazz
Maurice DuPont emerged in France as part of the
revival of the gypsy jazz guitar movement
making guitars in the style of the Selmer
Macaferri designed instruments made famous by
Django Reinhardt. Paul Hostetter kindly allowed
us to record his DuPont “Petit Bouche," a
faithful reproduction of the small oval
soundhole version of the Selmer. This was the
model favored by Django for lead work. These
guitars are explosive, have little sustain, and
have all their power in a cutting midrange.
They definitely require a particular touch to
sound right, but our modeled Gypsy Jazz sound
will take you right back to 1938 Paris if you
play with it right.
15) Biscuit Blues Resonator
The Dopyera Brothers, founders of National
realized that the Tricone resonator guitar,
introduced in 1926-27 was and would always be a
high-end instrument with it’s three cones
and relatively complicated structure. Hence the
development of several single cone model
guitars, which started coming out in 1928: the
Style O, Duolian, and Triolian. These were even
louder, ruder, and brasher-sounding instruments
than the sophisticated and warm Tricones, and
these were the guitar for blues and bottle neck
for the bluesmen of the South who wanted to be
heard on the street and in the bars, and to
this day, you can’t hear one of these
instruments without feeling in your pocket for
a slide.
This guitar is from the Alan Kozlowski collection, and recording is proved quite a challenge. It, like many old resonator guitars is just full of rattles and buzzes, and even live it sounds like a 78 rpm record played on a vintage juke box with a blown loudspeaker. Thanks to Alan and his great studio, we were able to deal with all the extraneous noises and perhaps they even have added to the authenticity of this patch on Mama Bear.
See below for the predecessor instrument.
This guitar is from the Alan Kozlowski collection, and recording is proved quite a challenge. It, like many old resonator guitars is just full of rattles and buzzes, and even live it sounds like a 78 rpm record played on a vintage juke box with a blown loudspeaker. Thanks to Alan and his great studio, we were able to deal with all the extraneous noises and perhaps they even have added to the authenticity of this patch on Mama Bear.
See below for the predecessor instrument.
16) Tricone Resonator
The National TriCone was the first of the
“resophonic” instruments made by
the Dopyera brothers back in 1926. This was
years before anyone went electric, and these
instruments were acoustically loud, loud, loud!
Many were made as hollow necked Hawaiian slide
instruments with a shape liberally borrowed
from Herman Weissenborn’s wood bodied
instruments; but some were made as
“Spanish” round necked guitars.
This was the instrument chosen by Django
Reinhardt’s friend and rival Oscar
Aleman, considered by many to be as good as
Django himself. There is a sad story of Aleman
returning to his native Argentina during the
Second World War, leaving German occupied
France. Aleman’s two National Tricone
guitars were seized by German authorities
because they were made of “strategic
materials”: aluminum and brass or nickel
silver.
Our model is derived from a 1929 Tricone that is owned and was recorded by Alan Kozlowski using a pair of Shoeps tube 221 mics, some of the most incredible mics we’ve ever heard.
Our model is derived from a 1929 Tricone that is owned and was recorded by Alan Kozlowski using a pair of Shoeps tube 221 mics, some of the most incredible mics we’ve ever heard.
*** The Recording Process & Acknowledgements
The recording process was split up into about
seven recording sessions spaced out over a year
and a half. Much of the process was in learning
about the right choice of mics and mic
positioning to best capture the true essence of
each instrument. Often enough, that meant not
using the most common mic techniques, but
rather working to really bring out the
character inherent in each instrument. We
recorded at Bear Creek Studio in Santa Cruz
with Justin Mayer, Owl Mountain Studio in
Inverness, CA, with Ethan Turner (yes, son of
D-TAR co-founder Rick), On the Path in Santa
Monica, CA, with Alan Kozlowski, Laurence
Juber’s home studio in Burbank, and at
the Seymour Duncan sound room in Santa Barbara.
Most of the time we used pairs of Schoeps small
diaphragm condenser mics, recording in stereo
direct to digital media.
Acknowledgements
In choosing the guitars to represent in Mama Bear, we were very fortunate to have the help of some very talented luthiers, guitar collectors, and recording engineers. Our aim was to record a broad spectrum of instruments that would cover a range of body sizes and different wood combinations as well as including some specialty instruments such as resophonic guitars and a gypsy jazz model. Our thanks go out to Ed Claxton, Roy McAlister, and Jeff Traugott who allowed us to record top of the line modern luthier-made guitars, Paul Hostetter, owner of a great Dupont “Django-style” gypsy jazz guitar, Alan Kozlowski, who gave us unlimited access not only to his great guitar collection, but also recorded them in his studio using some incredible Schoeps tube mics, and to Lowell (aka Banana) Levinger, vintage instrument dealer and collector and ex of The Youngbloods, who provided us with some of the rarest flattops and archtops in the world.
source: www.d-tar.com
Acknowledgements
In choosing the guitars to represent in Mama Bear, we were very fortunate to have the help of some very talented luthiers, guitar collectors, and recording engineers. Our aim was to record a broad spectrum of instruments that would cover a range of body sizes and different wood combinations as well as including some specialty instruments such as resophonic guitars and a gypsy jazz model. Our thanks go out to Ed Claxton, Roy McAlister, and Jeff Traugott who allowed us to record top of the line modern luthier-made guitars, Paul Hostetter, owner of a great Dupont “Django-style” gypsy jazz guitar, Alan Kozlowski, who gave us unlimited access not only to his great guitar collection, but also recorded them in his studio using some incredible Schoeps tube mics, and to Lowell (aka Banana) Levinger, vintage instrument dealer and collector and ex of The Youngbloods, who provided us with some of the rarest flattops and archtops in the world.
source: www.d-tar.com