No financial stake—I didn't even know Martin made archtop tenors—but this looked interesting: http://www.ebay.com/itm/1935-Martin-...UAAOSwdzVXr3IQ
No financial stake—I didn't even know Martin made archtop tenors—but this looked interesting: http://www.ebay.com/itm/1935-Martin-...UAAOSwdzVXr3IQ
I know they made archtop guitars mainly because so many of them have been converted to flattops. I don't recall seeing one of their archtop tenors. Pretty cool.
"It's comparable to playing a cheese slicer."
--M. Stillion
"Bargain instruments are no bargains if you can't play them"
--J. Garber
Just noticed that this sold at its lowest bid price. Anybody in these parts snag it?
That is an R-18T. The tops were not carved until 1937, they were steam-bent before that. According to my Carter book, they made 133 of these from 1934-41. There were also tenor and plectrum versions of the C style archtops as well. Those had carved tops from the beginning.
It looks like it has been through the mill with lots of cracks (repaired?) over the years. It could be a nice sounding one in any case.
Some online info here: tenorguitar.com/martin
Jim
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19th Century Tunes
Playing lately:
1924 Gibson A4 - 2018 Campanella A-5 - 2007 Brentrup A4C - 1915 Frank Merwin Ashley violin - Huss & Dalton DS - 1923 Gibson A2 black snakehead - '83 Flatiron A5-2 - 1939 Gibson L-00 - 1936 Epiphone Deluxe - 1928 Gibson L-5 - ca. 1890s Fairbanks Senator Banjo - ca. 1923 Vega Style M tenor banjo - ca. 1920 Weymann Style 25 Mandolin-Banjo - National RM-1
great link jim. you are font of info.
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