LARRIVÉE PLAYER SURVEY

Started by J M Larrivée, February 21, 2025, 04:14:46 PM

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A Larrivee similiar to Willie Nelson's Martin would be amazing. Sort of a 40 series in nylon?
Larrivee P-03
Larrivee 00-40R Moonwood top
Larrivee LV-09 Moonwood top

Herman,

Thanks for the links.

Ironically, the second guitar is located in a shop right next door to Lay's Guitar Repair in Akron, OH which is about two hours from my house. That guitar was listed 9 months ago and I'm planning a bike ride on the canal trail that runs through Akron when I return from Florida in early April. If it's still there, I'll stop by and check it out.

I do agree that classical guitar building is a specialized niche that major steel string companies have had a hard time cracking into. It's interesting that both Jean Larrivee and Martin got their start building Nylon string guitars and gravitated over to steel strings. Willie Nelson's Trigger notwithstanding, sales of their N-20 classical rosewood model never really took off. Maybe a second soundhole on the top or a relic'd version would appeal to more buyers.

Quote from: B0WIE on March 09, 2025, 04:19:51 PMI suggested a hand-voiced line of guitars. With Larrivee, the sound quality doesn't change a lot between $2k and $5k, you're mostly spending more on cosmetics. A lot of us won't spend on cosmetics but there's a growing market of players now who will pay more for an instrument built in the boutique shop style of hand voiced lutherie (often called "tap tuning").

This is a wonderful idea, and I'm here for it.

Quote from: B0WIE on March 09, 2025, 04:19:51 PMI suggested a hand-voiced line of guitars. With Larrivee, the sound quality doesn't change a lot between $2k and $5k, you're mostly spending more on cosmetics. A lot of us won't spend on cosmetics but there's a growing market of players now who will pay more for an instrument built in the boutique shop style of hand voiced lutherie (often called "tap tuning").

I like this idea. However, I have seen two videos of Larrivee vs Furch instruments and the Larrivee was the clear winner. I know Furch supposedly voices their instruments, but it didn't work in these two videos. I will say I did see a video of a tour of the Furch facility and the only part of the tour they wouldn't allow was the voicing part. Strange!

Quote from: William2 on March 11, 2025, 11:17:05 AMI like this idea. However, I have seen two videos of Larrivee vs Furch instruments and the Larrivee was the clear winner. I know Furch supposedly voices their instruments, but it didn't work in these two videos. I will say I did see a video of a tour of the Furch facility and the only part of the tour they wouldn't allow was the voicing part. Strange!
I don't know what Furch claims or does but voicing a top properly simply optimizes that individual set of woods and compensates for natural variances in wood. The result is a more harmonious response. When strumming big chords, the overtones line up and there's less dissonance. The voice becomes more of a chorus and even single strings gain a reverberant quality as the other strings ring from sympathetic resonance. If a company does it on more budget minded guitars I'd expect budget level results. It's not the most time consuming thing but it does involve paying a master luthier so it doesn't come cheap. I really think that Larrivee makes as nice an instrument as a factory can and that's why I'd love to see them take it to the next level. Larrivee may not feel it's a profitable venture though, so I understand why they wouldn't.

Quote from: B0WIE on March 11, 2025, 05:56:30 PMI don't know what Furch claims or does but voicing a top properly simply optimizes that individual set of woods and compensates for natural variances in wood. The result is a more harmonious response. When strumming big chords, the overtones line up and there's less dissonance. The voice becomes more of a chorus and even single strings gain a reverberant quality as the other strings ring from sympathetic resonance. If a company does it on more budget minded guitars I'd expect budget level results. It's not the most time consuming thing but it does involve paying a master luthier so it doesn't come cheap. I really think that Larrivee makes as nice an instrument as a factory can and that's why I'd love to see them take it to the next level. Larrivee may not feel it's a profitable venture though, so I understand why they wouldn't.

There may be more to this top tuning. The attached video has a Furch take on a Martin HD-28. For me, it wasn't even close, Furch all the way. Furch tunes their instruments and with this model they even tune the back. These are the same two that weren't allowed to see how Furch does their instrument tuning at a factory tour. They are speculating that Furch instead of tap tuning their instruments, they take a top with the braces on and have another to tune the tops enabling them to tune all their instruments where tap tuning would be too time consuming. While I had mentioned that there are to videos out there with Furch vs Larrivee and i thought Larrivee won, On this video it was Furch all the way and not even close.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6v750QW-8ik

Done and Done!

Cheers - SS
Scott Southworth
Larrivee LS-03WL Forum VI Limited
Larrivee OOO-40R Custom
Larrivee OM-03 MT Custom
Larrivee D-10E
Larrivee OO-03MH
Larrivee Baker-T Classic
Taylor 910
Taylor GA-WS
Taylor GA-Custom Shop
Taylor 614CE
Taylor 315CE
Takamine EG523SC
Journey OF660M
Ibanez AW120ECERDV
Guild D25

Seems I am always the slow one to the party.  Just completed your survey.
By the way, I am trying to track down serial number 082706 (neck block shows an "M" and second line is 082706).
the guitar is advertised on FaceBookMarketPlace as Vintage 1979 Larrivee L08 Acoustic Guitar
Not sure where to post this question so starting here.
According to the Larrivee serial number look up that guitar came back as:
Serial Number   Manufacture Date   Model
82706   Sep 13, 2005   LV-03 Mahogany

Wondering where the seller came up with "Vintage 1979..."

Quote from: xsesive on May 05, 2025, 03:06:42 PMSeems I am always the slow one to the party.  Just completed your survey.
By the way, I am trying to track down serial number 082706 (neck block shows an "M" and second line is 082706).
the guitar is advertised on FaceBookMarketPlace as Vintage 1979 Larrivee L08 Acoustic Guitar
Not sure where to post this question so starting here.
Check out the Larrivee guitars main website. They have a serial number look up feature you can use.

Quote from: xsesive on May 05, 2025, 03:06:42 PMI am trying to track down serial number 082706 (neck block shows an "M" and second line is 082706).
the guitar is advertised on FaceBookMarketPlace as Vintage 1979 Larrivee L08 Acoustic Guitar
Not sure where to post this question so starting here.
Use this URL and enter the serial number there.
Use the search bar at the bottom of that page to lookup your guitar's manufacture date. If you would like specs on your guitar view the Product pages by looking up the model number.

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