Gibson Acoustic Guitars

Started by William2, Today at 11:10:00 AM

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I was wondering if anyone on this site has played or owns a Gibson acoustic guitar. I never really considered Gibson due to the quality and comments like " they are great guitars if you can find a good one" that I've seen on AGF LOL!!! And the binding issues of Martin have made me dismiss them also. But I have to say the new Gibson Century series has made me take notice. I love the satin finish, the case, and a short scale at a great price. Anyone have thoughts on Gibson and are these AGF true?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmD2IXGaPPs
Larrivee D-40R
Larrivee SD-40R
Larrivee D-40
Larrivee D-03R
Eastman E-20DL-TC (2026)

I think that their transition from Kalamazoo to Nashville in the mid '70s was not a particularly easy move for them. Several of the old timers stayed in Michigan and started up the Heritage Guitar Company in the original Gibson factory facilities building electric archtops utilizing much of the old Gibson shop equipment.
Gibson struggled financially after the move.
Then in the mid '80s Henry Juszkiewicz sat in the CEO chair. He was an extremely unpopular CEO and faced widespread criticism for trying to pivot Gibson into a "music lifestyle" consumer electronics company, alienating core guitar purists and facing backlash from both fans and dealers. Prices went up and quality went the other way.
Only one Gibson guitar (1960 LG0) ever had a home here at my place and I was never able to get a good sound from it. No sustain, low volume. Nothing. We parted ways before too long.
Lots of country musicians favor Gibson acoustics, and justified or not, I do make that association with their guitars. Maybe it's the Nashville connection; I don't know. Although as I understand it, all of the acoustic guitars are built in Bozeman, Montana now.

I can't speak to the quality today, since it has been too long since I've played one.

 If I were to buy a factory guitar that wasn't a Larrivee, it would be a Gibson and it isn't even close. They have a sweetness to the sound that calls back to so many old recordings. IMO, the "good one" conversations online are largely one of those things that people like to parrot (and AGF is 90% parroting if I may be so rude). I remember, in the early days of the internet, you'd rarely see that. But, it just grew over time, despite Gibsons actually becoming better in recent years. Yes, they absolutely did have times of QC issues, just as Fender did. They also used some really goofy bridge and bracing designs in the distant past. But, the "good one" concept as a whole is largely overblown in terms of modern US-production guitars. If I waked into a GC and played a J45, as I've done many times, its' probably going to be a great instrument.

 There's just something that Gibson does really well with their instruments that sounds "like music". Again, I think it's the familiarity because we've heard those sounds on so many recordings, be it a J45, a LesPaul, etc. I own 1 acoustic that I inherited, and one LP that I was gifted so I'm not really a Gibson fanboy, but I do respect they make really good sounding instruments.

When I think of Gibson Guitars, the Les Paul electric models are the first thing that comes to mind. On the acoustic side, jumbos, 00s and Gordon Lightfoot's iconic B-45 sunburst 12 string are the ones I think about. I've seen ads for the Century series but have not played one yet but I'd like to give one a try. The problem is I don't have anything I want to sell or trade and my guitar room is getting filled up.

On the Martin front, I played a 000-17 w/mahogany top, back and sides two months ago that was really good and I saw one listed yesterday for $2,150 online at Alamo Music Center. As nice as this guitar was, it wasn't better than my Larrivee all mahogany 00-24 that I got in 2024. The rosewood radial rosette and purfling coupled with the vine headstock inlay on the 24 series has to be seen in person to be fully appreciated. Under the hood, Larrivee also uses Moonwood Spruce for the bracing on the 24 series. 

On the subject of binding and in the interest of full disclosure, the binding was starting to lift in three places at the waist of my 2015 Martin Custom Shop 000 12 fret. I called the authorized Martin Repair Shop that I use, provided them with documentation proving that I am the original owner and the repair was fully covered under the lifetime warranty without question. I like this guitar so much that I would have paid for the repair out of pocket.

The only problem I've ever had with any of my Larrivees in the past 22 years was a defective tuning gear about two years ago on my 2004 Parlor that I replaced immediately.

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