What guitar does Milos play?

A little piece today on the weapon of choice of the marvelous Milos.

Soundhole and rosette of a Greg Smallman guitar
Soundhole and rosette of a Greg Smallman guitar (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This axe that the Montenegrin sensation wields on his two recordings to date and countless concert dates is none other than a 2007 Greg Smallman.

An excellent choice of instrument with a serious pedigree of fine players also wielding the mighty Smallman. Apparently this is not his guitar, however, with this instrument being lent to him by a couple of kind benefactors (Paul and Jenny Gillham). Perhaps a seemingly strange arrangement, but something that is reasonably common to a fashion with violinists*– who can afford a Guarneri del Gesu or a Stradivarius?! (* That, or they have them on a ridiculous hire-purchase kind of arrangement which means they can never really afford them unless they make serious money as the instruments appreciate in value far more than the musician can ever pay it back.)

OK, so the Smallman isn’t quite in the price league of an 18th century Cremonan violin, but when you consider you need to part with the best part of AUD$30,000 (roughly US$30,500) to have one of these fine instruments in your possession, that and Milos in the early days of his career, the arrangement is actually a pretty good deal for the musician. Although the way Milos is tracking at the moment, I have no doubt he’ll be able to afford one of his very own in no time at all!

Here the man himself playing Recuerdos de la Alhambra on the 2007 Smallman:

Who else plays a Smallman?

A number of well-renowned players also play Smallman guitars, including John Williams, Carlos Bonell, Xuefei Yang, Stepan Rak, Timothy Kain, Ben Verderey, David Tannenbaum and Thibault Cauvin to name but a few.

So who is Greg Smallman?

Greg Smallman is arguably one of the most well-respected and pioneering of the Australian guitar builders. Greg started building guitars back in the early 1970s, following a traditional Fleta model. At that time Australian musicians, instruments, instrument makers and their ilk were largely unknown to the wider world, and frankly not greatly well-respected.

To combat this Greg Smallman realised, much to our benefit, that he’d have to do something a little different with his guitars. So in 1980 Greg developed his now famous balsa and carbon fibre lattice bracing system with a paper-thin soundboard. These guitars have an incredible volume, whilst maintaining clarity of tone – as we can tell from Milos’ recordings.

We can also tell this from the recordings of one of Greg Smallman’s early customers and collaborators in developing his designs – another great Australian, John Williams.

John Williams playing his Smallman in 2005
John Williams playing his Smallman in 2005 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Greg Smallman’s development of the lattice braced system, and undoubtedly the patronage of John Williams, created a springboard for phenomenal growth in Australian guitar-building.

One of the most recognizable features of Greg Smallman guitars (or Smallman and Sons Damon and Kym, to give the guitars their full and correct label title) is an armrest in the form of a small strip of wood on the bass side of the guitar. This prevents the guitarist’s arm stopping the vibrations moving through soundboard and so getting maximum response from the instrument.

How are these guitars built?

I’m not going to try to explain the full technical details of the guitars here, but check out this video to take a look inside a Smallman guitar: 

And check out Damian Lodge, another Australian builder, give a bit of a run-down on lattice braced guitar construction: 

References:

http://www.guitarcentre.com.au/smallman.html

http://www.guitarteacher.com.au/johnwilliams.html

Are you ready to listen and practice? Oh and then play in an ensemble?

The Guitar Player (c. 1672), by Johannes Verme...
The Guitar Player (c. 1672), by Johannes Vermeer, guitar Voboam (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Well, we’ve been a month on this lovely WordPress-hosted site now, seven months-ish of the blog and a good time is being had by all – including yourselves I hope dear readers!

So I think it’s time add to add in a new little feature that may interest you, and possibly help the time-stretched (most of us!).

From today I’m also going to post up audio files/podcasts of my postings. Woop! Woop!

The aim of this is to offer another avenue for you to explore the blog – and now you can listen to me witter on with my guitar-inflected pearls of wisdom when you’re on the tram or driving to work (but not cycling to work, because that’s naughty to have headphones in whilst doing that isn’t it?).

Initially these will be some of my back catalogue of posts, so this may interest some of you newer readers and followers. But then again it may also interest some of you who have read for a while and want to revisit and recap on some of my earlier musings. I’m thinking there may be some audio-only content coming up in the near future too. If you’ve any thoughts on that please let me know.

I’ll embed these into coming posts, but I’ll also created a dedicated page for these to live on permanently so you can access them super easily whenever you want. Keep your eyes peeled for that coming up shortly.

Anyway, here’s the first one for you: How do you practice when you can’t practice?

You can also stream this and download directly from SoundCloud:  http://soundcloud.com/nicole-rogers/how-do-you-practice-when-you

Ooh and before I forget I’m also working on some video content for the near future. Oooh…… [tanglible anticipation ensues].

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On a completely different note now, and harking back to one of my pet topics for the moment – ensemble playing…

Reading Carlos Bonell’s blog again recently he talks about the benefits of ensemble playing. One quote stood out in particular for me and I just wanted to share that with you:

To achieve great things in playing music with others requires more than loads of practise and rehearsing together: it needs a meeting of minds and such familiarity that one player can anticipate another’s next move intuitively. For the musicians who enjoy this feeling it is a wonderful experience. To reach it is the wish of all who participate, with the pleasure of working towards it almost as intense as its realisation.

This is so true, and it is extremely difficult to surpass the feeling of playing music with others. There’s a little magical feeling that can’t help but leave a big cheesy grin on your face when you know you’ve hit “the groove”, you’re all in the zone together. Ooh. Magical… Brrr. If you get the chance to give it a whirl, grab it with both hands!

You can read all of Carlos’ great insights here: http://queenguitarrhapsodies.com/blog/?p=1313