If you’re not in a great hurry to
make a living, you can do some
wonderfully creative work.
In this country, the culture
of the modern guitar really
started to come into its own
with the folk music movement
of the ’60s. In fact, that’s when
I began my own love affair
with the guitar. Many of us
who grew up with Peter, Paul,
and Mary, the Kingston Trio,
the Beatles, and so many other
exciting musicians of those
days, went out and bought guitars
in an effort to emulate our
musical heroes. This was also
about the time when American
lutherie—the making of guitars
by individual craftsmen rather
than in factories—got its start.
It was a time of great musical
ferment, optimism, and for
many, the beginning of a love
affair with this particular musical
instrument.
Then, for most of us, life got
in the way of that love affair.
We were overtaken by jobs,
marriages, children, mortgages,
careers, and all the rest. Though
that early love affair with the
guitar may have been placed on
the back burner, for a lot of us,
it never died.
I know this because I’ve
taught guitar making for many
years now. I’ve not only seen
the cycle—I’ve been a part of
it since the guitar crowd has
kept up with me insofar as age.
More specifically, my students
have been more or less my own
“youngish” age for many years.
Because I’m part of the first
generation of Americans to
embrace this work, there really
wasn’t a pool of like-minded
older people to draw from.
While I do have some younger
students these days, most of my
students continue to come from
my age and socio-demographic
group. Furthermore, unlike the
younger students I’ve had, they
are at the retiring points of their
various occupations. With that,
these folks are very open and
eager about finally having the
time and energy to return their
attention to that first love—
playing and making the guitar.
Like reuniting with an old
flame, these retiree-age individuals
don’t want to waste
time. They have much less of
it than they used to, and they
don’t want to spend 20 years
learning the basics by making
lots of mistakes on their own.
They’re eagerly throwing themselves
into the work by taking
classes, reading books, going to
guitar-making schools, watching
DVDs, and taking advantage
of other resources that weren’t
available way back when. Also,
because they’ve had “real” lives,
they’re adept problem-solvers in
a number of ways that younger
people are not. They have a
huge variety of work and life
experiences to draw on towards
engaging a chosen pursuit
that challenges them—rather
than one that has been thrust
upon them. In a word, they’re
motivated.
I haven’t retired yet and
probably never will. But
I’ve met enough retirees to
know that things like playing
golf and traveling don’t
have enough staying power for
everyone. So for those who
are looking for something that
has a different kind of staying
power, and one that challenges
them by using their hands
and critical intelligence, guitar
making may offer a solution.
In fact, guitar making is a
remarkably complex, challenging,
and satisfying occupation.
And one that can be done at
one’s own pace. The learning
curve in lutherie is set by a
number of variables, including
the need to master various
handskills and the ability to
use and maintain specialized
tools. One must understand
the choices and availability of
a wide spectrum of materials
and the tonal potential for each.
There are the never-ending
design challenges in artistry,
engineering, and architecture,
and a builder has to sort
through the different existing
techniques and theories for
conducting any particular procedure.
Along with developing
an understanding of acoustics
and dynamics, there are the
challenges of mastering a new
language to be able to speak
with other luthiers—as well as
the musicians who play their
creations—and continually find
ways of improving one’s work
and craftsmanship.
Lutherie certainly has its
share of frustrations—especially
if one is trying to make a living
at it. Though if retired, or
close to it, one normally doesn’t
need to make a lot of money
at anything any longer. If one
did need to bring in significant
money, there are the additional
challenges of running a shop,
streamlining the work, and the
marketing and promotion of
one’s work. There’s also dealing
with the trade-offs between
production problems and the
need for artistic creativity and
personal expression.
Lutherie provides the
opportunity to meet and get to
know a whole bunch of interesting
people who are sometimes
quirky, but never stupid.
This can play into vacations
and traveling, where one can
visit other guitar makers in
other places around the country
or world. In reality, once
one’s shop is set up and the
tools are acquired, overhead
is reasonably low. So expenditures
are pretty much limited
to purchases of wood, electricity,
and sandpaper.
After a lifetime of chasing
other people’s goals, making
musical instruments offers a
world where one can organize a
space that is really one’s own—a
space to play in and be reasonably
happy in. Lastly, but just
as important, there’s the simple
love of wood and of making real
things. All in all, making a guitar—
or mandolin, banjo, ukulele,
or other stringed instrument—
presents an irresistible
combination of challenges and
pleasurable intangibles.
Ervin Somogyi
A professional luthier
since the early 1970s,
Ervin Somogyi is one
of the world’s most
respected acoustic-guitar
builders and
rosette designers. To learn more about
Somogyi, his instruments, or his rosette
and inlay artwork, visit
esomogyi.com.