Smooth-as-satin playability and exacting construction make this accessibly priced slope-shouldered dread an understated star.
Super excellent playability and neck feel. Tip-top quality for the price. Beautiful Grand Pacific shape. Excellent value.
Harder strumming can overemphasize midrange.
$899
Taylor 117e
taylorguitars.com
Though Iāve never owned a Taylor from the affordable end of their price spectrum, they have brought me a lot of joy and inspiration over the years. My encounters with GS Minis and 100-series dreads whilst lounging on friendās porches and tour hostās living rooms have inspired little riffs that became more elaborate things over timeāall born from a casual hang with a flattop that was fun to hold, easy to play, and sounded sweet enough that I didnāt want to ditch the conversation.
The new 117e is a little extra special to me though. Thatās because I love Taylorās Grand Pacific body style. I adore its curves, its dimensions, its feel, and the way it plays with classic round-shouldered dreadnought shapes while arriving at something distinctive. The 117e is the first Grand Pacific to join the 100-series family. And its responsiveness and playability are quite likely to make it a favorite sibling. Itās a beautiful guitar that delivers a lot for $899.
Fine Tailoring
The designers and builders at Taylor are masters of delivering quality and consistency at an attainable price. Thatās no mean feat. You can go through a lot of guitars while shopping for an inexpensive one and deal with a lot of compromises. Taylorās batting average is impressive though, and the 117e is well-built even by Taylorās high standards.
Though the back and sides are layered sapele you donāt really give the idea of ālaminateā much thought when you look it over, touch it, and play the guitar. The torrefied spruce top is very pretty, with just a little figuring in the otherwise straight grain that adds visual interest. Though the 100-series appointments are simple, no-frills stuff, Iād venture the guitar is better for it. The black binding and black-and-white rosette enhance the Grand Pacificās beautiful lines and complement the ebony fretboard and bridge. I wouldnāt mind having a look at this model with a tortoise pickguardāthe black one falls a little flat to my eye. Then again, it contributes to the visual balance here, and anything that detracted from the Grand Pacific silhouette would be a bummer.
The 117e is built with Taylorās C-bracing, an asymmetric, cantilevered pattern that was originally conceived to contribute low end and sustain to the companyās smaller GT-class guitars. Though, instinctively, it seems like an odd choice for an instrument with a top as expansive as this one, it succeeds in adding low-end resonance to an instrument that has a natural midrange emphasis. Plus, itās just plain cool to see Taylor toying with design evolutions that mix up staid, if proven, acoustic construction formulas.
No Bum Notes
Thereās no way you canāt be struck by the 117eās playability, particularly given the price. My partner, who is a pretty ace fingerstylist, likened the neck to playing on silk sheets just seconds into playing it, and Iāve seen her get pretty ruthless with guitars she doesnāt bond with. Sheās right, too. Though Taylor calls the neck profile āslender,ā there is a just-right heft and thickness to the shape that lends a touch of vintage feel without seeming needlessly fat. The action feels fast and low and almost like a really nice electric guitarāespecially between frets 1 and 7. Yet it is totally free of fret buzz, even when you strum with vigor, and the strings ring and sustain with the unmistakable feel of a guitar set up to near perfection. Intonation is also spot on and the tuning stability is excellent.
āThe action feels fast and low and almost like a really nice electric guitar.ā
The 117eās tone profile is the one area where it pays to really play the guitar and weigh it against your preferences. Both the Grand Pacific body shape and C-bracing are meant to add resonance and low-end heft, and Iād venture that they lend much in that regard in this instrument. But, perhaps because of the layered sapele back and sides, there is an unmistakable midrange focus. The good thing is that it really only verges on strident when you take to the guitar like Townshend. In more nuanced fingerstyle situations or even strumming where you use a lighter touch, the 117e comes off as balanced, sensitive to picking dynamics, full of range and volume, and ringing with attractive and sometimes enveloping overtones. Those ringing, sustaining qualities also make it a great vehicle for acoustic leads. The Expression System 2 electronics, by the way, are reliably solid and sound lively if a touch midrangey at times. But I would also rate the system as especially well-suited for the detailed kind of playing the 117e invites.
The Verdict
Sure, $899 is not the kind of scratch most of us dig up by peeking under the sofa cushions. But in the contemporary scheme of things, it certainly falls within the accessible category, which makes the 117e a great deal and, in many respects, an overachiever. Another observation from my partner: āThis is the kind of guitar you buy because itās inexpensive. Then it becomes indispensable.ā Again, I concur. This sweet player is genuinely hard to put down, and it will be hard to send this one home to the Taylor gang in Southern California. But when I do, it may be with a little request: How about a 117 12-string? I can already see that headstock mated to the lovely Grand Pacific body and hear it chiming away as we all jangle our way toward summer. Given the way this guitar is likely to sell, it doesnāt seem like too much to ask.
The newest gem in the Grand Pacific line opens up the tone possibilities of a round shouldered dreadnought.
The 417e-R Is a Grand Pacific acoustic-electric crated with solid Indian rosewood back and sides, a solid Sitka spruce top and V-Class bracing. The round-shoulder dreadnought design pairs beautifully with the classic rosewood/spruce tonewood configuration, yielding a vintage-inspired, blended sound with clear low-end power and notes that overlap into a seamless whole. A warm bass range and crisp trebles resonate around a slightly scooped midrange, while the innovative bracing design coaxes out more power, longer sustain and near-perfect harmony across the fretboard. Like its siblings, the 417e-R is detailed white binding, black and white top purfling, a single-ring agoya shell rosette, Finial fretboard inlays in Italian acrylic, a gloss-finish body with a Tobacco Sunburst top, nickel tuners and a faux tortoiseshell pickguard. It includes ES2 electronics for warm and dynamic amplified sound and a deluxe hardshell case for storage and protection.