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Brand New Musser Advanced Jumbo, The Tree Mahogany/Engelmann Spruce
So hot we couldn’t keep it long enough to list! This is our first Gibson-style slope shoulder dreadnought from Don Musser, and of course the tonewoods are top notch. The Tree Mahogany back and sides, Engelmann Spruce on top, and Ocelot Ear Brazilian Rosewood for the headstock veneer and bridge. Bigleaf Maple bindings tie it together, with a sunburst finish on top that really pops. Tonally, this Advanced Jumbo kicks with clarity and precision, an excellently clean and energetic voice. It holds up handsomely for fingerpicking and flatpicking both! Now, this beauty is already gone, gone, gone, but if you want to commission a Musser for yourself just give us a shout here!
Other keywords: tone wood, fingerstyle, abalone, mop, mother of pearl, big leaf
SOLD Read moreScale Length 25.5 in Nut Width 1.75 in String Spacing 2.25 in Woods Spruce - Engelmann, Mahogany - The Tree Add to CompareBrand New Musser OM, The Tree Mahogany/Engelmann Spruce
This latest OM from Don Musser is something extraordinary. Explosively figured The Tree Mahogany back and sides, Engelmann Spruce top, with nitro finish throughout and pearl across the body and headstock with surprisingly three-dimensional properties. Striking Rosewood bridge, headstock veneer, and fingerboard set off the Maple bindings, and Don’s medium thickness C neck is easy peasy for left hand work. The scale length is 25.5”, just a touch longer than Martin long scale for a snappier response, and that pairs well with the crisp tones generated by The Tree Mahogany here, and the warm, smooth trebles courtesy of Engelmann Spruce.
This beauty is just that: a beautiful work of functional art, balancing visual aesthetics with dynamic and inspirational tonality.Other keywords: tone wood, tonewood, fingerstyle, orchestra model, abalone, abalone, mop, mother of pearl, gotoh
SOLD Read moreScale Length 25.5 in Nut Width 1.75 in String Spacing 2.25 in Woods Spruce - Engelmann, Mahogany - The Tree Add to CompareNew Musser OM, Cocobolo/Sitka Spruce
It’s hard to put this one down. Our latest brand new OM from Don Musser is a gorgeous example of what happens when you combine a tonewood dealer’s personal collection with their luthier chops: purity, clarity, and strength. Costa Rican Cocobolo back and sides paired with a tight-grain Sitka Spruce top and Honduran Mahogany bindings. Glassy nitro finish, 25 1/2” scale, Brazilian Rosewood bridge—this OM is a sight to see, and that goes double for hearing.
Don’s voiced the top for fingerstyle responsiveness and clarity. The 25.5” scale gives a bit more bite when you drop down into DADGAD and beyond. There’s a great string-to-string balance; the voice doesn’t favor any particular register, letting them all ring out evenly. We’d recommend this Musser OM for, well, everything.Other keywords: lutherie, luthier, tone wood, orchestra model, flatpicking, gotoh, tkl
SOLD Read moreScale Length 25.5 in Nut Width 1.75 in String Spacing 2.25 in Woods Spruce - Sitka, Rosewood - Cocobolo Add to Compare1997 Don Musser Dreadnought, Brazilian/German
This is not your average Dreadnought, all boom and no balance—the response is even from string to string and fret to fret. Don Musser, when he isn’t building guitars, is selling tonewood to luthiers, so it should come as no surprise that the woods are incredible on this Dread. Brazilian Rosewood back and sides paired with a German Spruce top, Flamed Maple bindings, scalloped nut and saddle. Pay close attention and you’ll see no detail is fudged, right down to how Don gracefully transitions the straight edges of the heelcap into the Flamed Maple bindings at the back.
The voice has excellent note clarity, and the bass response is warm, focused, and well-defined. The respective registers are well-balanced; it’s a seamless transition from bass runs to solos on the treble strings. It’s opened up handsomely in 20 years: there’s lots of energy under the hood that’s easy to access. The lower mids in particular have a breathy response that balances nicely between the bass and treble registers.
For the flatpicker who plays Bluegrass but wanders into Jazz territory and beyond, this is a unique piece that can easily keep up with your genre-bending arrangements.
SOLD Read moreScale Length 25.5 in Nut Width 1.75 in String Spacing 2.25 in Woods Spruce - German, Rosewood - Brazilian
My roots in guitar work extend back to helping my Dad in his workshop. He was a Master gunsmith who built reproductions of the early Colt handguns in the 1950s and 50s . His shop – with milling machines, lathes, bandsaws and all kinds of exotic gunstock and pistol grip woods was fascinating. It was always very dark and chaotic with tools, wood, and metal stock everywhere – but also very rich with creative possibilities . He could make and do anything .Very early on he figured out I had the ability to focus and execute precise craftsmanship and had me fitting and finishing gunstocks and helping with repair work.
Having taught myself to play guitar the last few months I was in the Army – when discharged – I decided to buy a finer instrument. While shopping at the local stores in the L.A. area my eyes started to notice things about the factory made instruments. As an alternative I looked in the phone book for custom guitar makers – and there was a listing for Marc Whitebook and David Russell Young. Marc built the first hand made guitars for James Taylor and David wrote one of the earliest books on steel string guitar construction. I visited Mark in his shop and left a deposit for one of his guitars. I was very intrigued with what he was doing and pestered him a bit too much with visits and questions. He eventually refunded my deposit and suggested that I needed to built my own guitar. With a lot of help from David and his book and from Roy Noble – another local builder – I started to assemble guitars in my father’s workshop.
The first two instruments I thought were marketable were taken down to McCabes guitar shop in Santa Monica and they bought – and then sold both – very quickly. One went to Peter Fonda and the other went to Tom Rush. Tom eventually performed and toured with that guitar for over three decades. I also hooked up at just the right time with Norman Harris who opened a little shop in Reseda – Norm’s Rare Guitars – that would eventually grow into one of the major dealerships for Vintage Acoustic and Electric guitars. Norm has sold my instruments to many of the most prominent musicians of the past four decades. We are still at it.
One other thing worth mentioning is my involvement with marketing musical instrument wood. Early on I had an opportunity to purchase, resaw, and sell some Pre CITES Brazilian Rosewood that was imported into the US back in 1948. Just now I am working with some of the best of that wood and looking forward to seeing it finish up into some beautiful guitars. I also had the experience of living in Colorado near the sawmills that processed high altitude Englemann and Blue Spruce logs. For several years I bought, processed, and sold spruce to LMI, Gibson, and many other individual guitar makers. Tops and billets of those Spruces have been seasoning for decades in the low humidity here in southwest New Mexico. In the early 1990s I was also very fortunate to purchase a quantity of Quilted Mahogany boards that were cut from “The Tree” – a very unique, large, and beautifully figured Honduras Mahogany tree that has become a legend. That wood is now available on my instruments thru Dream Guitars.