Unusual Alkire EHarp
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
-
- Posts: 10
- Joined: 2 Aug 2009 7:11 pm
- Location: Pennsylvania, USA
Unusual Alkire EHarp
An EHarp made in 1961 by a C.F. Martin employee whose son was a student of Eddie Alkire. Alkire's jaw must have dropped when the kid pulled this out of the case, but the lessons evidently didn't take--the instrument remained in untouched condition, stored for more than four decades in its standard EHarp case of the era. The employee had started working at the Martin factory just after WW II, learning to execute the appointments of the top-of-the-line prewar Martins, the 45's, though no such abalone-trimmed instruments were being made by Martin for about the first 25 years he worked there. This was his own application of the Martin design sense and his skills to a steel--an "E-45." Solid Honduras mahogany body overlaid with a thin layer of spruce to make it look like a Martin flat-top, but everything was fastened solidly into the mahogany for sustain. Brazilian rosewood headstock overlay, fingerboard, and handrest. Hardware all evidently procured direct from Valco except for the Grover Rotomatic machines then being used on Martin guitars. Some ride.
WOW
Incredible!! What an outstanding looking lap steel!! (sorry... E-Harp) Any sound samples?
Incredible!! What an outstanding looking lap steel!! (sorry... E-Harp) Any sound samples?
If Music Be the Food of Love, Play On. -Shakespeare
___________________________________________
1941 Ric B6 / 1948 National Dynamic / 1951 Bronson Supro / Custom teak wood Allen Melbert / Tut Taylor Dobro / Gold Tone Dojo / Martin D15S / Eastman P10
___________________________________________
1941 Ric B6 / 1948 National Dynamic / 1951 Bronson Supro / Custom teak wood Allen Melbert / Tut Taylor Dobro / Gold Tone Dojo / Martin D15S / Eastman P10
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
- Tom Pettingill
- Posts: 2246
- Joined: 23 Apr 2007 11:10 am
- Location: California, USA (deceased)
-
- Posts: 209
- Joined: 29 Mar 2010 12:19 pm
- Location: Nashville TN, USA
- Stan Schober
- Posts: 611
- Joined: 19 Aug 2009 3:05 pm
- Location: Cahokia, Illinois, USA
-
- Posts: 223
- Joined: 27 Mar 2010 8:29 am
- Location: Penticton, BC
After buying six guitars in the past year--most of them 1950s classics--thought I was pretty well done with the guitar envy. Nope. What a beauty. Kind of a poignant father/son story, too. When I was teaching myself to play guitar and sing forty years ago, my dad used to knock on my bedroom door and offer me an Aspirin. I stuck with it all the same.
...but you are the music / while the music lasts (TS Eliot)
-
- Posts: 6895
- Joined: 15 Nov 2002 1:01 am
- Location: Kaaawa, Hawaii, USA
- Contact:
- Joseph Meditz
- Posts: 345
- Joined: 14 Nov 2005 1:01 am
- Location: Sierra Vista, AZ
- Ryan Barwin
- Posts: 613
- Joined: 7 Aug 2009 12:23 pm
- Location: Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
- Contact:
- Mark Lavelle
- Posts: 110
- Joined: 31 May 2010 10:29 am
- Location: San Mateo, CA
- Contact:
- David Eastwood
- Posts: 137
- Joined: 23 Mar 2010 5:53 pm
- Location: Minnesota, USA
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
Yeah, that's a cool deco design. Every version of the Eharp (at were at least three versions) had that style of fretboard. The Valco Eharp had a lucite fretboard.Dig that three octave fret board shaped something like the state of Tennessee.
The earlier version (built by Epiphone) had a Brazilian rosewood fretboard, much like this custom one.
-
- Posts: 839
- Joined: 31 Jan 2011 2:33 pm
- Location: Trenton, New Jersey, USA
- Geoff Cline
- Posts: 748
- Joined: 6 Jul 2009 7:36 am
- Location: Southwest France
-
- Posts: 10
- Joined: 2 Aug 2009 7:11 pm
- Location: Pennsylvania, USA
Thanks for your kind comments, Geoff. The fellow who made this eye-popping guitar, long retired from Martin, was so pleased to hear that folks on the Forum appreciate what he achieved in making this this ultra-deluxe Eharp. He is a wonderfully modest man, but I think he is pretty proud of this instrument, and rightly so! Martin really set a high standard for precision and elegance in build and binding work, and the maker of this one-off steel was a master with outstanding skills and taste. In retirement he has stayed very busy as a seriously good prizewinning pie baker on a commercial scale, shoo-fly a specialty.
-
- Posts: 839
- Joined: 31 Jan 2011 2:33 pm
- Location: Trenton, New Jersey, USA