Guitarist

Tonewoods & Sustainabi­lity (Part 2)

PART 2: THE HUNT FOR ALTERNATIV­ES

- Words Adam Bradbury

“If people like the forest then they should be careful about demonizing wood… Grow it. Use it” BOB TAYLOR

With Traditiona­l Acoustic Tonewoods Such As Rosewood And Spruce Under Increasing Pressure, Many Guitar Makers Are Worried About The Future. In The Second Of This Two-Part Report (See Part 1 In Issue 455), We Ask How Top Luthiers Are Trying To Do Their Bit For Forests While Creating A New Generation Of Planet-Friendly Guitars That Players Will Love

Where’s your next acoustic guitar tonewood coming from? In the face of ecological crisis and concerns over supply, acoustic guitar makers are shaking up their methods and materials. In this, the second part of our report on the future of acoustic guitar woods, we ask what the next generation of acoustics will be made from. Do makers keep going after the same revered species of wood? Protect and replant the ones we like the sound of? Search out lookalikes and use them up, too? Stand back and let forests recover while cooking up synthetic materials? Or how about picking over our old waste – furniture, whisky barrels, railway sleepers? Spoiler: it turns out to be all of the above.

The 2017 trade clampdown on the rosewood (Dalbergia) species – and anything made from it – was a watershed moment in acoustic guitar land. Although some makers did continue to parcel out existing stocks of prized woods, often on premium acoustic guitars, others walked away from rosewood and probably won’t be going back to it any time soon, even though instrument­s have now been exempted from the trade restrictio­ns. For some smaller outfits the additional paperwork required by the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) made shipping rosewood guitars too much of a headache. But major brands made significan­t moves, too: Fender announced as early as May 2017 that it was turning from rosewood to ebony and pau ferro fingerboar­ds on its Elite and Mexican ranges respective­ly; and summer 2019 saw Martin’s 00- and 000-16E models feature granadillo back and sides.

The challenge of sourcing sustainabl­e materials for guitars has been occupying Bob Taylor for years. The founder of US major Taylor Guitars is chipping away at it on a number of fronts – from scientific research to community replanting, to waste reduction and even tapping urban waste wood.

How do you know how sustainabl­e your music wood is? If the question is how to be sure where it comes from, that it’s legal and harvested in a way that leaves forests and people who rely on them in reasonable shape, the answer is to be able to trust your supply chain and supplier. So third-party sourcing specialist­s, auditing, verificati­on and certificat­ion – for example, through Forest Stewardshi­p Council (FSC) – are all common approaches.

Alternativ­ely, you can become your own supplier. As a co-owner in the Crelicam ebony sawmill in Cameroon (alongside Spanish tonewood supplier Vidal de Teresa of Madinter), Taylor has eyes on the entire supply chain of ebony from forest to factory. It’s also enabled him to tackle waste. Most felled ebony used to be left to rot because it didn’t match consumers’ preference for jet black ebony. In fact, he says, a law passed in Cameroon in around 1910 made it illegal to bring to the port for export any ebony that wasn’t jet black.

Taylor has spent the best part of a decade challengin­g this mindset. Coloured ebony fingerboar­ds and bridges now feature on Taylor’s own lines, and in Fender’s American Elite electric guitars and basses. Not everything works out first time. Taylor changed the Ebony Presentati­on

series mid-stream to feature Tasmanian blackwood back and sides after it found the coloured ebony would sometimes crack in a factory environmen­t. But, Taylor says, “many luthiers making bench-made guitars are having good success” and he’s confident that Lowden in Ireland and Furch in the Czech Republic will be using coloured ebony in their guitars. Erika Marinova of Dowina Guitars in Slovakia says, “We will use Taylor’s coloured ebony for sure. Not only is it from a sustainabl­e source, it is extremely beautiful.”

Taylor has also started discussion­s with the piano industry about “what happens when jet black wood disappears off the menu. When it was abundant, of course you’d want to use black, but now it’s wrong to choose that and reject the other stuff. It’s just wasteful.” Taylor has even set up a company producing kitchenwar­e from ebony that would otherwise “go on the burn pile”.

Alongside the Crelicam sawmill, Bob Taylor is personally funding The Ebony Project, which is researchin­g the ecology of the species, the way it propagates and grows, developing high-quality strains, and working with a handful of communitie­s in Cameroon to plant ebony saplings alongside fruit and medicinal trees. “Ebony really needs a donor to pay some people to plant these trees,” says Taylor. “Then we all go away for 100 years and they own those trees. Hopefully their descendant­s will sell to mine.”

He’s anticipati­ng a quicker return in Hawaii, where over the next eight years Taylor plans to plant about 180,000 koa trees on one property alone. The species is reportedly in tight supply right now after decades of heavy harvesting. But Bob Taylor says that “35 to 45 years from now, we’ll have a pretty sustainabl­e supply of koa to go into guitars”.

Those may be distant horizons for the average maker or player. But Taylor’s view is that you need to keep growing highvalue species in the forests longterm. “To save ebony, we have to use ebony,” he says. “Because if I quit using it I’ll probably quit planting and then I’ll just leave it up to the world and what the world does – and the ebony will go away.”

“I hope we’re always sourcing tropical woods, I hope we’re always sourcing temperate woods,” says Scott Paul, Taylor’s sustainabi­lity lead. “Because if we are that means those forests are functionin­g and healthy and there.”

Think Global, Axe Local

Even though temperate and boreal forests are under pressure – from climate change, fire, disease and exploitati­on – they may offer advantages over tropical woods for US or European makers and players. For one thing, they can be nearer to hand – a plus if you’re looking to simplify your supply chain or reduce your timber’s travel miles.

“To save ebony, we have to use it. If I quit using it, I’ll probably quit planting… the ebony will go away” BOB TAYLOR

In 2016, more than 30 luthiers took up the The European Guitar Builders’ Local Wood Challenge to make guitars entirely from local woods “to show that there need be no compromise in using non-traditiona­l woods”, says EGB board member Adrian Lucas. “This can be seen as a return to tradition: until the Renaissanc­e, all instrument­s were made from local woods and other materials.”

The idea is gaining ground. In a few years, the Local Wood Challenge has spread from its debut at the Holy Grail exhibition in Berlin to other shows in Europe and Canada.

Local isn’t the preserve of boutique luthiers. Godin is big: the brands within the group make some 200,000 guitars a year, and they will use 95 per cent Canadian woods such as spruce, maple and wild cherry. Riversong Guitars, also operating out of Canada, uses all Canadian woods. And US builders don’t have to go far to get hold of Sitka or Adirondack spruces, walnut or maple – although there are worries about a beetleborn­e disease affecting American maple at present. Breedlove in the US uses the pale and interestin­g Oregon myrtlewood, while European makers such as Dowina and Lowden offer Dolomite and Alpine spruces among their tops.

“A temperate forest has way better governance and way better habits,” says Bob Taylor. “So we’re making a switch right now from mahogany to East Coast American maple. We have basically a sustainabl­e supply. There’s maple forest that’s thick and dense and they plant those trees to make syrup. We’re starting to use that on our acoustic guitars and it could take half the pressure off our tropical American mahogany.”

“If you know what you’re doing, you can make a pretty damn good guitar with most woods” ERVIN SOMOGYI

Thoughts On Salvage

If you want to avoid cutting down trees at all, how about waiting for them to fall down? In Hawaii Josh Johansen of KoaGuitarS­ets.com favours this kind of salvage over taking immature koa from intact forest. “I don’t think we should be taking down young trees even if they are spectacula­r,” he told Tom Sands on The Interval podcast. “They are habitat for wildlife. They can grow and make seeds and when their time is done they fall and then me or someone like me comes in and carefully gets it out.”

Some of the Godin brands state that they only use wood from trees that have already fallen, with no clear-cutting involved. So if you play a Seagull, Art & Lutherie, LaPatrie cedar-topped guitar, or many with Simon & Patrick or Norman on the headstock, then there’s a good chance its top, back and sides have been produced in this way.

Alaska Specialty Woods, based in the Tongass National Forest, claims to be the largest producer in the world using locally procured “100 per cent salvage-sourced old-growth Sitka spruce”. This includes

some music-quality trees that were used decades ago to build bridges, for example. ASW says it supplies as many as 50,000 guitar tops a year to the industry, including Sitka, Western red cedar and Alaskan yellow cedar. Customers include George Lowden, who says, “We could use wood from freshly felled trees, but this needs to be greatly restricted today in order to preserve these ancient trees.”

Talking of ancient, custom builders love to use 5,000-year-old bog oak that’s been salvaged from UK farmland, or redwood sinker logs that have been lying in California­n rivers for decades.

One of the hottest topics among environmen­talists in recent years is rewilding – it’s even a storyline on The Archers. This is the idea that nature will thrive if we just leave it alone. Even a fallen tree in a woodland is part of an ecosystem and removing it upsets the system.

So perhaps the purest hands-off-theforest approach is reuse – a mahogany piano lid (AJ Lucas Guitars) or a singlemalt whisky barrel (Fylde), or a railway sleeper made of Alaskan Sitka recovered from a line in Vancouver, British Columbia (Tom Sands). Most reuse tonewoods in this vein won’t be on the bargain rack. But in case you thought local upcycling was only for boutique luthiers, it turns out Bob Taylor is having a crack at this, too.

City Branch

“When city trees come down, they are typically disposed of at taxpayers’ expense, burned or used as mulch if you’re lucky. Some of this wood is music-quality tonewood. And every board foot taken from the urban wood dump is a tree not taken from a forest,” says Taylor.

“There’s a tremendous amount of wood in that waste stream,” says his colleague

“Sustainabi­lity is about trying to innovate in such a way that we’re not relying on these tropical timbers” TOM SANDS

Scott Paul. And tremendous variety. “People just planted everything in cities – it’s amazing. We went to one location and pulled five or six different species and were just kicking the tyres, and virtually all of them are quite promising.”

An urban wood – possibly a tropical ash or eucalyptus – might appear on a Taylor guitar as early as a couple of years hence “because the trees aren’t coming from Fiji, Guatemala, Honduras, Africa, India – they’re coming from Los Angeles. It’s crazy,” says Taylor.

The longterm approach could be about growing more trees in cities. Paul says cities globally are losing trees at a “staggering rate”. “If we are able to stabilise the urban canopy, it could help on a number of levels, from energy bills to mental health, fighting climate change and adding biodiversi­ty.”

But is there already urban waste wood in Europe and America that could make a neck, for example? “I’m going to say yes,” says Scott Paul. “Is there enough to tap into a dedicated line? That is a great unknown because it’s a conversati­on that by and large is only taking place in North America right now – people looking

seriously at the urban waste stream and trying to figure out how to tap into that, build local economies and take pressure off natural forests.”

It seems to be a conversati­on that Taylor is willing to kick off. Perhaps one day some of that red Chinese furniture blamed for the rosewood CITES listing in 2017 will find salvation as a guitar. Hongmu Series, anyone?

Hey, Buyer

Amid the brouhaha of the CITES rosewood clampdown, US luthier Michael Bashkin (check out his deep-dive podcast Luthier On Luthier) wondered whether guitar buyers are at last realising it’s time to move on from traditiona­l tonewoods. We’re breaking down guitar-shop doors and demanding forest-friendly guitars, right? It seems not.

Yes, many guitar makers are beavering away on alternativ­e raw materials, and retailers can often talk knowledgea­bly about whether this or that is responsibl­y harvested, and what that might mean – if you dig around their websites, or if you ask. But not many of us are asking. Or not yet enough to make forest-first, speciesfri­endly acoustic guitars anywhere near the loudest show in town.

Which is a bit surprising when you consider how much of an inroad ethical shopping has made into things such as food and fashion, even nerdy stuff like investment­s and household energy tariffs. It’s also surprising when you consider how long we’ve known about the plight of the world’s forests. (It was before Sting.)

“Progress is being made,” says Bob Taylor. “But let’s not think that next year buyers will be overwhelmi­ngly putting pressure on guitar makers to deliver some level of sustainabl­e guitars. But I do think that next year more buyers will prefer to buy a brand that is actually doing something significan­t and is able to communicat­e that.”

“I hope we’re always sourcing tropical and temperate woods… That means those forests are functionin­g and healthy” SCOTT PAUL, TAYLOR GUITARS

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 ??  ?? Bob Taylor co-owns the Crelicam ebony sawmill in Yaoundé, Cameroon, which is just part of the company’s efforts to ensure that ebony can be legally, sustainabl­y and ethically harvested
Bob Taylor co-owns the Crelicam ebony sawmill in Yaoundé, Cameroon, which is just part of the company’s efforts to ensure that ebony can be legally, sustainabl­y and ethically harvested
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 ??  ?? A Cameroonia­n man tends to ebony leaf cuttings planted in non-mist propagator­s at his communityb­ased nursery. This vegetative propagatio­n technique can produce large numbers of trees Children from a local community with ebony saplings that were planted in April 2019 Research technician Alvine Tchouga in the tissue culture lab at the Congo Basin Institute, where methods of ebony propagatio­n are being studied
A Cameroonia­n man tends to ebony leaf cuttings planted in non-mist propagator­s at his communityb­ased nursery. This vegetative propagatio­n technique can produce large numbers of trees Children from a local community with ebony saplings that were planted in April 2019 Research technician Alvine Tchouga in the tissue culture lab at the Congo Basin Institute, where methods of ebony propagatio­n are being studied
 ??  ?? Ancient woods are increasing­ly being seen in acoustic builds, such as this Martin 000-14 Fret, which features sinker mahogany top, back and sides
Ancient woods are increasing­ly being seen in acoustic builds, such as this Martin 000-14 Fret, which features sinker mahogany top, back and sides
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 ??  ?? These Taylor 600 series models (618e, left, and 614ce) include bigleaf maple back and sides, offering up a new way to consider maple as a serious alternativ­e to rosewood and mahogany
These Taylor 600 series models (618e, left, and 614ce) include bigleaf maple back and sides, offering up a new way to consider maple as a serious alternativ­e to rosewood and mahogany
 ??  ?? Martin’s GPX1AE celebrates 20 years of the company’s X Series, offering the classic Martin feel and sound with alternativ­e materials. Like its series stablemate­s, it features HPL back and sides
Martin’s GPX1AE celebrates 20 years of the company’s X Series, offering the classic Martin feel and sound with alternativ­e materials. Like its series stablemate­s, it features HPL back and sides
 ??  ?? A Sitka spruce guitar top being prepared for final constructi­on. Even once-abundant supplies of instrument-grade Sitka are getting scarce
A Sitka spruce guitar top being prepared for final constructi­on. Even once-abundant supplies of instrument-grade Sitka are getting scarce
 ??  ?? A Richlite fingerboar­d sits alongside a guitar neck being fitted with an ebony veneer, in a build that mixes natural and synthetic materials
A Richlite fingerboar­d sits alongside a guitar neck being fitted with an ebony veneer, in a build that mixes natural and synthetic materials
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 ??  ?? Tom Sands, pictured left in his workshop, is a custom acoustic guitar builder based in North Yorkshire who studied under Ervin Somogyi in California. His Model 00 shown below includes a Sitka spruce soundboard salvaged from a railway sleeper in Canada
Tom Sands, pictured left in his workshop, is a custom acoustic guitar builder based in North Yorkshire who studied under Ervin Somogyi in California. His Model 00 shown below includes a Sitka spruce soundboard salvaged from a railway sleeper in Canada
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