Sunday, January 25, 2009

Happy New Year

Hi everybody, Well it's been a long time since my last post, but with the holidays behind us I am now ready to resume my news relaying duties. A lot has been happening. I have been working on marketing the company a bit, which is always challenging for me. The process has led to a bit of soul searching. At times the guitar world seems so vast and I often wonder if the world needs another guitarmaker. A recent conversation I had with a fellow guitar-o-phile put some of these fears to rest. He asked me if I would make a Les Paul Jr. double cut-away style guitar. At first I said sure, but as I drove away from the shop I got thinking about his request. I realized that I had no desire to undertake the project. Why would I want to make another version of a guitar which has been, and continues to be, produced by the thousands. Guitar aficionados are a notoriously backward looking bunch. In someways I include myself in this group. I have a deep appreciation for history, and I love old guitars. There is something special about them. It has taken me a while to figure out what that magic is, but at the risk of sounding to new-agey, I think the magic is this: As a guitar is played and loved it begins to take on some of the spirit of it's owners. It grows a soul, a soul which cannot be replicated. I guess this is a very long-winded way of saying that what I find exciting about guitarmaking is not reproducing classic guitars, but exploring my own sense of what a guitar should be. After all, when ever you buy a custom guitar. you are getting that builder's ideas, a little piece of who that builder is. So I guess I realized that there will always be room for another guitarmaker, because guitarmaking (or any creative pursuit) at it's core is about ideas. Ok...enough...I must stop this rant...So from the sublime to the ridiculous (or possibly the other way around depending on your perspective). I finished a 504 solidbody which will be headed out to my friends at Guru Guitars In Raleigh, NC. Look for it there if you are in town. Additionally I am working on a prototype for a steel string acoustic. I hope to push it forward over the next few months. There is a new shop here in Knoxville called Mojo's Rock Shoppe. They have expressed interest in having some of my stuff in their shop. So I plan to focus on a couple guitars for them. Also look for our ad in the May issue of Just Jazz Guitar magazine. That's about all for now. Talk soon.

Clay


The 504


The 504 back


Steel String Prototype Top


Steel String Prototype Body

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Those are the sweetest guitars I've ever seen!! Clayton Conner, you are becoming a true master. I'm psyched that you've finally got your own shop to make it all happen. I dig the blog...

Let's get on the horn and chat sometime soon.