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Super rare Japanese luthier guitar “Yamaoka Guitars Strings Art NY-5/Dark Brown”!!!
Leading jazz guitarist Kazumi Watanabe and other musicians have praised his guitars!
Yamaoka can only produce about a dozen guitars a year, with expensive ones priced at more than 1.4 million yen.
16inch, double cutaway body shape like 335. It looks like semi-acoustic-guitar, but it’s full-acoustic guitar which have “King post”. “King post” is original reinforcement construction. Thanks to this construction, the guitar have rich acoustic sound, in addition, it saves hauling.
Very tasteful dark-brown color, warm woody atmosphere, strong presence, outstanding aura. This guitar have been catching tremendous number of musician`s hearts!
Solid Sitka Spruce Top, solid maple side, laminated maple back, maple 3P neck, Ziricote fingerboard. Pick-guard was also made by Ziricote. It very suits with this guitar.
Pickup is original floating one. Because it’s floating pick-up, it doesn’t annoy body wood vibration and create natural acoustic wood sound. Very attractive Jazz sound is always attract everyone.
This is very rare guitar. Even us, we finally received after several years passed. If you are Jazz lover, there is no reason to miss this guitar, special chance!
Product Details
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Body Width:16″
Body Depth:80mm
Scale:628mm 20F
Pickup:Yamaoka Original Floating-Ham
Tuner:Gotoh SXN510
Finish:Nitrocellulose Lacquer
Body Top:Solid Sitka Spruce
Body Side:Solid Maple
Body Back:Laminated Maple
Kingpost:Mahogany 1P
Neck:Maple 3P
Head Plate:Ebony
Fingerborad:Zilicote
Nut Width:43mm
Bridge:Ebony
Tailpeace:Ebony
Pickgard:Zilicote
Trassrod:Tatuta β Titanium
Fret:Jescar FW 9665ns
Strings:D’Addario ECG25
Color:Dark Brown
Weight:About 2.63kg
Accessories: Hard case
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※KURASHIKI, Okayama Prefecture--Norimasa Yamaoka stumbled out of bed in response to what sounded like an explosion. He couldn’t get back to sleep that night.
It was July 6, 2018. That summer, successive torrential downpours swamped western Japan.
He soon found his entire neighborhood was flooded and, before long, so was his house.
Yamaoka, a guitar maker, grabbed a half-finished instrument and fled upstairs.
Before he knew it, the water was up to his knees.
Just when he thought it was too late, a Self-Defense Forces boat came to the rescue and evacuated his family from the house through a window.
When he eventually returned, he found that his studio had been devastated.
Rusty tools were strewn across the floor. Drawings and wood molds essential for guitar making were submerged in muddy water.
But after barely making it out of his flooded home in time, he decided not to fret over his ruined workshop and instead poured his heart and soul into rebuilding, redoubling his commitment to his craft.
Refusing to give in, he did not rest. He spent the next nine months working around the clock to repair his house and mud-covered tools.
He managed to recreate a wooden mold from a drawing that survived the disaster.
Then, finally, in April of last year, he reopened.
Yamaoka works alone in his studio in the Mabicho-Kawabe district, up to 12 hours a day.
He specializes in creating archtop guitars usually associated with jazz. Delicate carving techniques are required to put the finishing touches on a curved, smooth guitar body.
The destruction of his studio was not the only major challenge he faced in his career.
He long struggled to find the right job. And when he finally did decide to chase his dreams, he took a difficult path to get there.
Yamaoka was born in Yakage, Okayama Prefecture, in 1964, and moved to Mabi, now part of Kurashiki, in the sixth grade.
He was obsessed with playing the guitar, although performing did not become a career. After graduating from high school, he bounced aimlessly from job to job, working as a car dealer and even at one point as a hang gliding instructor.
But he reached a turning point at 37. That was when his wife, also 37, died from subarachnoid bleeding, leaving behind two small children.
Reflecting on his life, he made up his mind to stop being half-hearted with his goals and finally build the career of his dreams. He thought he could make use of his manual dexterity to produce guitars.
Yamaoka did not learn his trade the way many professional luthiers normally do, though.
Usually, complete amateurs begin studying guitar making at professional schools or repair shops. But Yamaoka decided to teach himself because he thought it would let him bring a new perspective to the craft.
So, he found a book to serve as his guide. He holed up in his parent's home in Mabi, struggling to understand the book, which was written in a foreign language. With no income, he dug into his savings.
Four years later, he completed about 10 guitars. He put them up for sale online, branded as Yamaoka Guitars.
He started to receive inquiries, with at least one of them fetching a price to the tune of about 300,000 yen ($2,800).
It did not take long before they struck a chord with guitarists. He soon received orders from musical instrument stores across the country and from abroad. Yamaoka even landed an exclusive sales deal with a Tokyo-based musical instrument wholesaler.
After years of self-learning, the results paid off.
His electric guitars earned him the patronage of professional musicians and attracted publicity from home and abroad. Leading jazz guitarist Kazumi Watanabe and other musicians have praised his guitars.
Yamaoka can only produce about a dozen guitars a year, with expensive ones priced at more than 1.4 million yen.
The success lasted until the 2018 flood suddenly wiped away his studio--but not his spirit.
"I'll try to be even more particular about details to create an ideal guitar," Yamaoka said.
The expert guitar maker is now trying to share his spirit of resilience as the coronavirus pandemic drags on.
"Everyone, including musicians, are having a hard time because of the novel coronavirus," Yamaoka said.
"To return the favor to those who supported me after the torrential rain, I want to keep making guitars in Mabi to offer comfort."
※Quote The Asahi Shinbun. May 18, 2020
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Note: Our guitars ship tracked and insured by Japan Post EMS. Any import duties or taxes are the buyers responsibility.
If you have any questions about any of our items please feel free to contact us. Thank you for looking!
※The shipping cost conform to EMS, therefore the shipping cost will be changed if EMS can’t ship to your country.
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