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1972 Alvarez 5001/1975 Martin N-20

  • Writer: Jay EuDaly
    Jay EuDaly
  • 4 days ago
  • 6 min read

Updated: 3 days ago

This story is about 2 guitars. My '72 Alvarez was preceded by a Martin N-20 nylon string classical guitar that I bought new in 1975. That's the same make/model as Willie Nelson's famous guitar, Trigger (I didn't know anything about Willie at the time). Seems like I paid about $700 for it which in today's money would be about $3400.00. So it was not a cheap-ass guitar!


I bought it because I had been listening to Phil Keaggys' work with a nylon-string and had become frustrated with the steel-string acoustic I had at the time.


Young man in a blue plaid shirt playing an acoustic guitar. He is seated indoors near a brick wall and lamp, conveying a relaxed mood.
May 12, 1975 - New Martin N-20 Classical Guitar

In 1977 I enrolled at the Conservatory of Music at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. I was a classical guitar performance major and studied with Douglas Niedt. I spent 3 years there but quit my degree program short of graduating in order to study privately with John Elliott. You can read more about that phase in A Little Story.


At one point when I was studying with Doug we spent a semester on Renaissance Lute pieces arranged for the classical guitar. They were all in Drop-D tuning.


Because I was tuning the low E string down every day to practice the Lute pieces and then back up for everything else, I wore out the original tuner for the 6th string and in frustration decided to replace all the tuners with enclosed metal tuners that wouldn't wear out so easily. They were Grovers.


Man with a mustache sitting on a porch swing, playing a guitar, wearing a white shirt. Background features a white wooden wall.
May of 1979 with the Grover Tuners

So in my zeal to have the best hardware I could buy to put on the guitar I destroyed any collectability the instrument might acquire as well as the optics of it. The Grovers stuck out like a sore thumb. I didn't care about the visual; they were the best tuners even if they didn't look the part. Turns out it didn't matter.


In January of 1980, the guitar sat overnight in a broken-down tour bus on the side of the highway west of St Louis in freezing weather. I happened to be elsewhere by about 200 miles and couldn't do anything about it. Maybe I'll tell that story in another blog.


Anyway, when I re-joined the tour and got the guitar back, it had finish-checks all over it and the face was warped. It was still playable (I played it for years after that) but any remaining value was destroyed.


Incidentally, my early '70s Gibson 175 was also on that broken-down tour bus but wasn't damaged - whew! Probably because it's made out of a wood-laminate instead of the Brazilian Rosewood and a Sitka Spruce top of the Martin.


Fast-forward several years. I was teaching a student named Angie. Angie was an elderly lady, full of energy and spunk. She was nursing her husband who was dying of emphysema. He basically forced her to take guitar lessons to get her out of the house and away from him once a week. I'm sure there was also a therapeutic aspect to the lessons for her.


Turns out, in her younger and wilder years (I wish I had a time-machine!) Angie had lived in California and studied Flamenco guitar with a big-name Spanish guitarist - I can't remember the name. She had an old Alvarez classical guitar. She’d bought it new in San Francisco back in the day and so had been the only owner.


Alvarez is a St Louis-based company founded in 1965.


After taking lessons for a few months, Angie's husband took a turn for the worse and she quit her lessons to take care of him.


Maybe a year later, out of the blue I get a call from Angie.


"Well" she said, "My husband died and I'm a-movin' to Hawaii to live with my daughter and son-in-law. You want this guitar?"


"Sure" I said, "What do you want for it?"


"Did I say anything 'bout money? If'n you want it you come over here and git it!"


"Yes ma'am! I'll be right there!"


So I wound up with this guitar as a gift, not knowing anything about it. What I did know was that it had a gorgeous tone, and very quickly I concluded I liked it better - way better - than the Martin classical I had been playing. It sounded better; brighter, with not as much mid-range, and it felt better in my hands. Part of that was due to the fact that the Alvarez neck was narrower than the Martin neck. I finally got rid of the Martin a few years ago.


Alvarez guitar label with decorative floral border, featuring "Hand Made Classic Guitars," Model No. 5001, Made in Japan.

View of a guitar bridge with strings in focus. Numbers "4 1072" in red on wood. Warm tones dominate the close-up shot.

As far as I know, it's all original, with a couple of caveats:


  1. There is a clear, almost-invisible pickguard that has been adhered to the front of it. I suspect that was put on after the fact to protect the finish from percussive hits with the fingernails, which is a Flamenco technique. Wouldn't surprise me if Angie did that.

  2. I had a Barcus Berry Piezo pickup installed under the bridge. No knobs or anything electronic on the guitar; the battery for the pickup is mounted on the heel of the neck inside the guitar and the strap pin is the output jack. So while the pickup is not original, the cosmetics of the guitar are unchanged.


Front and back view of a classic wooden guitar on a floral-patterned table against a beige wall. The guitar has a glossy finish.

Structurally it's in great shape. As I said, it has a wonderful sound; the frequencies are very well-balanced. The sound has only gotten better with age.


Cosmetically, you can tell it's old. There are scratches and finish checks here and there and places where the finish is wearing off, like where the right forearm rests on the body, and on the back where it's in contact with my shirt or in the case of the picture below, my leather vest.


Musician with a mustache plays a brown guitar and sings into a mic. He's wearing a black vest and white shirt, with a leafy plant behind.
1995

There are fingernail gouges in the fretboard at the 1st, 2nd and 3rd frets. Not mine. I guess Angie didn't keep her left-hand nails trimmed short enough.


Even so, it still looks pretty good. The cosmetic issues only serve to give it more character!


I play it some at home mostly; using it on a gig is few and far between. Once in a great while I'll play it at a wedding or a funeral but most of the gigs I play there's no call for it.


Besides, I have a Crafter SA-TMVS Hybrid Acoustic-Electric that I modified for nylon strings which works way better for gigging with a nylon-string sound.


I've used it in the recording studio more than anything. It figures prominently in my own writing and recording.


Many of the tunes on my Sound Tracks CD use it.


Check out The Jewel:



Another example is Andrea's Rainsong (acoustic) where I used a pick for the melody/lead:



Most of my Channeling Harold album is a Hammond B3 organ-based Jazz trio. However, I used the Alvarez for the great Bill Evans standard, Waltz for Debby:


I also used it for the rhythm guitar part on the duo track with Mama Ray, My Romance:


As a side note, the solos for both Waltz for Debby and My Romance were played on my beloved Martin MC-28.


The Alvarez also features heavily on My Ship. For instance, Hymn for Her:



I own quite a few instruments but I'm not a collector. I consider them tools. Every guitar I own has paid for itself and then some. I'm all about function.


However, I have maybe four guitars to which I have an emotional attachment; this Alvarez is one of those.


Alvarez Classical guitar lying on a vibrant paisley-patterned fabric with blue, green, and yellow hues, creating a lively and artistic vibe.


HOW ABOUT 5 LESSONS?


The 5-Lesson Foundational Series teaches the Circle of Keys as an organizational mechanism by which you ensure that whatever you learn is drilled in every key in all possible positions. It also gives you a method to find any note, anywhere, without memorizing note names on every string. That is a beautiful thing!

 

Almost every lesson I teach presupposes these 5 lessons.

 

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Man plays acoustic guitar and sings into a microphone, wearing a black vest and white shirt. Green foliage in the background.

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