I don't mind "aging" if it is aged the way I play. I have a 1968 dreadnought, my first guitar, and I know what it looks like after being played by me for 50+ years. I acquired a single owner 1974 A Loprinzi LM-15 ( a Jersey Martin) and it is similar in light aging, like a closet relic. So "new old stock" or closet relic work for me. That aside, I purchased a Martin 000-16 Street Master (Adirondack-Rosewood) that sounds and plays great. They used this stain-finish printer to make it look well used by somebody other than I. I like the thin finish, but not the look. Luckily, I don't see it when playing. I have other guitars with aged finish (like Eastman E22SS-V-sb). I prefer to add dings and dents on my own. Thanks, John and Jeremy.
Agree. I own an OMC16e Ovangkol, a D35 an a D12-28 currently and I have owned a D16e and a 000M in the past. I have seen these SLs in the shop and have not been tempted to even pick it up. I was just playing my 1971 J50 before I watched this video. Bought it new and aged it along with me. But my favorite is the 2019 OMC16e. Ovangkol top, back and sides.. Very balanced tone. Perfect feel in the hand.
For a brief moment I looked at one 3 months ago, opted for the standard satin and love it. As mentioned in the video, the satin finishes have somewhat of a broke in sound right out of the box. I’ll relic this one my way, with good old fashioned playing.
I'm a relatively careful, non-gigging musician. By "careful" what I mean is that, despite my aggressive, intense picking style, I don't move my arm in a sawing motion. Any picking energy is translated to the string, not the soundboard (I don't pick in a way that scratches/wears against the top). I also pick gently for softer playing. After watching the tone sample, my picking style is identical to John's with my remaining three fingers loosely floating over the pickguard preventing errant pick motion to the soundboard. I would prefer to have any wear be the wear I put on it. I understand this is a finish and not a distressed instrument. I can't look past the finish. I could easily enjoy the sound and playing experience for something like this. I would not choose to purchase a guitar that looked like this unless the price was exceptionally compelling.
That guitar really sounds good. We have an old, 57, J-50 that looks about like that one and smells like it had a smoking problem and it's a hoss of a guitar... I really dig the old look and would like to look at one up close, but think it looks cool on the video anyway. As always, great video guys!
I love my d18 StreetLegend. Such a great guitar and at a cost savings from the gloss one.i will never be able to afford a prewar d18 so this guitar is as close as I can get.
I’m undecided and a little confused about it. I wouldn’t be excited about another guy walking in with a guitar and the “wear” is exactly the same. They need to somehow randomize the wear so every guitar isn’t a Kurt Cobain copy or the other two. I’m even less excited about it being a copy of that guy’s guitar. Be better if it had bits of cardigan baked in. Maybe someday you be able to pick Elmer Jone’s wear. When you can pick the wear or randomize it, it’ll be better. That said, if it sounds amazing, I don’t care so much. I just don’t want to pay more for something I don’t really care about. I played one and it was a good guitar. Weird touching the wear and there’s nothing to feel. I’m not totally against it because I see potential.
Kurt played a lot of junk, it wasn't even his guitar. It was Mary Lou lords. Boston singer songwriter he was dating before Courtney. He didn't own a martin till the D-18E he bought to use on unplugged. She also let Elliot Smith use that guitar.
@Jaxparoh Doesn't that trigger a dance-off or a Highlander situation? Thinking of having buddies and musicians along the way sign the top... that would make it different and it'd be the only one it wouldn't bother me to do it with.
I like it. Sounds great and costs less than a gloss version. The look may be a bit over done with the wear patterns. Yet, it kind of adds a bit of a fun factor to it. I don’t think anyone would buy this thinking they will trick people into thinking they created the wear or that it’s an old guitar.
I have zero doubts about the "quality" of this instrument; U.S. made Martin guitars are always high quality. I just do not like it looking like a guitar that has been abused. Goodness, it doesn't even look like natural wear from use by playing. It makes zero sense to me. I would rather buy a new looking instrument, and age it the old fashion way by playing it. Then hand it down to a next generation. Personally, if I had the money, I would by a new Martin D-18 in satin finish. My least expensive guitar I own is an Eastman E1D that has a satin like finish. I do NOT have to constantly worry about scratching it like a glossy finish. Since I cannot afford to drop 3K for an instrument, my next purchase will probably be an Eastman E6D. I like the Eatman E10D, but I am not convinced the Adirondack top is worth the higher price tag. BTW - Who is Kurt Chobain?
@@DanielC__ Just purchased a new D-18 recently and, at 4 pounds, I am happy with the Nitro. It's my forever guitar and it'll break in on its own. The SL is a good price, but I am not into relicing either.
My D-18 SL is the lightest and most open sounding D-18 I have ever owned. I’ve owned 5 D-18’s now. One happened to be an authentic that didn’t play or sound as good. You know you have keeper when you thump on the soundboard and it thumps like a snare drum. This is the most vibrant top out of any Martin I’ve played.
Martin should have put a wide-saddle belly bridge on it and completed the look. It would have looked a bit closer to that 1940 mojo that they were shooting for. At least they got the Butter-bean tuners right, and the sizes of the dot inlays on the fingerboard. I'll be happy to stay with my 2002 D-18 GE.
My old 00-18G looks almost as bad as Willie's N 20. It has had a pretty tough life but I had Martin reset the bridge and glue cracks back in 2012. It is as light as a feather. But I am up in the air about the Street Legends ?? But I kinda like them!
There are so many satisfying old Martins from the 30's to the 60's. They can be a joy to play, you can hug its history, and will sound beautiful, come in all sorts of sizes, woods in playable condition and affordable to most musicians (unless you want a 37 D-18) who love old Martins. They are better investments too. Why buy that?
AESTHETICS: 0/5 - The embarrassing realization you bought the wrong Martin D-18 when 2 other guys show up at the same bluegrass jam and start playing next to you showcasing the THREE guitars with fake wear...
@@seancasey5024 I go all the time, have no idea if some other dudes use the same picks, cause ya can't see them. If you want to look like a poser with fake wear on your guitar that other dudes may show up with that's on you...I'd rather put the wear in it myself...
It's designed for me! That's why it's sitting right next to me! Can't say enough about the service and support from TAS. First class experience from start to finish. A guitar I'm much less concerned about the wear I'm going to apply and sounds Fantastic. You're right, it's a 5. Speaking of which... time to play! -JP
@BulldoggerJK Indeed. In fact, they started before it ever showed up. Now that it's here got a buddy driving up to play it. You know that one friend who owns all the nicest guitars.. in the market for a Boucher... why would they want to play this junk?
@@johnpaulragan9134 you have to play them all! I never pass up playing any guitar no matter price or how it looks. You just never know. I went on a little guitar safari this weekend. I can say the street legend I played was better than the two authentics I played.
@BulldoggerJK You could not be more CORRECT. This exact one in the video sounds awesome in person too. I don't mean the same model, I mean that serial number in his hands is sitting 3 feet away. Sounds and Plays GREAT. One of my closest friends says to his ear it sounds better than the Authentics he's played, etc., so he's coming up to play it. At the end of the day, he'll bring a car full of VERY expensive guitars that he hand picked... including that Boucher I'm sure he's about to buy (TAS lookout)... we'll pass guitars around and sing and play for two days and care very little about the look of that finish.
I actually love relics. Most people can’t afford vintage instruments and most modern instruments are finished so that they’ll never wear like the vintage ones have. I mean don’t get me wrong I’d love to say the wear was mine but I’ve seen 20 year old guitars that were not treated nicely that still look brand new. At this price point I wish you could have each guitar look a little different or maybe not be quite as worn. Also at this price point you’re gonna “print” on the relic??? No I’m out on that. But I do LOVE guitars that are either satin, or the gloss has been worn down or off. The less stuff on the wood the more it vibrates and the better it sounds.
My 1991 Martin D28S lefty, has a nasty wear area from a thumb pick. Also a lot of checking. Honestly, I wish it didn’t. But, it’s real. I still wish it wasn’t there. I will baby my D45 FOREVER, because I would be devastated if it showed wear.
I'm indifferent. I love Martin as a company, so I don't think they would ever introduce something they didn't believe in. I love the way guitars look new, and also when they have wear. I guess I just love guitars. I won't be buying one, but more because I'm not a dread guy than any aversion to the look or how that look is achieved.
It’s a little cringey. I would take the amber tone any day, but playing this would make me feel like an imposter. The technology is cool, but surely Martin could put it to better use.
I love relicing / antiquing on a guitar. Because of the feel. The look comes fromthe feeling of being worn in. If it still feels like a perfect new finish it would be abhorrent.
I'm not of a fan of reliced instruments, or "fautina" car finishes. If I could afford a vintage Martin, then I would take whatever wear it had earned. If I could afford a new one, I would want a new-looking one. Since neither option is realistic for me right now, I'm just bloviating. SO, to each their own, YMMV - and it's your money, so enjoy!
Kinda like those “pre-washed” jeans trying to look old but aren’t - which to me contradicts the Martin brand ethos of tradition and authenticity. By the way, I have 3 Martins, 2 from 1969 and one from 2005, so I’m old school.
@unclesham5507 lmao now you're reaching. He never used it live, so fuckin what? I'm not even a fan of Kurt Cobain. Did he use the unplugged guitar for anything else but that one show? Is it on any albums? Did he use it for any other live shows? Why is that his guitar but not the other?
So just because sometbing is technically possible doesn't make it a good idea. It's like painting scratches on a Jeep to give it that off-road look. Standard finish and honest wear for me.
Wondering why, if this is supposed to be an aged guitar, Martin decided to put the modern gold foil sticker on the headstock instead of the original decal, which I personally dislike enough to pass on any Martin that has the gold foil sticker. It just looks cheap and out of place to me.
First off, it sounds terrific, even a little aged IMO. Personally, I always say if I want a guitar to look old then I'll play it till it is but for a sound as good as this - at the price , It's a no brainer. And I'll just say if you're not keen, they're not forcing you to buy. Cheers, Ross
I could play the same guitar for 50 years and not cause half the wear that is supposed to represent. To save $400, I might consider getting the satin finish, but not this.
I'm not a fan of the relicing. It's a personal choice... if you like the look, have at it. That being said, I wouldn't buy a 1950's Ford pickup truck and have someone paint rust on it either, some like the patina. To each his own.
I'm torn... Sort of like Foto Flame they used to do faking flame maple. This is less of a deception because they aren't trying to make it look like better wood. It would be a little cooler if every top was different... If two of you show up with the same guitar it's a little like matching dresses at a formal event for women 😂
After seeing one in person I like it. Not sure I’d prefer it over a used D18 for that price but if buying new I’d probably get this or the satin for the same price. The printed on amber tone doesn’t do it for me though.. looks cheap.
For me those martins are a iconic American guitar I don't want to buy something that looks beat up to my eye I want to buy one and let it age with me just IMHO I don't like vintage guitars old wood and brittle glue things coming loose braces letting go finger board lifting um no not for me not counting the expense to keep a vintage guitars playable so me it just don't make sense I have a friend that's into vintage guitars something always needs fixing or reglued just saying.
I did, and you have to touch the top to realize that the worn finish isn’t real. It looks that real up close and has some killer mojo. I love playing mine
I love that Martin is doing a Satin finish on their flagship dreads at a lower price point. That shows that they seem to care about their customers amid the prevailing inflation challenges. This, however, is a dumb idea and a waste of a good Martin. If I could pick one up used for maybe $1,500 or less and sand the top down I might consider that path to a good bargain. But then again I don’t know how deep the ink penetrates the too
Why would I want an AI finish on a guitar, when I can just turn my Macbook on and AI my music and skip the Martin man, opps I Bidened that one. Skip the middle man😮😅
Just picked one up today and really dig it. Throwing some custom light strings on her as we speak (thumb). Traded my D-16 RGT in on it as it was too newish & sterile feeling. This piece has the look of vintage without the warped neck & ridiculous price, the sound of a D-18 and at a fantastic price ☝🏻😉
It's a marketing gimmick trying to make a new guitar look old. I don't know why they feel they have to do that. They don't compete with D-18 guitars that are really old because the real vintage old guitars could fetch like $30,000 or something... but that being said, if the guitar sounds good, then consider it. I have an HD28V where they put "aging toner" on it to make the guitar look old, but it was NOT the aging toner that was the deal maker, it was because the guitar was and still is one of the best guitars I have ever played.
The age toner was too inprove the sound mainly. That toner ages the wood for a age sound. No difference on these guitars. Why do you think they scalloped your guitar with forward bracing and called them prewar? Martin never used scalloped/ forward bracing on a Dred guitar in the USA ever. Until the late 60s and it was on a D-16. Then in the 70s scalloped they used it on the D-28. Later 70s they used forward. They used scalloped only to make guitars sound like old preward guitars. Preparing guitars don't have scalloped/forward bracing.Martin didn't use the bracing because they used adi tops and other woods. At that time Martin was scared of top cracking and splitting. Now, people complain don't know what they're complaining about. Lot of guitars made and names are just copy. They are ways too make them have a loud prewar sound, with a design prewar dreds didn't have scalloped/forward bracing. The Martin 000 German made guitars did.
No, if I buy a vintage guitar I'm not buying it for the "LOOKS" I'm buying it for the "SOUND" because those old martins just have an amazing tonal resonance that can't be faked because they were all HAND BUILT by ONE skilled luthier who took personal pride in the quality of their work and that is something that won't ever be matched again unless you purchase a $20000+ bespoke guitar!
Vintage Martin guitars were typically crafted by multiple skilled workers, similar to modern production, though the process was more artisanal. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Martin employed a small team of craftsmen who specialized in different tasks, such as shaping necks, bracing tops, or installing frets. Each guitar passed through several hands, but with much more manual labor and fewer machines involved than today. While not built by a single person, the smaller team and handcrafted approach gave each guitar a distinct character compared to modern assembly-line methods.
I felt the same until I saw it in person. It’s actually pretty cool. Plus, the fact that you can play it and forget about bumping it into shit, because it just adds to its personality if you do.
An absolutely silly idea. Shame on Martin for pandering to fakeness. Want your pricey guitar to look beat up, give it to your six-year-old for a couple of hours…
Martin uses the grocery store scheme to create numerous models to crowd the competitors off the shelves. Same for Taylor. There are infinite combinations of letters and numbers to create model designations. So now we have a digitally recreated “old” D18? Hmm….
And you can have the so called SATIN finish too. Satin finish necks suck too! My blind bandmate has a 68 D35 that doesnt look this trashed. Im for GLOSS everytime. But Taylor is over priced, over rated and Over HERE!!!
Fake wear is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Paying 2,399 for it is sheer insanity. Btw, 2,399 is not a bargain. These guitars aren't worth half of that considering what you can get from other guitars at the same price. Martins, Taylors, and Gibsons being sold at the prices they are is a joke. It's no different than the fashion world. People are paying for brand name, not quality for price.
This will go down as a failure for Martin. Big L. It’s not even a relic it’s a print, it’s not going to age naturally like this at all, and it’s not even a Headstart on the aging process like some relic is. They should have a strong position at Martin to encourage people to buy their guitars and keep them forever and play them hard. That’s what Martin is.
The aging, in person, looks awful. There’s no reason to do it by printing except that it saves them money. Get an Atkin and get wear done right if you want an aged looking guitar.
This will go down as a failure for Martin. Big L. It’s not even a relic it’s a print, it’s not going to age naturally like this at all, and it’s not even a Headstart on the aging process like some relic is.
So they made it look Relic when it's not really Relic ? Just so I can understand ! So someone can pretend to have to have a Pre - whatever guitar ? Why not get a regular finish and wear it in by playing yourself ? People doing the same thing with electrics .. Have you looked at what people are doing to there bodies ? I hate the Botox affect and the Donald Duck lips..
The finish is fake, no getting round it. Shame for all the genuine, natural wood on it. Why pretend your brand new guitar is old and battered, when a quick look shows it’s nothing of the sort. Sounds like the two of you are just salesmen, obliged to say nice things about fakes.
Have you seen one? No you haven't. In person you can't tell it isn't old. It has a old open sound also. Sounds very vintage. They play very good. Buying that is no different they you buying a so called aged toner or man made aged top. I'm not in to buying for looks of old, but those guitars are cannons. Specially when they open up. They will knocked your socks off. They are light and project.
I played one of those and it was fantastic. I loved it
I don't mind "aging" if it is aged the way I play. I have a 1968 dreadnought, my first guitar, and I know what it looks like after being played by me for 50+ years. I acquired a single owner 1974 A Loprinzi LM-15 ( a Jersey Martin) and it is similar in light aging, like a closet relic. So "new old stock" or closet relic work for me. That aside, I purchased a Martin 000-16 Street Master (Adirondack-Rosewood) that sounds and plays great. They used this stain-finish printer to make it look well used by somebody other than I. I like the thin finish, but not the look. Luckily, I don't see it when playing. I have other guitars with aged finish (like Eastman E22SS-V-sb). I prefer to add dings and dents on my own. Thanks, John and Jeremy.
Agree. I own an OMC16e Ovangkol, a D35 an a D12-28 currently and I have owned a D16e and a 000M in the past.
I have seen these SLs in the shop and have not been tempted to even pick it up.
I was just playing my 1971 J50 before I watched this video. Bought it new and aged it along with me.
But my favorite is the 2019 OMC16e. Ovangkol top, back and sides.. Very balanced tone. Perfect feel in the hand.
The bro with mandolin cracks me up. “Smells like someone who doesn’t have teen spirit”, “I can’t wait to get my kids face printed on it, the dog…” 🤣
For a brief moment I looked at one 3 months ago, opted for the standard satin and love it. As mentioned in the video, the satin finishes have somewhat of a broke in sound right out of the box. I’ll relic this one my way, with good old fashioned playing.
Yep it's an "olive" thing. You either love it or hate them.
I'm a relatively careful, non-gigging musician. By "careful" what I mean is that, despite my aggressive, intense picking style, I don't move my arm in a sawing motion. Any picking energy is translated to the string, not the soundboard (I don't pick in a way that scratches/wears against the top). I also pick gently for softer playing. After watching the tone sample, my picking style is identical to John's with my remaining three fingers loosely floating over the pickguard preventing errant pick motion to the soundboard.
I would prefer to have any wear be the wear I put on it. I understand this is a finish and not a distressed instrument.
I can't look past the finish. I could easily enjoy the sound and playing experience for something like this. I would not choose to purchase a guitar that looked like this unless the price was exceptionally compelling.
Yes! LOL.
That guitar really sounds good. We have an old, 57, J-50 that looks about like that one and smells like it had a smoking problem and it's a hoss of a guitar... I really dig the old look and would like to look at one up close, but think it looks cool on the video anyway. As always, great video guys!
do you sell it?
I love my d18 StreetLegend. Such a great guitar and at a cost savings from the gloss one.i will never be able to afford a prewar d18 so this guitar is as close as I can get.
I have this guitar and it plays and sounds perfect.
I’m undecided and a little confused about it. I wouldn’t be excited about another guy walking in with a guitar and the “wear” is exactly the same. They need to somehow randomize the wear so every guitar isn’t a Kurt Cobain copy or the other two. I’m even less excited about it being a copy of that guy’s guitar. Be better if it had bits of cardigan baked in. Maybe someday you be able to pick Elmer Jone’s wear. When you can pick the wear or randomize it, it’ll be better. That said, if it sounds amazing, I don’t care so much. I just don’t want to pay more for something I don’t really care about. I played one and it was a good guitar. Weird touching the wear and there’s nothing to feel. I’m not totally against it because I see potential.
I like the randomized idea quite a bit. Something interesting going on with that finish, sounds at least as good in person.
I agree, imagine showing up at a jam and seeing the same wear on 2 or 3 guitars. Kinda odd
Kurt played a lot of junk, it wasn't even his guitar. It was Mary Lou lords. Boston singer songwriter he was dating before Courtney. He didn't own a martin till the D-18E he bought to use on unplugged. She also let Elliot Smith use that guitar.
@Jaxparoh Doesn't that trigger a dance-off or a Highlander situation? Thinking of having buddies and musicians along the way sign the top... that would make it different and it'd be the only one it wouldn't bother me to do it with.
love the looks of the street legend. reminds me of lester Flatts old d18.
Me parece interesante ese acabado. Me surge una duda.¿tapa la beta real de la madera?
For those not aware, this guitar's relic'ing consists of a silk screen top. It's not aged like the authentics
Coming to a Goodwill by you!
I like it. Sounds great and costs less than a gloss version. The look may be a bit over done with the wear patterns. Yet, it kind of adds a bit of a fun factor to it.
I don’t think anyone would buy this thinking they will trick people into thinking they created the wear or that it’s an old guitar.
I have zero doubts about the "quality" of this instrument; U.S. made Martin guitars are always high quality. I just do not like it looking like a guitar that has been abused. Goodness, it doesn't even look like natural wear from use by playing. It makes zero sense to me. I would rather buy a new looking instrument, and age it the old fashion way by playing it. Then hand it down to a next generation. Personally, if I had the money, I would by a new Martin D-18 in satin finish. My least expensive guitar I own is an Eastman E1D that has a satin like finish. I do NOT have to constantly worry about scratching it like a glossy finish. Since I cannot afford to drop 3K for an instrument, my next purchase will probably be an Eastman E6D. I like the Eatman E10D, but I am not convinced the Adirondack top is worth the higher price tag. BTW - Who is Kurt Chobain?
I myself would never buy a NEW guitar that looks like that.
Well said!
Me either. I despise the fake relic look.
@@DanielC__ Just purchased a new D-18 recently and, at 4 pounds, I am happy with the Nitro. It's my forever guitar and it'll break in on its own. The SL is a good price, but I am not into relicing either.
@@boomboxxhero9362you mean the binding will break on its own 😂
love em, have a d28 SL, my next D 18 will be a Street Legend.
My D-18 SL is the lightest and most open sounding D-18 I have ever owned. I’ve owned 5 D-18’s now. One happened to be an authentic that didn’t play or sound as good. You know you have keeper when you thump on the soundboard and it thumps like a snare drum. This is the most vibrant top out of any Martin I’ve played.
I like to antique them myself. Sounds good though. I have a 2014 that I love and it’s spotless outside the ding I put on it the first day 😂.
I wonder what those street legend guitars will look like when they get real scratches, dents and wear on top of the altered tops?
I used to work in the film industry as a scenic artist, and aging things is very easy. Basically, a bad paint job is an excellent choice for relic.
I like this, a lot.
This is the kind of video I’d make if I wanted to move inventory that wasn’t selling.
Martin should have put a wide-saddle belly bridge on it and completed the look. It would have looked a bit closer to that 1940 mojo that they were shooting for. At least they got the Butter-bean tuners right, and the sizes of the dot inlays on the fingerboard. I'll be happy to stay with my 2002 D-18 GE.
If you like it, buy it, if you don’t like it, don’t buy it.. no one is forcing anyone to buy this 🤷♂️
I wonder how that finish is going to look in several years when it begins to show actual wear like what is printed on it now.
@@imjason75 that’s a great question! How’s a real scratch going to look next to a fake scratch?
@@imjason75 imagine it’ll look even cooler
@@imjason75 Good question
It is so beautiful!!!
It’s passes the tone test with flying colors, people will probably really like these in a few years. Imo
I like well done relic guitars,takes all the pressure off of treating a brand new guitar like a baby's head. You can just get right to playing it.
For that $$$ i picked up a 2014 D28 Custom in #1 condition.... its my Forever Guitar!!!!
Price: I would prefer the price Jihn quoted at $2,399 compared to the $2,799 on their website. So what is the price?
$2,399 is the price on Martin's site, so I assume that's the actual price at The Acoustic Shoppe
My old 00-18G looks almost as bad as Willie's N 20. It has had a pretty tough life but I had Martin reset the bridge and glue cracks back in 2012. It is as light as a feather.
But I am up in the air about the Street Legends ?? But I kinda like them!
There are so many satisfying old Martins from the 30's to the 60's. They can be a joy to play, you can hug its history, and will sound beautiful, come in all sorts of sizes, woods in playable condition and affordable to most musicians (unless you want a 37 D-18) who love old Martins. They are better investments too. Why buy that?
Good luck finding a good condition D-18 built before 1970 and it will be twice the price of this one.
AESTHETICS: 0/5 - The embarrassing realization you bought the wrong Martin D-18 when 2 other guys show up at the same bluegrass jam and start playing next to you showcasing the THREE guitars with fake wear...
Don’t go to bluegrass jams?
@@seancasey5024 Not with a guitar that has the exact same wear pattern as three other dudes...that's stupid.
@@WysteriaGuitar So.. You will use the same guitar picks potentially also. Will that also make you not want to go?
@@seancasey5024 I go all the time, have no idea if some other dudes use the same picks, cause ya can't see them. If you want to look like a poser with fake wear on your guitar that other dudes may show up with that's on you...I'd rather put the wear in it myself...
I have a golden era D-18, I like the sound of the street legend a great deal. I am not sure that I would buy this one.
It's a great sounding guitar! I really like the all satin ones
It's designed for me! That's why it's sitting right next to me! Can't say enough about the service and support from TAS. First class experience from start to finish. A guitar I'm much less concerned about the wear I'm going to apply and sounds Fantastic. You're right, it's a 5. Speaking of which... time to play!
-JP
@@johnpaulragan9134 congrats! You’re definitely going to have some great conversations about it.
@BulldoggerJK Indeed. In fact, they started before it ever showed up. Now that it's here got a buddy driving up to play it. You know that one friend who owns all the nicest guitars.. in the market for a Boucher... why would they want to play this junk?
@@johnpaulragan9134 you have to play them all! I never pass up playing any guitar no matter price or how it looks. You just never know. I went on a little guitar safari this weekend. I can say the street legend I played was better than the two authentics I played.
@BulldoggerJK You could not be more CORRECT. This exact one in the video sounds awesome in person too. I don't mean the same model, I mean that serial number in his hands is sitting 3 feet away. Sounds and Plays GREAT. One of my closest friends says to his ear it sounds better than the Authentics he's played, etc., so he's coming up to play it. At the end of the day, he'll bring a car full of VERY expensive guitars that he hand picked... including that Boucher I'm sure he's about to buy (TAS lookout)... we'll pass guitars around and sing and play for two days and care very little about the look of that finish.
I actually love relics. Most people can’t afford vintage instruments and most modern instruments are finished so that they’ll never wear like the vintage ones have. I mean don’t get me wrong I’d love to say the wear was mine but I’ve seen 20 year old guitars that were not treated nicely that still look brand new. At this price point I wish you could have each guitar look a little different or maybe not be quite as worn. Also at this price point you’re gonna “print” on the relic??? No I’m out on that. But I do LOVE guitars that are either satin, or the gloss has been worn down or off. The less stuff on the wood the more it vibrates and the better it sounds.
This guitar is perfect for people that buy their jeans with holes already in them.
My 1991 Martin D28S lefty, has a nasty wear area from a thumb pick. Also a lot of checking. Honestly, I wish it didn’t. But, it’s real. I still wish it wasn’t there. I will baby my D45 FOREVER, because I would be devastated if it showed wear.
I'm indifferent. I love Martin as a company, so I don't think they would ever introduce something they didn't believe in. I love the way guitars look new, and also when they have wear. I guess I just love guitars. I won't be buying one, but more because I'm not a dread guy than any aversion to the look or how that look is achieved.
It’s a little cringey. I would take the amber tone any day, but playing this would make me feel like an imposter. The technology is cool, but surely Martin could put it to better use.
There’s a relic buyer born every minute.
Semper Fi
😂 C'mon brother, just enjoy the jam and don't set your cigar on my case.
Semper P
I love relicing / antiquing on a guitar. Because of the feel. The look comes fromthe feeling of being worn in. If it still feels like a perfect new finish it would be abhorrent.
A bluegrass cannon.
I'd like an aged guitar looking like Del McCourys!
D-18
I'm not of a fan of reliced instruments, or "fautina" car finishes. If I could afford a vintage Martin, then I would take whatever wear it had earned. If I could afford a new one, I would want a new-looking one. Since neither option is realistic for me right now, I'm just bloviating. SO, to each their own, YMMV - and it's your money, so enjoy!
I don’t dislike the finish but would get tired of explaining it every time someone asks how old the guitar is.🤷🏻♂️
Kinda like those “pre-washed” jeans trying to look old but aren’t - which to me contradicts the Martin brand ethos of tradition and authenticity.
By the way, I have 3 Martins, 2 from 1969 and one from 2005, so I’m old school.
Fun fact is the wear pattern was scanned from Kurt Cobain’s Martin.
That wasn't his. It was Mary Lou lords. He didn't own a martin till he bought the D-18E used on unplugged. Wasn't Kurt's guitar.
@unclesham5507 he played it for a time. It's the acoustic used on nevermind.
It was also in the hands or Elliot Smith at one point.
Don't be a snob.
He never used it live. And yes Elliot used it to. Moral of the story is never take a guitar from Mary Lou lol
@unclesham5507 lmao now you're reaching. He never used it live, so fuckin what?
I'm not even a fan of Kurt Cobain.
Did he use the unplugged guitar for anything else but that one show? Is it on any albums? Did he use it for any other live shows?
Why is that his guitar but not the other?
not true. he played it once but it belonged to mary lou.
So just because sometbing is technically possible doesn't make it a good idea. It's like painting scratches on a Jeep to give it that off-road look. Standard finish and honest wear for me.
Wondering why, if this is supposed to be an aged guitar, Martin decided to put the modern gold foil sticker on the headstock instead of the original decal, which I personally dislike enough to pass on any Martin that has the gold foil sticker. It just looks cheap and out of place to me.
200$ Corts have their logo inlaid in PEARL!
This tradition is RIDICULOUS.
great
it may have been better if they just sprayed a flash coat over the aging toner and it would have aged quicker instead of a photo like top .
"select hardwood" neck
First off, it sounds terrific, even a little aged IMO.
Personally, I always say if I want a guitar to look old then I'll play it till it is but for a sound as good as this - at the price , It's a no brainer.
And I'll just say if you're not keen, they're not forcing you to buy.
Cheers, Ross
The only time I would by a street legend is if it sounded way better than a standard
It does sound way more open and woody
Same as wearing pre-torn denim. Makes a white collar desk jockey pretend to be a blue collar tradesman. 🤪
Uh no, not for me but to each their own
I could play the same guitar for 50 years and not cause half the wear that is supposed to represent. To save $400, I might consider getting the satin finish, but not this.
I'm not a fan of the relicing. It's a personal choice... if you like the look, have at it. That being said, I wouldn't buy a 1950's Ford pickup truck and have someone paint rust on it either, some like the patina. To each his own.
Its photo printing the top finish.
I'm torn... Sort of like Foto Flame they used to do faking flame maple. This is less of a deception because they aren't trying to make it look like better wood. It would be a little cooler if every top was different...
If two of you show up with the same guitar it's a little like matching dresses at a formal event for women 😂
A lot cheaper than a Prewar reliced guitar. 😊
I like the look actually. I am happy with the D-18 that I already own but I would consider this if I was looking to buy one.
I seen them in the store. I thought they were trade in used.
Pretty convincing for sure!
How come people are attracted to relic’d guitars is a mistery to me
The aged sound.
After seeing one in person I like it. Not sure I’d prefer it over a used D18 for that price but if buying new I’d probably get this or the satin for the same price. The printed on amber tone doesn’t do it for me though.. looks cheap.
For me those martins are a iconic American guitar I don't want to buy something that looks beat up to my eye I want to buy one and let it age with me just IMHO I don't like vintage guitars old wood and brittle glue things coming loose braces letting go finger board lifting um no not for me not counting the expense to keep a vintage guitars playable so me it just don't make sense I have a friend that's into vintage guitars something always needs fixing or reglued just saying.
PSA: Make sure you see one in person before you buy one.
I did, and you have to touch the top to realize that the worn finish isn’t real. It looks that real up close and has some killer mojo. I love playing mine
@@seancasey5024 nice👍🏻
I love that Martin is doing a Satin finish on their flagship dreads at a lower price point. That shows that they seem to care about their customers amid the prevailing inflation challenges. This, however, is a dumb idea and a waste of a good Martin. If I could pick one up used for maybe $1,500 or less and sand the top down I might consider that path to a good bargain. But then again I don’t know how deep the ink penetrates the too
I'm ok with relic guitars ... I own a 56 Strat Custom Shop Relic. I wouldn't want a relic guitar that's identical to 10,000 other relic guitars.
Looks like some Martin sap poured acup of Clorox Bleach on
sound board!!! I wanna guitar that I tear hel outta
The original is named “Grandpa” and Kurt did not own it. It belonged to his girlfriend.
Why would I want an AI finish on a guitar, when I can just turn my Macbook on and AI my music and skip the Martin man, opps I Bidened that one. Skip the middle man😮😅
Just picked one up today and really dig it. Throwing some custom light strings on her as we speak (thumb). Traded my D-16 RGT in on it as it was too newish & sterile feeling. This piece has the look of vintage without the warped neck & ridiculous price, the sound of a D-18 and at a fantastic price ☝🏻😉
It's a marketing gimmick trying to make a new guitar look old. I don't know why they feel they have to do that. They don't compete with D-18 guitars that are really old because the real vintage old guitars could fetch like $30,000 or something... but that being said, if the guitar sounds good, then consider it. I have an HD28V where they put "aging toner" on it to make the guitar look old, but it was NOT the aging toner that was the deal maker, it was because the guitar was and still is one of the best guitars I have ever played.
The age toner was too inprove the sound mainly. That toner ages the wood for a age sound. No difference on these guitars. Why do you think they scalloped your guitar with forward bracing and called them prewar? Martin never used scalloped/ forward bracing on a Dred guitar in the USA ever. Until the late 60s and it was on a D-16. Then in the 70s scalloped they used it on the D-28. Later 70s they used forward. They used scalloped only to make guitars sound like old preward guitars. Preparing guitars don't have scalloped/forward bracing.Martin didn't use the bracing because they used adi tops and other woods. At that time Martin was scared of top cracking and splitting. Now, people complain don't know what they're complaining about. Lot of guitars made and names are just copy. They are ways too make them have a loud prewar sound, with a design prewar dreds didn't have scalloped/forward bracing. The Martin 000 German made guitars did.
Does it have the new neck shape? Too much like a Taylor or something in my opinion. I like the fat old v shaped necks.
No, if I buy a vintage guitar I'm not buying it for the "LOOKS" I'm buying it for the "SOUND" because those old martins just have an amazing tonal resonance that can't be faked because they were all HAND BUILT by ONE skilled luthier who took personal pride in the quality of their work and that is something that won't ever be matched again unless you purchase a $20000+ bespoke guitar!
Vintage Martin guitars were typically crafted by multiple skilled workers, similar to modern production, though the process was more artisanal. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Martin employed a small team of craftsmen who specialized in different tasks, such as shaping necks, bracing tops, or installing frets. Each guitar passed through several hands, but with much more manual labor and fewer machines involved than today. While not built by a single person, the smaller team and handcrafted approach gave each guitar a distinct character compared to modern assembly-line methods.
If you like it and it's your sound, buy it. I can't stand that inauthentic look.
I think most guitars are way over priced !!!
I predict Martin will discontinue this fake age finish. Maybe they will be cheaper on used market.
Fake relic? No way, never, forget it, don’t want it. 🤮
Your loss
I felt the same until I saw it in person.
It’s actually pretty cool.
Plus, the fact that you can play it and forget about bumping it into shit, because it just adds to its personality if you do.
@@MrBillwynn Its my loss but I can live with it. Id rather do it myself vs having it faked.
An absolutely silly idea. Shame on Martin for pandering to fakeness. Want your pricey guitar to look beat up, give it to your six-year-old for a couple of hours…
Martin uses the grocery store scheme to create numerous models to crowd the competitors off the shelves. Same for Taylor. There are infinite combinations of letters and numbers to create model designations. So now we have a digitally recreated “old” D18? Hmm….
And you can have the so called SATIN finish too. Satin finish
necks suck too! My blind bandmate has a 68 D35 that doesnt
look this trashed. Im for GLOSS everytime. But Taylor is over
priced, over rated and Over HERE!!!
Fake wear is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Paying 2,399 for it is sheer insanity. Btw, 2,399 is not a bargain. These guitars aren't worth half of that considering what you can get from other guitars at the same price. Martins, Taylors, and Gibsons being sold at the prices they are is a joke. It's no different than the fashion world. People are paying for brand name, not quality for price.
This will go down as a failure for Martin. Big L. It’s not even a relic it’s a print, it’s not going to age naturally like this at all, and it’s not even a Headstart on the aging process like some relic is. They should have a strong position at Martin to encourage people to buy their guitars and keep them forever and play them hard. That’s what Martin is.
The aging, in person, looks awful. There’s no reason to do it by printing except that it saves them money. Get an Atkin and get wear done right if you want an aged looking guitar.
This will go down as a failure for Martin. Big L. It’s not even a relic it’s a print, it’s not going to age naturally like this at all, and it’s not even a Headstart on the aging process like some relic is.
That guitar is an embarrassment
So are you
So they made it look Relic when it's not really Relic ? Just so I can understand ! So someone can pretend to have to have a Pre - whatever guitar ? Why not get a regular finish and wear it in by playing yourself ? People doing the same thing with electrics .. Have you looked at what people are doing to there bodies ?
I hate the Botox affect and the Donald Duck lips..
The finish is fake, no getting round it. Shame for all the genuine, natural wood on it. Why pretend your brand new guitar is old and battered, when a quick look shows it’s nothing of the sort. Sounds like the two of you are just salesmen, obliged to say nice things about fakes.
Have you seen one? No you haven't. In person you can't tell it isn't old. It has a old open sound also. Sounds very vintage. They play very good. Buying that is no different they you buying a so called aged toner or man made aged top. I'm not in to buying for looks of old, but those guitars are cannons. Specially when they open up. They will knocked your socks off. They are light and project.
Relic guitars are CRAP!
Really, just go play your nut and bolt Taylor junk.