Video by Stephen Lane
Lisätiedot: Musamaailma
Kitarablogi.com – Finland's premier Guitar and Bass blog
Juttuja kitaroista ja bassoista
This review could also carry the headline: ”Tanglewood brings vintage to the masses”. Tanglewood’s Sundance Historic guitars have been designed to give you plenty of that ”pre-war” charm at very player-friendly prices. Take the two models on review, for example, which have price tags well below 700 Euros, despite even coming with on-board Fishman pickups and preamps!
The TW40O-AN-E and the TW40D-AN-E are both quite reminiscent of certain legendary Martin-models from the 1930s and 40s.
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The Tanglewood TW40O–AN-E (current price in Finland 673 €) is the Sundance Historic series’ version of a Martin OM-18 model – the first Martin steel-string acoustic to feature a neck joint at the 14th fret when it was introduced in the Thirties.
Tanglewood’s TW40D-AN-E (673 €) is a tip of the hat to Martin’s D-18, which is the most copied, most referenced steel-string of all time. Even Gibson went out and bought a Martin in 1960, so they could use it to reverse engineer their own Hummingbird and Dove models.
Both of these models can also be had without the pickup system for 598 Euros each.
The necks of the TW40O and the TW40D have been built in the traditional fashion employed on classical guitars:
The neck is a one-piece mahogany affair – headstock and all – save for a separate, glued-on neck heel.
The bodies are crafted using solid spruce tops and laminated mahogany rims and backs.
The ”AN” in the model designation hints at the beautiful Antique Natural finish of these Historic Series instruments.
The nut is genuine bovine bone.
The machine heads are very decent copies of 1930s open-geared Grovers. They do a great job of keeping the tuning stable, but their action is a little bit stiffer than what you’re used to with modern die-cast tuners.
The slender and small frets fit the vintage brief of the TW40O and TW40D to a tee.
Here’s a good example of how different two pieces of rosewood can look:
The reviewed TW40O-AN-E’s bridge is a nicely-grained light example…
…while the dreadnought carries a much darker counterpart.
The compensated bridge saddle is genuine bone on both instruments.
Both Sundance Historics have been equipped with a Fishman Sonitone pickup and preamp.
The piezo transducer sits beneath the bridge saddle and feeds its signal to the preamp – featuring master volume and master tone controls – that has been glued to the underside of the soundhole’s bass side edge. The Sonitone is powered by a 9 V battery, which is stowed away in its own pouch that is velcro’d to the neck block. The downside is that changing the battery is a much more involved affair than with a quick change battery compartment, but the advantage of this Fishman system is that it doesn’t spoil the guitar’s looks.
Both Tanglewoods sport an end pin output jack.
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The care that has quite obviously gone into building these two Tanglewood Sundance Historic guitars really puts a smile on your face. The workmanship is clean and precise, and both instruments look more expensive than they really are.
Even though both guitars are from the 500-800 Euro price bracket, Tanglewood have gone the extra mile to match the wood grain on the sides of both guitars. The tops of the shoulders look bookmatched.
The vintage brief extends to more than simple cosmetics on the TW40O-AN-E:
Vintage OM-guitars (OM stands for Orchestra Model) are known for their slightly wider necks with soft V-profiles. You will also often find a slightly wider string spacing at the bridge, which makes fingerstyle playing much easier.
Tanglewood has used these vintage specifications for their Sundance Historic OM:
The neck has a very nice, soft V-profile, with a width at the top nut of 46 mm. The low E to top e spacing at the bridge is a very comfy 58 mm, which is good news for fingerpickers, working equally well with a plectrum.
The TW40O plays like a dream with a nice set-up on our review sample (string height at the 12th fret: bass-E – 2.1 mm/treble-e – 1.9 mm).
There a lot of debate about the pros and cons of solid backs in acoustic guitars. Some claim that a solid back is almost as important as a solid top in a steel-string acoustic, while others point to the use of laminated backs in the legendary Selmer-Maccaferri guitars (and newer exponents of the Gypsy Jazz genre) or to the great sound of arched-back vintage Guilds.
My own position in this debate is that most (but not all) guitars with laminated backs a bit quieter and drier-sounding than their all-solid brethren. Nevertheless, I feel that a solid top and an overall well-crafted instrument are much more important to the sound as a whole.
An OM-sized steel-string will have a ”sweeter”, less bass-heavy tone than a Dreadnought of similar build, which is due in large part to its smaller and differently-shaped body.
Tanglewood’s TW40O has the trademark OM-sound – the guitar’s voice is open and well-balanced, with a projection akin to that of a Dreadnought, and it is very easy to record and place in a mix.
These two clips have been recorded with a pair of Shure SM57 microphones:
Fishman’s Sonitone system is a decent and easy-to-use choice to amplify your guitar on stage with the least amount of hassle:
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The original aims in designing the Dreadnought were the need for more volume and a fatter bass register. At first Martin’s D-models were aimed squarely at the ”singing cowboys”, which were so popular in the US in the 1930s and 40s. These musicians, such as Gene Autry or Hank Williams, needed loud guitars that would build a strong foundation for their vocals. This is what started the phenomenal success of the D-model, making it fairly ubiquitous in most genres of music.
Tanglewood’s TW40D-AN-E is a well-made homage to a 1930s-style D-18, both in terms of looks and sound.
The TW40D’s neck is virtually identical to the one on the TW40O – a nice soft-V affair, which is slightly wider and bigger than the neck on many contemporary steel-strings.
The craftsmanship displayed on this D is of the same high standard as on the reviewed OM, really leaving nothing to be desired in terms of the TW40D’s playability and set-up (bass-E: 2.2 mm/top-e: 1.7 mm).
We all know how a Dreadnought should sound: a big bottom end, coupled with a warm mid-range and chiming treble.
The Tanglewood TW40D doesn’t disappoint:
Fishman’s Sonitone system also works very well in the context of the TW40D-AN-E-model:
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In my opinion Tanglewood’s TW40O-AN-E and TW40D-AN-E really do offer something special in their price range:
Here we have a pair of steel-string acoustics at player-friendly prices, which take the terms ”vintage” and ”historic” above and beyond mere cosmetics. Thanks to the ”vintage correct” neck dimensions and neck profiles of these two instruments, and the wider string spacing, genuinely vintage-feeling guitars become available without custom shop price tags.
These are well-made, great-sounding guitars. Too bad I have to give them back…
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Tanglewood Sundance Historic
TW40O-AN-E – 673 €
TW40D-AN-E – 673 €
Finnish distributor: Musamaailma
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Pros:
+ value-for-money
+ workmanship
+ authentic neck profile
+ playability
+ Fishman pickup and preamp
+ sound
Tämän jutun otsikko voisi myös olla: ”Tanglewood tuo vintagea kaikkien soittajien ulottuville”. Sundance Historic -kitaroissa on nimittäin paljon vanhan ajan hohtoa, vaikka niiden hinnat pysyvät – jopa mikitettyinä – selvästi alle 700 euroa!
Kitarablogi sai testiin kaksi soitinta – TW40O-AN-E ja TW40D-AN-E – jotka muistuttavat erehdyttävästi kahta legendaarista Martin-mallia.
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Tanglewood TW40O–AN-E (673 €) on Sundance Historic -sarjan kunnianosoitus Martin OM-18 -kitaralle, joka oli 1930-luvulla ensimmäinen teräskielinen, jolla oli kaulaliitos 14. nauhan kohdalla.
Tanglewood TW40D-AN-E (673 €) on saman sarjan versio Martin D-18 -mallista, joka on kopioiduin teräskielinen akustinen kautta aikojen – jopa Gibsonin Hummingbird- ja Dove-mallit kopioitiin suoraan musiikkiliikkeestä ostetulta Martin-kitaralta!
Molemmat Tanglewoodit saa myös ilman mikitystä 598 eurolla.
TW40O:ssa ja TW40D:ssä on espanjalaisessa tyylissä rakennettu kaula, mikä tarkoittaa että kaula ja viritinlapa ovat yhdestä mahonkipalasta veistettyjä, vaan kaulakorko on lisätty jälkikäteen.
Kaikukoppa taas on tehty kokopuisesta kuusikannesta ja mahonkivanerisista sivuista ja pohjasta.
Mallitunnuksen kirjainyhdistelmä ”AN” viitaa Historic-mallien kauniiseen, kellertävään ja kiiltävään viimeistelyyn (Antique Natural).
Näissä Tanglewoodeissa yläsatula on aitoa luuta.
Virittimet ovat 1930-luvun Grover-koneistojen kopioita, jotka pitävät vireen todella hyvin, mutta ovat käytössä hieman nykyaikaisia virittimiä jäykempiä.
Myös TW40O:n ja TW40D:n sirot nauhat sopivat näiden soittimien vintage-tunnelmaan täydellisesti.
Hyvä esimerkki ruusupuun ulkonäön vaihtelevuudesta:
Tässä testissä käyneen TW40O-AN-E:n vaaleampi talla…
…ja tässä D-mallin tummempi vastine.
Molemmissa kompensoitu tallaluu on aitoa luuta.
Testatuissa Sundance Historic -soittimissa on helppokäyttöinen Fishman Sonitone -mikitys.
Pietsomikki on sijoitettu tallaluun alle, kun taas etuvahvistin säätimineen (volume ja tone) on liimattu ääniaukon yläreunan alle. Yhdeksän voltin paristo istuu omassa kotelossa, joka on kiinnitetty kaulablokkiin. Pariston vaihtaminen ääniaukon kautta on hieman hankalampi kuin kopan reunan läpi kiinnitetyissä paristolokeroissa, mutta isona etuna tässä on koko systeemin näkymättömyys.
Lähtöjakki on molemmissa malleissa yhdistetty hihnatappiin.
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On todella ilahduttavaa nähdä kuinka huolellisesti nämä kaksi Tanglewood Sundance Historic -kitaraa on tehty. Työnjälki on erittäin siisti ja viimeistely laadukas ja kaunis.
Vaikka näissä kahdessa soittimessa on kyse 500-800 euron hintaluokan teräskielisistä Tanglewoodeista, on molemmissa testikitaroissa sivujen syykuviot sovitettu yhteen, että sivujen ”hartiat” näyttävät bookmatch-peilikuvilta!
Vintage-motto ulottuu TW40O-AN-E:ssä huomattavasti pidemmälle kuin pelkästään kosmetiikkaan:
Vanhat OM-kitarat (Orchestra Model) tunnetaan siitä, että niissä on aavistuksen leveämpi, pehmeästi V-muotoinen kaulaprofiili. Myös kielten keskeinen etäisyys tallan kohdalla on usein pikkuisen isompi kuin monissa nykyaikaisissa soittimissa, mikä tekee sormisoitosta mukavamman.
Tanglewood on käyttänyt tähän Sundance Historic -malliin juuri näitä ”oikeita” vanhoja mittoja. Kaulaprofiili on pehmeä V, ja kaulan leveys on satulan kohdalla 46 mm. E-kielten etäisyys tallassa taas on ilmavat 58 milliä – kitara siis tarjoaa mukavasti tilaa sormisoitolle, mutta myös plektran käyttö onnistuu ongelmitta.
TW40O:n soitettavuus on ensiluokkaista, ja kitara saapui testiin loistavassa trimmissä (kielten korkeus 12. nauhan kohdalla: basso-E – 2,1 mm/diskantti-e – 1,9 mm).
Kitarapiireissä keskustelu täyspuisen pohjan tärkeydestä teräskielisen kitaran sointiin käy edelleen kuumana. Joidenkin mielestä kokopuinen pohja on lähes yhtä tärkeä kuin täyspuinen kansi, toiset taas viittaavat erittäin laadukkaisiin Selmer-Maccaferri-kitaroihin (Gypsy Jazz -kitarat) tai vanhoihin Guild-soittimiin, joissa on vaneripohja.
Oma näkemykseni tähän kiistakysymykseen on, että vanerista tehty pohja on usein (mutta ei aina) aavistuksen verran hiljaisempi ja soundiltaan hivenen verran kuivempi kuin kokopuinen vastine. Pidän kuitenkin teräskielisen kitaran yleissoundin kannalta huomattavasti tärkeämpänä, että kansi on täyspuinen ja että soittimen koko rakenne on laadukas ja terve.
OM-kokoisen teräskielisen pääerot dreadnoughtiin nähden ovat sen pienempi koppa ja OM-kitaran siistimpi bassorekisteri, joka tekee soittimesta erittäin helpon äänittää.
Tanglewood TW40O:lla on malliesimerkki OM-soundista – kitaran ääni on avoin, sen projektio lähes D-mallin luokkaa, ja se istuu äänitettynä erittäin nätisti miksauksissa.
Nämä kaksi esimerkkiä on äänitetty Shure SM57 -mikrofoneilla:
Fishman Sonitone -pietsojärjestelmä on hyvä ja helppokäyttöinen valinta, josta lähtee hyvin terve pietsosoundi livekäyttöä varten:
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Alkuperäisen dreadnought-kitaran lähtökohdat olivat volyymi ja reilunkokoinen bassorekisteri. Alkuperäinen kohderyhmä olivat 1930- ja 40-luvulla Yhdysvalloissa hyvin suositut ”laulavat lehmipojat”, kuten Gene Autry tai Hank Williams, jotka tarvitsivat live-esiintymisiään varten kitaroita, joissa oli potkua plektrasoitossa. Tästä alkoi D-mallien voittokulku joka kasvoi yhä vain voimakkaammaksi, kun Folk-laulajatkin löysivät tiehensä tähän isompaan vaihtoehtoon.
Tanglewoodin TW40D-AN-E on laadukas kunniaosoitus 1930-luvun D-18:lle, sekä ulkonäön että soitettavuuden kannalta.
TW40D:n kaula on käytännössä täysin identtinen TW40O:n kaulaan – kaulaprofiili on erittäin mukava pehmeä V, ja koko kaula on hieman leveämpi kuin monissa nykykitaroissa.
Testikitaran työnjälki on samalla korkealla tasolla kuin Historic-sarjan OM-mallissakin, eikä TW40D:n soitettavuudessa todellakaan löydy mitään moitittavaa (matala-E: 2,2 mm/diskantti-e: 1,7 mm).
Dreadnought-kitaran soundi on varmaan kaikille tuttu: iso basso, lämmin keskirekisteri ja helisevä diskantti – ja kaikki hyvällä potkulla höystettynä.
TW40D on todella hyvä esimerkki tästä soundista:
Fishmanin Sonitone -mikkisysteemi toimii sulavassa yhteistyössä myös TW40D-AN-E-mallissa:
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TW40O-AN-E:n ja TW40D-AN-E:n myötä Tanglewood tarjoaa tässä hintasegmentissä todella harvinaista herkkua:
Tässä ovat kaksi teräskielistä akustista kitaraa soittajaystävällisillä hinnoilla, joissa käsitteet ”vintage” ja ”historic” ulottuvat todellakin pintaa syvemmälle. Erittäin mukavan kaulaprofiilin ja leveämmän kieltenvälisen etäisyyden ansiosta, myös meillä rivisoittajilla on nyt varaa kokea aidon vintagen-soittotuntuma.
Tärkein on kuitenkin näiden soittimien soundi, joka vakuutti ainakin minut täysin.
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Tanglewood Sundance Historic -kitarat
TW40O-AN-E – 673 €
TW40D-AN-E – 673 €
Maahantuoja: Musamaailma
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Plussat:
+ hinta-laatu-suhde
+ työnjälki
+ autenttinen kaulaprofiili
+ soitettavuus
+ Fishman-mikkisysteemi
+ soundi
Uusi Fender Paramount -sarja koostuu kolmesta koppakoosta – PM-1 on Dreadnought-kitara, PM-2 on Parlour-kokoinen ja PM-3 on soololovella varustettu 000-teräskielinen.
Joka malli on saatavilla Standard-versiona, jossa kaikukopan kokopuiset sivut ja pohjat on tehty mahongista, tai Deluxe-versiona ruusupuisella kaikukopalla. Kokopuisessa sitkakuusikannessa on kevyt scalloped-rimoitus.
Kaikissa malleissa on Fishman-mikitys ja uusi Fishman PM -etuvahvistin.
Deluxe-versiot on saatavilla myös sunburst-värityksellä, kun taas Standard-kitarat saadaan ainoastaan natural-viimeistelyllä.
Lisätiedot: Fender
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The UK’s favourite brand of acoustic guitars – Tanglewood – is steadily growing a devoted following in Finland, too, thanks to their wide variety of different models, as well as the company’s knack for providing fantastic value for money.
This time Kitarablogi.com takes a closer look at two guitars from opposing ends of Tanglewood’s price range:
The Tanglewood TW28-CLN is one of the brand’s most affordable instruments, and is part of the Evolution-series.
Tanglewood’s Finnish distributor – Musamaailma – has equipped the test sample with a Seymour Duncan soundhole pickup, the humbucking Woody (SA-3 HC).
Tanglewood’s TW1000HSRE is the top model of the Heritage-series, and comes factory-equipped with a Fishman-pickup and Sonitone-preamp.
By the way, Musamaailma throws in a nifty Kyser Lifeguard humidifier for free with the purchase of any Tanglewood acoustic guitar, so you can be sure that your new instrument won’t suffer the detrimental effects of central heating during the cold season.
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Tanglewood’s TW28-CLN (current price in Finland: 201 €) is a Dreadnought with a soundbox made from plywood, and a set mahogany neck.
The top is crafted from very nice looking cedar…
…while the rims and the back have been made of laminated mahogany.
The whole instrument – with the exception of the gloss-lacquered headstock veneer – has been finished in a very thin, clear satin finish.
The TW28-CLN’s headstock sports a rosewood veneer.
In this picture you can clearly spot the glue line, where the headstock has been added to the neck, as well as the very decent sealed machine heads.
Even though the Evolution-series is all about affordability, this Tanglewood has been spruced up with some nice cosmetic touches: The rosewood fingerboard, for example, has been bound using genuine maple!
The frets are of medium size, and the fretwork looks and feels very crisp and clean.
The neck’s heel-cap has been adorned with a maple overlay and a ”Tanglewood-T” made from holographic aluminium foil.
Tanglewood’s TW28-CLN exudes a certain down-to-earth, organic stylishness: There is no scratchplate, but the instrument features multiple binding, and also sports a pretty, bird-shaped bridge.
The looks of the Seymour Duncan Woody pickup (current price in Finland 61.70 €) complements the TW28’s earthy looks. This magnetic pickup is a stacked humbucker featuring double-potted (wax and resin) coils in a maple casing.
The Woody fits most regular soundholes (with a diameter between 9.8 and 10.4 cm) and is kept in place by chunky foam inserts on its sides.
The pickup’s quality lead is approximately five metres long.
Tanglewood’s standard of workmanship is delightfully crisp, even when it comes to their most affordable models.
Both the top nut, as well as the compensated bridge saddle have been carved from bovine bone.
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There is a certain logic behind the Tanglewood TW1000HSRE’s (current price in Finland: 1,137 €) hard-to-enunciate model designation: The letters in the suffix stand for the guitar’s Herringbone-trim (H), its solid rosewood back and sides (SR), and the factory-installed Fishman-electronics (E).
Engelmann spruce has been chosen for this model’s solid wood top.
The fine Indian rosewood used for the TW1000 is breathtakingly beautiful.
The same material has also been used for the headstock veneer.
Vintage-aficionados will be delighted at the sight of the diamond-shaped headstock volute, so reminiscent of vintage Martins (and their reissues).
The gold-coloured tuners may look light straight vintage copies, but they have been designed to feature a much more practical, modern gear ratio. The result is a very smooth and precise tuning feel.
Only the best ingredients go into the making of Tanglewood’s top models – this Dread’ sports genuine mother-of-pearl inlays (in a D-45’s hexagonal style) in its ebony fretboard.
The inlay work and fretting are top-notch!
Just look at that rosewood…
All Tanglewoods come equipped with a second strap button – a small, but nevertheless very nice little detail.
Genuine mother-of-pearl inlays in the rosette, along with Herringbone-binding – this is a guitar enthusiast’s wet dream come true!
Here’s a second glimpse at Tanglewood’s stylish steel-string bridge – this time crafted from luscious ebony.
Tucked away beneath the bone saddle is a Fishman Sonicore piezo pickup, which feeds a Sonitone-preamp.
The Sonitone’s controls are mounted beneath the soundhole’s bass side edge.
The system is simplicity incarnate, offering a volume control (bridge-facing side) and an easy-to-use tone control (neck-facing side).
Tanglewood have chosen to keep the TW1000HSRE’s good looks intact, by using a battery pouch, velcro’d to the neck block. There is one drawback, tough: You have to loosen the strings to get to the pouch, meaning quick battery-changes mid-set are impossible.
The output jack is integrated into the guitar’s end pin.
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Our review sample of the TW28–CLN is a very lightweight and comfortable instrument, even though its broad shoulders are a few millimetres wider than those of some other Dreadnoughts. The guitar sits nicely in your lap and feels well-balanced.
For the guitar’s price the standard of its satin finish is quite good – there are a couple of tiny grainy spots on the back of the neck, but overall the feel is very nice.
The neck profile will fit into most players’ hands – it’s a D-profile of medium depth with a slight whiff of a soft V blended in.
The TW28-CLN is a very decent player, thanks to its clean fretwork and comfortable set-up (string height @ 12th fret: bottom-E = 2.6 mm, top-e = 1.7 mm). String spacing is a good middle-of-the-road choice – 3.7 cm at the nut and 5.5 cm at the bridge. It’s a workable compromise for both fingerstylists and plectrum strummers.
I was surprised by the test sample’s punch and volume! After the first few strums I really had to check the label to make sure I hadn’t been given this model’s solid top cousin (the TW28-CSN) by mistake.
The TW28-CLN wins you over with its warm and clear voice. Thanks in no small part to its tight bass response, this model is very easy to record with a condenser microphone set up in front of it.
Seymour Duncan’s Woody sounds old-fashioned in a very nice way: The bottom end is warm, the mid-range is plummy and the trebles are airy and pleasant. If you’re after an authentic Sixties Pop guitar tone, the Woody will get you there in no time. Many of the early Beatles-stuff (pre-1966), for example, was recorded with their Gibsons miked up, as well as plugged into their Vox amps. Furthermore, I’m quite sure the Woody’s vintage-tinged tones will also please the slide guitar fraternity.
Here are some sound examples of the TW28-CLN recorded with an AKG microphone, as well as using the Duncan Woody:
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To say Tanglewood’s TW1000HSRE is a ”great guitar for its price” or a ”very decent Chinese-made instrument” would do this guitar a grave injustice. The TW1000HSRE is simply a great guitar, carefully crafted from top quality materials – period! Our review sample is that sort of guitar that puts a quick stop to any kind of brand snobbery.
The guitar’s finish is flawless, and the instrument plays like a dream.
We have a mid-sized, oval C-Profile, coupled with a generous string spacing – 3.95 cm at the nut and 5.75 cm at the bridge – which makes a lot of difference to fingerstyle players.
The set-up is superb, with the guitar playing cleanly across the whole neck, despite the comfortably low action (bottom-E: 2.0 mm, top-e: 1.6 mm).
The TW1000HSRE’s acoustic tone and punch will bowl you over! The bottom end is fat and rich, the mid-range has character in spades, and the top end sparkles like a diamond. This is a very hard guitar to put down.
The Fishman Sonicore-piezo and Sonitone-preamp seem like the perfect match for this Tanglewood – a really inspired choice. The Fishman system sounds surprisingly ”acoustic” with not so much as a whiff of piezo quack or dryness. The amplified tone is a couple of degrees more upfront, and a tiny bit fuller, than the TW1000HSRE’s acoustic voice, but it’s very close. Coming to grips with the Sonitone only requires seconds. I left the tone control on full – if you need more scope for adjustment you’ll most probably find it in your acoustic amp or at the mixing console.
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If there’s a conclusion to be drawn from this review, then maybe it is that Tanglewood seem to consistently offer fantastic value at any price-point. And this is regardless of whether you chose one of their affordable models (like the TW28-CLN) or something from the very top of their catalogue (like the TW1000HSRE).
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Tanglewood TW28-CLN
Tanglewood TW1000HSRE
Seymour Duncan Woody soundhole pickup
Finnish distributor: Musamaailma
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Tanglewood TW28-CLN
Current price in Finland: 201 €
Pros:
+ value-for-money
+ workmanship
+ playability
+ sound
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Tanglewood TW1000HSRE
Current price in Finland: 1,137 €
Pros:
+ top grade instrument
+ value-for-money
+ workmanship
+ playability
+ acoustic sound
+ preamp sound
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Seymour Duncan Woody (SA-3 HC)
Current price in Finland: 61.70 €
Pros:
+ very affordable
+ easy to install
+ stylish
+ vintage-type tone
Cons:
– vintage-type tone