Log in
Log in

or
Create an account

or
< All Takamine TS97C reviews
Add this product to
  • My former gear
  • My current gear
  • My wishlist
Takamine TS97C
Images
1/10
Takamine TS97C
Price engine
Classified Ads
Forums
David Murray Holland David Murray Holland

« CEDAR top fingerstyle. »

Published on 02/12/22 at 05:29
Value For Money : Excellent
Audience: Anyone
So.. I've had a few thinline guitars before and smaller bodied guitars that I generally liked the tone of but mostly played because the shape allowed it to sit somewhere you couldn't with a Jumbo or Dreadnaught.

Well.. I've always liked Takamine and Cedar top that Glen Hansard plays gives me a strange excitement we'll say.

So I have an S34c Jasmine by Takamine that appears to be from 2000 and it has been a great balanced and loud guitar perhaps lacking in subtlety but doing the big strummer thing so well that it's hard to deny.

Well the TS-97C fills in the stuff the Big Girl doesn't do so well.

As it turns out I have 12-53 on the s34c NEX which is 25.5" and 11-49 on the 25-3/8" FXC and I keep the bigger one Eb and drop C# while keeping the FXC in E standard and drop D. For a 30 year old guitar it's in great shape. I did have to spend some time rehydrating the wood with it clamped up to a neck and bridge level jig. It all went seamlessly and the guitar barely needed setup with new bone nut and saddle.

The things they say about Cedar top guitars are all true. It breaks up early and is very touch sensitive. It records beautifully and has some indescribable tonal quality that you only get on stunning guitars.

A current Takamine equivalent is $2000 and this little guitar speaks of why.

For a 1992 Jasmine by Takamine it has no right to be this good. I'd gladly challenge a Taylor or Martin to a time war.

If you find one keep it. These are lifetime guitars when setup right.

Images linked to this review

  • photo
  • photo
  • photo
  • photo
  • photo