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Sunday, June 19, 2011

- Happy Father's Day ...


- A Must For The 1'st Post From The New Lap-Top. So For The Few That Will Read, The Millions That Never Will, & The Drones In Between, A Very Happy Father's Day! Go Hug Someone & Tell Them You Love Them !

- Luthier: one who makes or repairs stringed musical instruments, as violins or guitars. Origin: late 19th century: from French, from luth 'lute'

- Pedagogue: (ped a gog), a teacher, or school master, especially a dull formal or pedantic teacher. Origin: Middle English pedagoge, Latin paedagogus, a slave who escorted children to school.

- A Good Friend Shared This With Joshua & I, So Today I'd Like To Share It With You ...

A Pedagogues Lament

It's a pity, isn't it? Nowadays, nobody wants to pay the dues for their art. Everyone wants to BE something but nobody wants to BECOME something. Everyone wants to be an expert but no one wants to become one. But you must become before you can be.

It is noble to be a student, a beginner. Whatever happened to the fine old tradition of the "amateur"? The word comes from the French: "lover of". If you love something, you want to know it deeply. However, that takes time and effort. And it seems people just don't want to give things the effort it takes to know something deeply.
I often find myself telling my students: "Drop your illusions. You cannot become a luthier after taking a course. You can pick up some mental tools and some knowledge about the assembly process, but not experience. You can only acquire experience like you do age. Experience comes after many guitars. Experience comes from studying the masters: Martin, Torres, Macaferri, Aguado, Velazquez and trying to dissect their decisions, studying how they solved the great problems. Then you fail, throw up your hands repeatedly, then pull yourself together, and start yet again. You suffer sleepless nights wondering why things failed and what to do next. You devour information about tools, finishes, machinery, abrasives, adhesives, old ways, new ways, and odd ways. Then, somewhere between your fiftieth and hundredth guitar you start to hear it. Because you've been straining to listen for so long, you hear the peculiar song of the sound box."
But as I look into the eyes of some aspirants of the craft, and I see so many eyes looking back with; "Not me! I'm a special case. Waiting is for idiots. Life is too short."
But mastery comes from giving it all the time it takes, whatever that may be.

One student asked me if he could build two guitars in the same course. He had already sold one and wanted to display the other in the new shop he was going to open up!

Another student disapproved of my choice of Spanish method slotted-neck construction for his first guitar. He was paying dearly for the course and felt entitled to build a more "advanced" instrument. Could he pearl it and sunburst it besides? He too was anxious to make a living as a luthier right after the course.

Another young fellow told me he had built two guitars which had come out "pretty good". He could get financing, so if I would agree to be his partner we could both open up this school and...

One student had gotten a job as a repairman after showing off the guitar he had made in the course to his employer. Now, he wondered; "Could I tell him how to get this bridge off?"

The production manager of a guitar company calls: "One of your students is applying for a job. He's got his guitar here and his calling card that says 'expert luthier, fine handcrafted instruments, skilled repairs and restorations'. Is he for real?"

My answer: "He's pretty good with his hands but has precious little humility. Which of the two qualities are you looking for?"

Some time ago, one student's third guitar came into the shop. It had a fancy three-color printed label. The action was up in the air, but the guitar had to be rebuilt before it could be adjusted. When the owner returned it to the builder, all he got was a scolding. The owner showed me the builder's expensive brochure where he said the luthier had been "apprenticed" to me. He called me responsible for his dilemma.

Later, I was feeling badly about all this and I asked someone whom I knew to be a good luthier if I wasn't creating a batch of mini Frankensteins and loosing them upon the world. Had these people just never learned how to be students, or were they just simply cynical frauds? His advice was that Guitar making would surely take care of them in time. There are no old dilettantes or fakers in this business. It is too complex and too elusive a thing to do. It rewards only the pure in heart, the ones who give themselves completely to it and ask nothing from it except the privilege to be allowed to continue. Guitar making weeds out the faint of heart, the poseurs, the ego trippers. Just like the making of a guitar itself, the making of a guitar maker takes its own sweet time. Those who are too impatient to sit and wait at the door soon get up and leave to become insurance trainees, dental technicians, or surfers or something.

Alas, Guitar making evokes an aura of seductive mystery, one with a great appeal to the sentimental and illusion-prone. But after the third set of expensive rosewood breaks on the iron or curls up in the mold, or the fourth center seam opens up, or when the finish starts to fish eye on your tenth guitar, the illusion ends. You have to pay your Guitar making dues. No one can shield you from those dues.

He continued, reminding me that it is impossible to teach anybody anything. The learner must first learn to be a patient student and then teach himself. Above all, students must supply their own will to persevere through the frustrating obstacles and all the disinformation out there masquerading as the real thing.

A master of the art is someone who has made more mistakes than you, has made mistakes you haven't made yet, and has learned how to embrace them. Thus the master has learned to see them coming before they happen. You proceed toward mastery one mistake at a time. How many errors can you stand? As many as it takes to become a master. The master has persevered past the errors until he's made all of them.

Although it's cynical to award somebody a "diploma" in Guitar making after a single course as some schools do, the student must decide whether to put it on the wall or hide it in a box with other memorabilia.

So to conclude, and with my apologies to Shakespeare: "The evil you do will live on while the good is oft interred with your bones". Don't sell your first guitars or they'll come back to haunt you.

(William Cumpiano)

- Thanks John, For Sharing This With Me ...

Love, S.


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