I was fortunate enough to acquire one of these recently in the satin finish. It is a wonderful instrument. I would entirely agree with the above statement "exceptionally dynamic and responsive" but at the same time there is a beautiful warmth to the sound as well, so sweet. Also this guitar is very light, a quality inherent in the T-Series I think. Thanks for the great demo!
Wow, you’re sounding super clean! Great audio and playing my friend, would love to hear that Carr Sportsman in the back sometime. I liked the Lenny Breau reference too.
Hello Sam! Jesse is playing the Carr Sportsman in these videos! Have a listen and let us know what you think! Fender Custom Shop Danny Gatton: ruclips.net/video/oZmHqQ0hTlg/видео.html Fender Custom Shop '62 Stratocaster: ruclips.net/video/6_6Jqg4sIRk/видео.html Fender Custom Shop '52 Telecaster: ruclips.net/video/7fHxsSk3uyE/видео.html Fender Custom Shop Masterbuilt Thinline Telecaster: ruclips.net/video/wQDHLkiUff4/видео.html Fender Custom Shop '65 Telecaster: ruclips.net/video/6oCOuzD-9w4/видео.html
Jack, we couldn't agree more. We were there when Bill introduced these during Winter NAMM. Our take was his intent to "hot rod" his own brand, taking lessons from the light build technique of his Waterloo project, ultra-thin nitro finish. These models more closely assimilate a 30's era vintage guitar tone and vibe.
Comparing the Waterloo guitars to their siblings at Collings is complex, as they have very different intended tones in mind, while still sharing spruce tops and smaller bodies. The Waterloo guitars definitely sound more reminiscent of a depression era instrument, along the lines of a Kalamazoo, but with MUCH higher quality build materials. Lots of rich fundamental tones, with fewer overtones. Take a listen to our Waterloo video, and tell us what you hear. Call us if you have more questions! ruclips.net/video/EYGEuvGDAn0/видео.html
Apples to oranges... Waterloos are modern day old guitars, the inexpensive ones... An old Stella would be a better comparisson. Where as the Collings would compare better to a Martin, which may or may not sound better. The Collings would have a much better setup then the Martin. Martins are blank canvases, IMHO, where as the Collings is "right" out of the box, Waterloo too, just don't expect a Waterloo to sound like a Collings.
I was fortunate enough to acquire one of these recently in the satin finish. It is a wonderful instrument. I would entirely agree with the above statement "exceptionally dynamic and responsive" but at the same time there is a beautiful warmth to the sound as well, so sweet. Also this guitar is very light, a quality inherent in the T-Series I think. Thanks for the great demo!
By far the most entertaining of all reviewers, well done Jesse both playing and wit.
Appreciate it, Brandon!
Sounds great, almost as good as the Recording King RO 328 👍
Wow, you’re sounding super clean! Great audio and playing my friend, would love to hear that Carr Sportsman in the back sometime. I liked the Lenny Breau reference too.
Coming soon!
@@ArtisanGuitars 😍
Hello Sam! Jesse is playing the Carr Sportsman in these videos! Have a listen and let us know what you think!
Fender Custom Shop Danny Gatton: ruclips.net/video/oZmHqQ0hTlg/видео.html
Fender Custom Shop '62 Stratocaster: ruclips.net/video/6_6Jqg4sIRk/видео.html
Fender Custom Shop '52 Telecaster: ruclips.net/video/7fHxsSk3uyE/видео.html
Fender Custom Shop Masterbuilt Thinline Telecaster: ruclips.net/video/wQDHLkiUff4/видео.html
Fender Custom Shop '65 Telecaster: ruclips.net/video/6oCOuzD-9w4/видео.html
@@ArtisanGuitars I think good things! Grateful things! Thankful things! Much appreciated.
The traditional guitars have a cool, unique sound.
Jack, we couldn't agree more. We were there when Bill introduced these during Winter NAMM. Our take was his intent to "hot rod" his own brand, taking lessons from the light build technique of his Waterloo project, ultra-thin nitro finish. These models more closely assimilate a 30's era vintage guitar tone and vibe.
What’s the theory behind that upward angled mic placement?
How do you find the OM 1 compares to the Waterloo guitars?
Comparing the Waterloo guitars to their siblings at Collings is complex, as they have very different intended tones in mind, while still sharing spruce tops and smaller bodies. The Waterloo guitars definitely sound more reminiscent of a depression era instrument, along the lines of a Kalamazoo, but with MUCH higher quality build materials. Lots of rich fundamental tones, with fewer overtones. Take a listen to our Waterloo video, and tell us what you hear. Call us if you have more questions!
ruclips.net/video/EYGEuvGDAn0/видео.html
Apples to oranges... Waterloos are modern day old guitars, the inexpensive ones... An old Stella would be a better comparisson. Where as the Collings would compare better to a Martin, which may or may not sound better. The Collings would have a much better setup then the Martin. Martins are blank canvases, IMHO, where as the Collings is "right" out of the box, Waterloo too, just don't expect a Waterloo to sound like a Collings.
I like it but idk. I think i like the Om2h traditionals more. Not sure