Dudenbostel owners out there?
Dudenbostel owners out there?
Dudenbostels are among the best guitars and mandolins you can get anywhere, regardless of price, and Lynn just seems to gain knowledge and experience as the years go by. Although I've not played a current specimen, I suspect that they're at the apex of what he's produced throughout his career. On the old forum there was a bit of conversation about them. None yet here that I've seen.
I heard from him just yesterday and it got me wondering: who here owns a Dude, how many do you have, how many have you had, and what has been your history with them? And, of course, the obligatory question: how do they stack up against your other guitars, present and past?
I heard from him just yesterday and it got me wondering: who here owns a Dude, how many do you have, how many have you had, and what has been your history with them? And, of course, the obligatory question: how do they stack up against your other guitars, present and past?
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- Joined: Sun Dec 30, 2018 12:33 pm
Re: Dudenbostel owners out there?
Sunburst D. Brazilian and Carpathian. Extraordinary. Among the very best guitars made today. Once brought it with me to a well known vintage guitar shop for A/B purposes with the intention of walking out with a Martin D-28. I left with only the Dude.
Re: Dudenbostel owners out there?
I have a 2015 14-fret OOO-28 of Brazilian / Torrefied Red Spruce. It's the first guitar he built with a Torrefied top. I agreed to be the guinea pig, with the stipulation that he'd either re-top the guitar or build me a new one if I wasn't happy with the results. Suffice to say, he didn't have to do either. It's a phenomenal guitar that instantly felt and sounded "old" (in a good way). My current acoustic stable includes the Dudenbostel, a 2007 Julius Borges OM-40, and a 1990 Taylor 712. Each is better than the next one by an order of magnitude, with the Dudenbostel reigning at the top of the heap. Not to mention, Lynn was great to deal with and is now a good friend.
Re: Dudenbostel owners out there?
I own a custom D which has a label number 41 from January, 2000. I bought it from Guitargal, sight unseen, in 2013 and had it shipped here to Sydney, Australia. I also own a cutaway OM Collings I have two friends, one of whom is a fully pro blues muso, Wolf mail, and the other leads an occasional band. They both prefer the Collings not because it sounds better but I think it’s because it’s easier to play.
I am, I believe, the third owner of the Dude and I’ve come to love it despite its slightly high action. The G string has a beautiful warmth to it up around the 10th fret.
Although I am not talented I’ve worked hard for many years, on and off, and used the instrument as an intro for a podcast on electricity and decarbonisation I produce which has about 5000 downloads a week and I know, because people say so, it sounds terrific on that. Unfortunately we had to go to a different Canned intro when we changed sponsors.
I am, I believe, the third owner of the Dude and I’ve come to love it despite its slightly high action. The G string has a beautiful warmth to it up around the 10th fret.
Although I am not talented I’ve worked hard for many years, on and off, and used the instrument as an intro for a podcast on electricity and decarbonisation I produce which has about 5000 downloads a week and I know, because people say so, it sounds terrific on that. Unfortunately we had to go to a different Canned intro when we changed sponsors.
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Re: Dudenbostel owners out there?
I have had some other players use the Dude recently and of course they love it. I have been playing it a lot more recently and it just grows and grows on me. Sometimes I feel almost spiritual with it, which is ridiculous. It’s just an instrument. The bass strings are very effective in duets. The treble stings can struggle to cut through in solos particularly if your fellow music is focusing on his own stuff.
At chorus level a G chord registers 79-81 db with dude (iPhone meter on my left thigh) and on Collings on cutaway 80-82 db. The Collings sound is brighter the Dude sound is more I dunno subtle is the word that comes to mind. Warm but not hot. Comfortable.
At chorus level a G chord registers 79-81 db with dude (iPhone meter on my left thigh) and on Collings on cutaway 80-82 db. The Collings sound is brighter the Dude sound is more I dunno subtle is the word that comes to mind. Warm but not hot. Comfortable.
Re: Dudenbostel owners out there?
I think I need to add it was comments by members of the prior version of this forum that drew my attention to the fact the guitar was for sale at Guitar Gallery. I figured at the time that people making the comments were possibly friends of the vendor but that didn’t stop me. Anyway I wanted to say thanks to this forum and its predecessor. I could have bought shares and made more money but that guitar is now one of my most treasured things. I have never explained to my wife or kids about it’s provenance. It lives on a stand rather than in a case but that way it’s picked up played at the drop of a hat. I love that it doesn’t look fancy.. it’s sound does it’s talking.
Re: Dudenbostel owners out there?
Great description of your guitar and its role in your life.
Play it always in good health!
Play it always in good health!