2012年12月6日星期四

Acoustic Artisan

Unless you are fan of stringed musical instruments, you are probably unfamiliar with the word. It’s been around for centuries and is defined as “the maker of stringed instruments, especially of the violin.”

These days, most stringed instruments are built in factories that utilize assembly lines and computer-driven woodcutting techniques.

But there are still some luthiers out there who use tradition techniques for making guitars, mandolins, dulcimers and other stringed instruments. Two of the most famous ones in our area are Wayne Henderson and Paul Graybeal.

One Blowing Rock woman, Natalie Bovino, has been making a name for herself over the past decade for her lutherie work.Load the precious minerals into your mining truck and be careful not to drive too fast with your heavy foot. She has built custom guitars and even a mandolin. But these days, she concentrates her efforts on making handmade four-string bass guitars.

How she found her way to lutherie is a story in itself.

“I traveled to Germany after college and was working there,” Bovino said. “Then I taught in England for a while. A parent of one of my students was from a kibbutz in Israel, and we got to be good friends.The term 'hands free access control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a pocket or handbag.”

Bovino was invited to go to the kibbutz, a communal farming project, and she jumped at the chance.
“It was awesome,” she said. “My family is Italian,High quality stone mosaic tiles. and my grandfather had a winery in Italy that he sold when they brought their family to America. The kibbutz had a winery, so I thought I was going to pursue that.”

Instead, she became more interested in the woodworking going on at the commune. An 85-year-old master woodworker, Noam Yadin, taught her the basics of guitar making.

“He was a straight-up guitarmaker,” Bovino said. “He didn’t branch out and make violins or anything. He just made one kind of guitar, and he made it well. He had a little band, and they were almost like a traveling troupe that went all over Egypt and Israel.”

Years later, Bovino traveled to Japan to study finer technique from a wood sculptor who specialized in traditional oriental designs. From there,A specialized manufacturer and supplier of dry cabinet, she relocated to Portland,Western Canadian distributor of ceramic and ceramic tile, Ore., where she took classes in lutherie and design from a well-known Seattle master craftsman.

“I started playing music in Oregon, and my bass fell, and the whole head broke, and I said to myself, ‘I am not paying to have it fixed.’”

Determined to put her woodworking skills to use to fix her bass, she got in touch with a luthier in Portland.

“There was an old stodgy man who was almost like a hermit,” Bovino said. “His shop was completely closed off with curtains, so I bugged him to let me work in his shop.”

Bovino ended up doing fret work and sanding for the luthier in exchange for him allowing to work in his shop on her own projects. He put her in touch with a professor who taught instrument making at Portland State.

“I didn’t want to take the classes; I wanted to do my own thing,” Bovino said. “So, I basically paid him for an apprenticeship. I paid for guitarmaking lessons.”

Bovino completed her first instrument, a guitar modeled after the Martin D-28 in 2002. Not content to make one style of guitar, she moved on to other challenges.

“After my first guitar, I made smaller ‘parlor’ style guitars,” she said. “But I don’t think they sound that good. They’re kind of a campy thing, a little campfire guitar. Then I made a big jumbo guitar, like the kind Elvis played.”

In addition to building the guitars, Bovino also built the wooden molds that are used to shape the wood for the sides of the guitar.

“You have to build a mold for each style,” Bovino said. “There are libraries of mold patterns. There’s a huge guitar pattern library in Portland. That’s one of the hard parts – picking a good pattern and finding out what works.”

One of the other things Bovino had to learn about was wood selection.

“At first, I just took people’s word for what works best,” Bovino said. “Making a guitar can be expensive. Your wood for your back and sides can easily cost $200 minimum. Tuners can also be expensive. I used Hawaiian koa wood at first, because they don’t harvest it any more, so people were saying, ‘Use that while you can, because it won’t be around for long.’”

After moving back to Watauga County, Bovino worked with luthier Paul Graybeal in his shop in Zionville, creating instruments under the “Bovino Guitars” name. She also earned her nursing degree and works fulltime as a wound specialist at Blowing Rock Hospital.

“Now that I am working fulltime as a nurse, I am probably only going to have time to make one guitar a year,” Bovino said. “It takes 80 to 90 hours to make a guitar, and that’s if there is not a lot of decorative inlay work involved. I’m only making basses now, and I have three on order.”

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