This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Jeffrey Yong | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Jeffrey Yong |
Born | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | 29 November 1958
Occupation(s) | Luthier |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, harpguitar, ukulele, sapelele, bass guitar |
Years active | 1985–present |
Website | Official website |
Jeffrey Yong (born 29 November 1958) is a Malaysian luthier noted for using local Malaysian wood in his instruments and for his innovative designs. Yong has exhibited at conventions in the United States, Canada, Japan, Russia and China. He was the founder of the Guitar Institute of Malaysia.
Yong was born in 1958 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. He started his career as a guitar instructor and examiner in 1976. He built his first guitar in 1985 from a DIY kit, and traveled abroad to improve his guitar-making skills.
After a luthier asked why he was sourcing material from overseas when Malaysia exported good quality wood, Yong looked into the possibility of using local, non-traditional timber, such as monkeypod, rengas, mango, rambutan, and Malaysian blackwood [ disambiguation needed ], for building musical instruments. He continued to innovate and gained extensive knowledge of different kinds of timber, especially those from tropical regions.
Yong founded the Guitar Institute Malaysia (GIM) in 1993, specializing in teaching different genres of guitar playing and guitar construction. He also taught at the Luthier School International in California. His skills in luthiery were mostly self-taught. He has published articles on guitar-making in several newspapers over an eight-year period, and has appeared at guitar maker conventions in the United States, Canada Japan, Russia, China and Malaysia.
Yong's guitars have been exhibited at Healdsburg Guitar Festival, Shanghai Music Festival, and Montreal Guitar Show. At the Montreal show in 2011 he introduced his "JJ Blackie" and his innovative "Seismic", a JJ-shaped 10-string acoustic guitar with Monkeywood body and Blackwood fingerboard (see pictures, right) which featured in Premier Guitar Magazine. The guitar's D and G strings had octave pairs and the B and high E had unison strings. [1]
Yong introduced Malaysian Blackwood to other guitar makers during the 1998 GAL convention in Tacoma, Washington, USA. He also pioneered Monkeypod as a tonewood and saw it adopted by other luthiers. [2] Using Monkeypod wood (Samanea sama or Rain Tree), formerly known as Albizia saman to build guitars was not new, but it had not been regarded as a premium tonewood and had previously only been used for aesthetic purposes.
Yong built almost an entire guitar of Monkeypod, and in 2006 it won the Blind Listening Test at the Guild of American Luthier's convention. It was judged to be the best-sounding instrument in terms of tonality, timbre and sustain. Yong was competing against notable luthiers such as Erwin Somogyi, and two of his guitars were ranked in the top three
Instruments built in Yong's workshop were made by hand with 99 percent local woods, mostly Monkeywood, the remaining one percent being the maple veneer used in the bindings. His bracing design and layout were influenced by Martin's X-scalloped patterns, Torres fan bracing and Smallman lattice bracing.
Artists who use Yong's guitars have included Don Alder, Farid Ali, Kent Nishimura, Hiroshi Masuda, Shun Ng, Wayan Balawan, Dan LaVoie and Okapi.
Year | Conventions & Festivals | Place | Achievements |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | Guitar Institute Malaysia (GIM) | Malaysia | - Founder |
1998 | Guild of American Luthier's (GAL) Convention | Tacoma, Washington, USA | - Introduction of Malaysian Blackwood internationally |
2006 | Guild of American Luthier's (GAL) Convention [3] | Tacoma, Washington, USA | - Introduction of Monkeypod wood (Samanea saman or Rain Tree) - OM Guitar won the Blind Listening Test - Best sounding guitar in terms of tonality, timbre, and sustain |
2011 | Montreal Guitar Show [4] | - JJ Blackie & Seismic was featured by Premier Guitar Magazine | |
2012 | Kirov Moscow International Guitar Making [5] | Moscow, Russia | - Classical Guitar Tioman III won first prize |
2012 | Sound Messe Osaka [6] | Osaka, Japan | |
2013 | Malaysian International Guitar Festival (MIGFEST) | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | |
2013 | Healdsburg Guitar Festival [7] | - Featured on Guitar Player Editor | |
2013 | Tokyo Handcrafted Guitar Show | Tokyo, Japan | |
2014 | Malaysian International Guitar Festival (MIGFEST) [8] | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | |
2014 | Guild of American Luthier's (GAL) Convention [9] | Tacoma, Washington, USA | |
2015 | Osaka Music Festival | Osaka, Japan | |
2016 | Shanghai Music Festival | Shanghai, China |
Year | Media | Title | |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | The Star Newspaper | Jeffrey Yong promises to teach how to make a guitar in two weeks | |
2012 | The Straits Times Newspaper | Strum a Mango | |
2014 | The Star Newspaper | Guitar Gods of A Different Sort | |
2016 | Create with Malaysia | A Luthier's Song | |
2017 | Sin Chiew Newspaper | Making Musical Instrument with Non-Traditional Wood |
Steel String Guitars
Classical Guitars
The JJ is a hybrid of a classical guitar and a jumbo. It uses scalloped "X" bracing, and has a unique bridge with more mass than the conventional bridge.
Other interesting features are:
The steel-string acoustic guitar is a modern form of guitar that descends from the gut-strung Romantic guitar, but is strung with steel strings for a brighter, louder sound. Like the modern classical guitar, it is often referred to simply as an acoustic guitar, or sometimes as a folk guitar.
The classical guitar, also known as Spanish guitar, is a member of the guitar family used in classical music and other styles. An acoustic wooden string instrument with strings made of gut or nylon, it is a precursor of the modern steel-string acoustic and electric guitars, both of which use metal strings. Classical guitars derive from instruments such as the lute, the vihuela, the gittern, which evolved into the Renaissance guitar and into the 17th and 18th-century baroque guitar. Today's modern classical guitar was established by the late designs of the 19th-century Spanish luthier, Antonio Torres Jurado.
The guitar is a stringed musical instrument that is usually fretted and typically has six or twelve strings. It is usually held flat against the player's body and played by strumming or plucking the strings with the dominant hand, while simultaneously pressing selected strings against frets with the fingers of the opposite hand. A guitar pick may also be used to strike the strings. The sound of the guitar is projected either acoustically, by means of a resonant hollow chamber on the guitar, or amplified by an electronic pickup and an amplifier.
C.F. Martin & Company is an American guitar manufacturer established in 1833 by Christian Frederick Martin. It is highly respected for its acoustic guitars and is a leading manufacturer of flat top guitars and ukuleles. The company has also made mandolins and tiples, as well as several models of electric guitars and electric basses, although none of these other instruments are still in production.
The fingerboard is an important component of most stringed instruments. It is a thin, long strip of material, usually wood, that is laminated to the front of the neck of an instrument. The strings run over the fingerboard, between the nut and bridge. To play the instrument, a musician presses strings down to the fingerboard to change the vibrating length, changing the pitch. This is called stopping the strings. Depending on the instrument and the style of music, the musician may pluck, strum or bow one or more strings with the hand that is not fretting the notes. On some instruments, notes can be sounded by the fretting hand alone, such as with hammer ons, an electric guitar technique.
A luthier is a craftsperson who builds or repairs string instruments.
The seven-string guitar adds one additional string to the more common six-string guitar, commonly used to extend the bass range or also to extend the treble range.
The Russian guitar (sometimes referred to as a "Gypsy guitar") is an acoustic seven-string guitar that was developed in Russia toward the end of the 18th century: it shares most of its organological features with the Spanish guitar, although some historians insist on English guitar descent. It is known in Russian as the semistrunnaya gitara (семиструнная гитара), or affectionately as the semistrunka (семиструнка), which translates to "seven-stringer". These guitars are most commonly tuned to an open G chord as follows: D2 G2 B2 D3 G3 B3 D4. In classical literature, the lowest string (D) occasionally is tuned down to the C.
A flamenco guitar is a guitar similar to a classical guitar, but with lower action, thinner tops and less internal bracing. It usually has nylon strings, like the classical guitar, but it generally possesses a livelier, more gritty sound compared to the classical guitar. It is used in toque, the guitar-playing part of the art of flamenco.
A person who is specialized in the making of stringed instruments such as guitars, lutes and violins is called a luthier.
Classical guitar strings are strings manufactured for use on classical guitars. While steel-string acoustic guitar strings and electric guitar strings are made of metal, modern classical guitar strings are made of nylon and nylon wound with wire, which produces a different sound to the metal strings. Classical guitar strings were originally made with animal intestine and silk wound with animal intestine up until World War II, when war restrictions led Albert Augustine Ltd. to develop nylon strings. Nylon guitar strings were put into production in 1948. Strings made from fluorocarbon polymers have since been developed and are the main alternative to nylon strings.
A classical guitar with additional strings is a nylon-string or gut-string classical guitar with more than six strings, in which the additional strings pass over a fingerboard so that they may be "stopped" or fretted with the fingers. These are also known as extended-range guitars, and should not be confused with harp guitars.
An acoustic guitar is a musical instrument in the string family. When a string is plucked, its vibration is transmitted from the bridge, resonating throughout the top of the guitar. It is also transmitted to the side and back of the instrument, resonating through the air in the body, and producing sound from the sound hole. While the original, general term for this stringed instrument is guitar, the retronym 'acoustic guitar' – often used to indicate the steel stringed model – distinguishes it from an electric guitar, which relies on electronic amplification. Typically, a guitar's body is a sound box, of which the top side serves as a sound board that enhances the vibration sounds of the strings. In standard tuning the guitar's six strings are tuned (low to high) E2 A2 D3 G3 B3 E4.
Tonewood refers to specific wood varieties used for woodwind or acoustic stringed instruments. The word implies that certain species exhibit qualities that enhance acoustic properties of the instruments, but other properties of the wood such as aesthetics and availability have always been considered in the selection of wood for musical instruments. According to Mottola's Cyclopedic Dictionary of Lutherie Terms, tonewood is:
Wood that is used to make stringed musical instruments. The term is often used to indicate wood species that are suitable for stringed musical instruments and, by exclusion, those that are not. But the list of species generally considered to be tonewoods changes constantly and has changed constantly throughout history.
There are many varieties of ten-string guitar, including:
Jean Larrivée Guitars Inc. is a Canadian company that manufactures electric and acoustic guitars. Founded in 1967 by Jean Larrivée, the company moved from Toronto, Ontario, to Victoria, British Columbia, in 1977, and to Vancouver in 1982. A second plant opened in California in September 2001. Canadian manufacturing was closed in 2013.
Classical electric guitars, also known as nylon-string electric guitars, represent a unique fusion of traditional classical guitar design and modern electric guitar technology. These instruments combine the rich and warm tonal qualities of nylon-stringed classical guitars with the versatility and amplified sound capabilities of electric guitars. By integrating nylon strings with onboard electronics, pickups, and preamp systems, classical electric guitars offer musicians a wide range of sonic possibilities for various musical genres and performance settings.
Guitar bracing refers to the system of wooden struts which internally support and reinforce the soundboard and back of acoustic guitars.
Breedlove Guitars is an American acoustic instrument company based in Bend, Oregon. Breedlove produces acoustic guitars, acoustic bass guitars, and ukuleles.
Lichty Guitars is an American company based in Tryon, North Carolina, that has been making custom acoustic guitars and ukuleles since 2009. It was founded by musician Jay Lichty.