Their guitars have printed on the label 'est. 1887' but that date has to do with the the original Masakichi-led company and it's production of violins. The production of guitars by the original SuzukI factory seems to have started,in the early 1900's. One reference says.
I signed up for this forum just to ask this one question: How much is my Kiso Suzuki W-350 serial number 01207 worth? It's in a good conditi. Cakewalk Sonar X1 Producer Free Download Crack. This is why a guitar printed 'kiso suzuki' or 'Three S' is very rare. And serial number(?). About suzuki G-150, the guitar price was 15.000 Yen in japonese. Serial number question. So you want to date your kiso Suzuki guitar. Hi i have a suzuki guitar the serial number jus says 4-4 What does this mean Jarrod. Suzuki Acoustic Guitar Serial Numbers.. History and pictures of Nagoya Suzuki and Kiso Suzuki guitars and. One or two numbers in the serial number stands for the.
'Masakichi Suzuki was Japan's first violin producer. His father was a samurai moonlighter and made shamisens in Nagoya.
Masakichi succeeded his father's craft business that soon failed. In the push for westernization in Meiji, he naturally became interested in shamisen's western counterpart: the violin. In the 1880s, he started to manually produce and sell violins. Limbajul Vorbirii Arta Conversatiei Pdf. He founded the Suzuki Violin Factory in 1900. By 1910, his factory was producing 65,800 violins per year.
Nagoya became the manufacturing center of string musical instruments. Masakichi's original company was eventually split into two: Kiso Suzuki and Nagoya Suzuki. They were one company before the 2nd World War. But after the war they were split up into the Suzuki Violin Company (now Kiso Suzuki Violin Company) and Suzuki Violin Manufacturing Company (now Nagoya Suzuki Violin Company). And there the relationship ended. The two companies were headed by sons of Masakichi Suzuki. Both companies made guitars that commonly have a laminated back or sides, many times the top also is laminated, but the sound, playability, and volume are what makes them so popular.
Both Suzukis used a very high grade of laminate and the construction usually shows a high degree of craftmanship. To some players, the neck shape of their guitars is one reason they seem so playable. Nagoya Suzuki made violins and mandolins, and is still in business making violins, but no guitars.
They stopped making them around 1989. Nagoya Suzuki had a ' Three S' brand of guitar that seems to be consistently very highly valued by everyone that owns one. They also produced an Insignia series of guitars in the 80's that had solid woods used in the manufacture and had more of an electric guitar-type of neck - thinner than a typical acoustic guitar. There are thousands of players worldwide who would like to know more about their Suzuki guitar. It's a common story that when someone has G.A.S (Guitar Acquisition Syndrome) and needs to let a guitar or two go, the Suzuki is the one that stays behind and can't be replaced. Probably the skill acquired from violin-making and the other instruments played a large role in the good craftsmanship, according to one web source cited previously.
It makes sense. Good wood, or good laminate, and good craftsmen, make a good guitar. If you own a Nagoya Suzuki guitar- congratulations on what you probably already know - that you own a well-crafted and good sounding instrument. One that is still undervalued in the opinion of many players (in other words - a good buy). Maybe you'll hang on to it and see that there is something special about many of their instruments. In any case, as Tetsu said..' Have a nice life with Suzuki guitar.'