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1924 Hermann Hauser Sr. Guitar
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Although Hermann
Hauser Sr. (1882-1952) was one of the greatest luthiers of the 20th century,
he is perhaps best remembered for the remarkable instruments he built in the
Spanish tradition after 1924. In that year, both Andres Segovia and Miguel Llobet
visited Hauser. Segovia had attended a concert in Munich at which a group of
musicians all played Hauser's. Segovia impressed by the quality of Hauser's work,
wrote his impressions of the concert, noting that he "immediately saw the
potential of this great artisan if only his mastery might be turned to the
construction of the guitar in the Spanish pattern as immutably fixed by
Torres and Ramirez" (Segovia 1954). Segovia encouraged Hauser to copy his 1912 Manuel Ramirez guitar (an instrument
generally believed to have been built by Santos Hernandez while he was
foreman of the Ramirez shop). He examined and made measurements of this
instrument. As Llobet owned an 1859 Antonio de Torres, Hauser also had
opportunity to examine it as well. Although Hauser began building in the
Spanish tradition in 1925, the secrets of these great masters were not an
open book, and it took Hauser twelve years of trail and error before he was
able to build a guitar that Segovia proclaimed as being the "greatest guitar
of our epoch."
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While the story of Hauser's conversion to the
Spanish tradition as it is usually told places the emphasis on what he
learned from these great Spanish luthiers, little attention has been paid to
what Hauser himself may have contributed to that tradition. Whatever Hermann Hauser brought to the Spanish
tradition was rooted in the German tradition. Hauser was himself the son of a luthier,
Josef Hauser (1854-1939), and attended the State School for Violin Making in Mittenwald as a youth. To become a luthier, one had to pass a state exam
which covered all aspects of the luthier's art, and Hauser's examination
master was Johann Otto Haslvanter, a famous guitar and zither maker in
Munich. While Hermann started his career by building zithers by 1905 he was
also making guitars. Following his graduation, Hauser went to work in the Amberer's shop,
a family of luthiers who had been building for several generations. However,
by the time of Segovia's and Llobet's visit Hauser had established his own
shop, and had developed a excellent reputation for his precise work building
guitars, lutes, lyre-guitars, and historical instruments. While
justifiably Hauser's reputation rests on some 250 instruments that he built
between 1925 and 1952, he had by 1924 perhaps already made 250 guitars in
the German tradition.
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The 1924 Hauser I recently acquired a 1924 Hauser, which much
to my surprise has a recognizably Hauser tone, despite its very different
construction. The 1924 Hauser had suffered years of abuse and had numerous
cracks that had been poorly repaired over the years. To restore the guitar,
the neck and back had to be removed. Inside was a forest of cleats,
gobs of white glue which had been liberally applied by previous attempts to
repair the guitar, all of which had to be removed before restoration work
could begin. The process of restoring the Hauser to its original condition,
however, allowed us to inspect his work closely. While story of Hauser's
conversion to the Spanish tradition has always emphasized what Hauser
learned by copying Manuel Ramirez and Antonio Torres, this guitar allows us
to glimpse some of what Hauser may have brought to that tradition.
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| Body length:
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445mm |
| Upper bout:
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275mm |
| Lower bout:
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220mm |
| Depth at neck
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71mm |
| Depth at waist
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83mm |
| Depth at end
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78mm |
| Scale |
630mm |
| Nut width |
50mm |
Label
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Herm.Hauser
Lautenm[ache]r
in
MŰnchen
1924
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Plantilla
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Outwardly, the 1924 Hauser is smaller
than modern Spanish instruments and is a typical guitar in German tradition
whose very exaggerated hour glass figure seems to derive from the work of
Johann Anton Stauffer (1805 –1843). The back and sides are made from
European maple, but the guitar is
much shallower in depth than is typical of Spanish classical or even
flamenco guitars. Unlike Spanish guitars which increase about 10mm from the
neck to the end in depth, the 1924 Hauser, like many German instruments of
the period,
increases in depth from the neck to the waist, and then becomes shallower
again. Structurally, this profile is designed to give an arch the back
lengthwise. It is also domed slightly, rising about 2mm from the edge to
the center. The back made from two pieces is joined without center strip,
and glued without bindings to the sides. The sides are glued to the neck and
end blocks, and not fitted as into the neck assembly as is the case with the
Spanish foot. A wedge of ebony with a peg for a guitar strap adorns the join
of the side over the end block. |
Soundboard
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The top is also slightly domed, lifting perhaps 2mm toward
the center both in length and width, coming with the pivotal point centered
along a line passing under the saddle. There are three thin bands of
purflings around the edges alternating white, black, and white in color. The
rosette which is only 8mm wide uses two bands of the thin edge pattern
separated by three wider black bands. The top made from two matched pieces
of German spruce, which increase from about 15 grains per inch at the edge
to about 25 in the center.
The German spruce used in the top is probably
from the supply of wood Hermann discovered in the early 1920s while
walking on the outskirts of Garmisch. According to an interview with Hermann
Hauser II:
"Hauser passed the home of a zimmerman, a
rough carpenter, who specialized in hewing logs for the beams and rafters of
farm houses. This fellow was in the middle of the yard in the midst of a
great supply of logs and was busy with a broad ax, squaring them. Hauser
took a close look and rushed into the yard yelling, "You are a gangster!"
When the astonished carpenter recovered from his surprise, Hauser explained
to him that he was chopping on the finest grade of mountain spruce, a wood
suitable for the sounding boards of stringed instruments. A deal was
consummated on a more friendly basis and Hauser bought the entire supply of
wood. This was cut to more convenient shapes and send to Hauser's shop in
Munch (Herttig 1983:11-12).
Apparently, Hauser used this wood for the
rest of his life, and his son was using the last of this magnificent wood
when Herttig interviewed him in 1983. If this is the wood that Hauser used
in this 1924 instrument, it may help to partly explain this guitar
remarkable purity of tone.
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Bracing
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On the left is the forest
of previous repairs that were found when the back was removed. The two
photos on the right show the restoration work in progress. Under the
bridge plate was found the footprint of the original bridge plate which
was then replaced. |
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One of the features that stands out is the
asymmetrical strutting Hauser used in the top. The purpose of this design
seems to be to stiffen the treble side of the top and strengthen the treble
response. Although Santos Hernandez also used a sloping horizontal bar for
this purpose, Hauser had developed this idea independently, and, in fact,
patented this design in 1920. The top has five scalloped bars. Two traverse
bars between the neck block and sound hole. One traverse bar just beneath
the sound hole. One diagonal bar running from just below the waist on the
base side to the mid-lower bout on the treble side. And one traverse bar
just beneath the bridge. There is a bridge plate through which the bridge
pins. There is also a similar sized plate between the traverse bracing about
the sound hole, and a somewhat large plate that follows the contours of the
neck block above the uppermost brace. There is some thought that the plate
beneath the bridge, in addition to securing the bridge pins may encourage a
more even quality of sound across all the strings.
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The bracing on the back
consists of three traverse bars: one in the middle of the upper bout;
one just below the waist; and, one in the middle of the lower bout. The
center seam joining the two halves of the back is reinforced by a strip
of wood running its length. The
linings used to glue the top and back to the sides of guitar are made
from plain continuous strips, and notched to accommodate the traverse
bars.
The end block is of rounded pine, and is
drilled for a strap peg.
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Neck
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features. It is appears to be Honduran mahogany that has been lacquered
black, with an ice cream cone type heal. The neck fits into a dove-tail
joint, but is fastened to the body by a bolt which is set into the heal and
goes through a threaded nut set into the neck block emerging on the other
side. The dove-tail joint is cleverly made by constructing the neck block of
several pieces. The inner member appears was formed by cutting V shaped
wedge out. This pine wedge was glued to the neck assemble and so fit
perfectly into the V shaped slot. The pieces with the V slot were then
backed by another piece of wood, one side of which was then rounded.
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Headstock
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The headstock is distinctively different from
the guitars from 1925 on which paid homage to Torres and Manuel Ramirez.
Rather, it has a crest like a flattened m with an oval hole through with a
guitar strap was probably attached. Hauser uses a v-joint to attach the head
to neck, a feature that he carried over into his Spanish-style guitars, but
one which is not characteristic of Spanish instruments. |
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Fingerboard
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The ebony fingerboard has twenty frets,
including a zero fret just in front of the nut which seems to function
somewhat like the saddle and contribute to the guitar's volume, sustain, and
evenness of tone. This is also a feature seen in some of his later work.
There are position markers at the 5th, 7th, 9th, 12th and 17th frets. Like
on a violin, the Hauser's fingerboard floats above the body of the guitar. |
Tuning machines
| The tuning machines appear to be
made of nickel, perhaps by Landstorfer,
with ivory grips. |
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Bridge
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Hauser seems to have
experimented with a number of bridge types, including adjustable bridges
with metal tailpiece assemblies that fastened to the bottom of the
guitar. On this guitar, he used a simple elegant pin bridge with what
might be described as a pointed mustache.
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The Hauser Riddle
1924 Hermann Hauser played
by
Randall
Avers
This guitar presents a puzzle. It has tonal
characteristics concentrated trebles of remarkable purity, great separation,
balance and evenness of tone, qualities abundant in his later work, yet the
design and construction of this instrument could not be more different.
Although the 1924 Hauser has a lovely voice, there are some
differences in the sound and tone. The bases are not as quite as resonant,
nor does it have quite the volume of those he built in Spanish tradition.
While one suspects that the wood Hauser used might hold part of the answer
to this riddle--at least in terms of the purity of sound-- but I suspect is
real answer is more profound. As José Romanillos notes (Courtnall
1993:125-126), rather than fan bracing, European makers used several
traverse bars across the soundboard. As a result, their soundboards are
tighter and higher pitched than are guitars that use fan struts. While
European guitars may have nice trebles, the bases are restricted, and lack
vibrancy. While Romanillos goes on to say that the Spanish guitar is more
lightly built, and is designed to get the soundboard and the air cavity to
vibrate at their optimum, the 1924 Hauser, too, is a remarkably light
guitar, and the whole instrument vibrates when played. Features like zero
fret which seems to be designed to transfer energy back to the body suggest
that Hauser was already aware of many of the same principles that Spanish
makers were using, but approached them in a different manner. We certainly
see this in his patent of the diagonal bar. While Romanillos holds that
Hauser had to forget the German tradition in order to produce the kind of
sound Segovia was looking for, what this 1924 Hauser suggests is what had to
do was to translate what he knew about guitar making into the Spanish
tradition-- and what took him so much time and effort to figure out was the
methods these great Spanish luthiers used to control the same sorts of
variables that he controlled using German methods. This guitar suggest that
Hauser was not a mere copyist, but a true innovator who brought considerable
knowledge to the Spanish tradition and enriched it.
References
Courtnall, Roy. Making Master Guitars.
London: Robert Hale, 1993.
Hutting, H.E. "Remembering Hermann Hauser II."
The Guild of American Luthiers Quarterly. Vol. 11, No. 3.
Morrish, John. The Classical Guitar: A
Complete History. London: Outline Press Ltd.
Segovia, Andres. "In Memoriam, Hermann
Hauser." Guitar Review, Vol. 16, 1954.
Urlik, Sheldon. A collection of Fine Spanish
Guitars from Torres to the Present. Commerce, CA: Sunny Knoll Publishing
Company, 1997.
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