Let me preface this post by saying that I consider Robert Lundberg the
greatest American Lute maker, living or dead. He was a true master producing
master works. 

I learned my building from Bob Lundberg in his shop during the 1980s. I was
somewhat surprised by some of the offerings in the book as the processes
were not all exactly as I had learned. Experience has made me alter my
building procedures even more from that initial tuition to suit my own
vision of the instrument. I found that Bob's fealty to exact historical
precedent, while not slavish or dogmatic, carried an importance that I
thought unnecessary to modern playing. He was, however, just what the HIP
advocate ordered. 

I, therefore, have assumed a comfortable position of maverick or outright
heretic in my building techniques and uses of modern available woods. I
depart from Bob's teaching in adhesive choices and uses, hardwood
applications and string tensions. My barring has matured with time and my
top thicknessing scheme has evolved as well. Bob would be interested in some
of those innovations, aghast at others. But, he  might be gratified that I
toast him often and keep a worn copy of his book right beside my own
building notes on the shelf in the shop.

"From each according to his gifts." Read the book, it has much to offer if
not everything.

Rob Dorsey
http://LuteCraft.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Timothy Motz [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2008 9:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [LUTE-BUILDER] Re: What to build.

Someone once told me that I needed to read the book, but that no one would
really build lutes that way.  Having read the book, I would agree.  I'm glad
he wrote the book and I refer to it a lot, but I wouldn't build a lute that
way.

Tim Motz




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