Sorry to dig up old bones but found this thread and have an interesting story about my stanley.
I have #5 and while previously owning many mandolins (BRW, Collings, Weber, Pomeroy, bla bla bla) I've found my Stanley suits me the best for the type of music I play. Ah'um Monroe mostly. Thats not taking anything away from any of the other builders out there, each had they're own thing goin on and I get chastises daily for selling each one off. But "TO ME" this stanley is the bee's knee's and while I would like bigger frets and maybe new tuners I didn't see anything wrong with my baby. That is unit I brought it to a local luthier who will remain nameless and is a friend of mine to discuss the wish list I mentioned above. He'd never heard of Stanley mandolin's and proceeded to rake his finish work over the coals. He started at the headstock and ended at the tailpiece, one thing after another, neck to thick, fern inlay didn't fit the mandolin (bought instead of cut), points not straight and the list goes on. I left wanting to sell it as fast as I could with my tail between my legs, until that evening when I played it. #5 has the sound and I realized that throughout the rant earlier that day he never once mentioned the tone or was slightly interested in how the instrument sounded. He purely was interested in visuals. Needless to say I still have the mandolin and will keep it for a long time despite the cosmetic flaws. On Jul 28, 8:50 pm, J Hill <[email protected]> wrote: > Mike - I have one of Chris Stanley's mandolins. I got it maybe 4 years > ago. I would echo Brian's observations in that the fit and finish was a > little less than what I was used to (this was my first small builder > mandolin) but it was definitely within the range of acceptability. > > The sound is very good. Quite loud and a good fit for bluegrass. In the > hands of a better player it sounds very good.. > > Chris was very good to work with when I ordered mine. I wanted a one-piece > back and more of a leathery color and he was very accommodating. > > They're worth checking out. > Jason > > On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 2:23 PM, Dasspunk <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Yes and sure. > > > Chris Stanley is a fellow Wisconsinite and though I have yet to meet > > him, I have friends that play his mandos. His early work had nice tone > > but the fit and finish suffered a bit. This changed over the years and > > they now look as good as they sound. Great Bluegrass tone, great for > > Monroe style (at least as best as I can play it). Volume to spare. > > Excellent mandos period. I recently played one of his newest (last few > > months I believe) and it was the best I've played of his... an > > outstanding mando in all respects > > > Hope that helps... > > Brian > > > On Jul 27, 7:19 pm, Mike <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Wish I could type, "care to comment".! > > > > On Jul 27, 6:17 pm, Mike <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Has anybody here had any experience with Chris Stanley mandolins and > > > > care sto comment as to sound , tone etc.? --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Taterbugmando" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/taterbugmando?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
