Taylor Guitars 812ce 12-Fret
A Fresh Take on an Old Favorite
Several years ago, it was difficult to imagine anyone improving upon Taylor's vaunted 800 series. Most people would be terrified to try and fix something so decidedly unbroken, but Andy Powers is not most people. He built his first guitar at age eight, and he's had his nose to the grindstone ever since. So, the redesigned 800 series is a celebration of a storied tradition by a builder with twenty years of experience, but it also injects that tradition with oodles and oodles of youthful energy. This combination of innovation and experience has resulted in a truly stunning final product.
To start, they recalculated the ideal thickness of every top, back, and side of every guitar, and they decided to finish each piece of wood with a very thin polyester gloss finish to optimize projection. Also, each body size features side bracing to help improve the connection between the top and back to increase frequency response. This doesn't even take into account the redesigned ES-2 System--which delivers truly incredible plugged-in tone--or the stunning new aesthetic updates like figured maple binding, an Indian rosewood pickguard, and an abalone rosette. Now, fresh for 2020, it comes with a radiused armrest! Armrests allow you to play longer with greater comfort, and they help the guitar project more, because your arm kills fewer vibrations on the top!
Grand Concert Greatness
Taylor's Grand Concert body shape offers a host of strengths to both fingerstyle players and strummers. Guitars with this shape produce punchy midrange response, well-defined low-end, and plenty of that classic Taylor sparkle and chime. Their articulation is incredible, and their woody attack captures every detail and nuance of your right-hand dynamics. When you dig into them, more and more overtones pop out of the top as the sound becomes more piano-like and full, like a box full of lush resonance. This is because the Grand Concert's smaller body has less headroom, which makes it easier to get the top moving and get some natural-sounding compression.
A Twelve-Fret Terror
A guitar with a 24 7/8"-scale 12-fret neck always has slinkier handfeel than its 14-fret cousins. There's less tension on the strings, which reduces the player's left-hand effort and makes bending much easier. But, a 12-fret neck doesn't just affect feel. To make it work, the luthier must position the bridge in the sweet spot where the top is most flexible. This makes the top vibrate in a different way, and it gives the guitar exceptional punching power, projection, and woody warmth.
A V-Classic
We can't talk about the 812ce without talking about Taylor's new V-Class bracing. It's an elegant solution to a problem that has plagued luthiers for decades. For years, acoustic guitar builders had to compromise between volume and sustain. Flexibility equals volume, and stiffness equals sustain. Obviously, a piece of wood cannot be rigid and flexible at the same time, so builders had to go for one or the other.
Andy Powers wanted to have his cake and eat it, too. After much tinkering, V-Class bracing was his elegant solution to the problem that has plagued luthiers for centuries. As the name implies, V-Class bracing features two long pieces of wood that make a "V" shape together. The bracing is quite thin and flexible near the rear bout, but it becomes thicker as you get closer to the soundhole.
So, you get volume from the flexible parts of the bracing, and sustain from the rigid parts! Many areas of the guitar neck that typically sound weak (ninth fret on the G string, for instance) have just as much presence, resonance, and sustain as the low E. As a result, the 812ce 12-Fret sounds supremely balanced and sculpted. When you hear one played live in the room, you'd swear a mix engineer had already done a bunch of post-production work on it. And, it gives the guitar piano-like note separation and crystalline clarity even when you play fancy jazz chords!
Intonation Station
V-Class bracing also does wonders for the guitar's intonation. Are you ready to have your mind blown? When I visited the Taylor headquarters El Cajon, Andy Powers explained that an acoustic guitar's intonation is not necessarily just the sum of the typical adjustments like saddle height, nut slots, and neck angle (though they do play a part). The way that the actual guitar itself vibrates also has a lot to do with how in-tune it sounds.
Andy told me to picture it like this: when you take close-up slow-motion footage of a guitar's top with a high-speed camera as someone plays it, you can see the top move vividly. On a traditional X-braced guitar, the top vibrates in a disorderly, disjointed manner. This can cause a guitar with the perfect saddle height and neck angle to sound out of tune when you play a big open chord.
By contrast, guitars with V-Class bracing vibrate in a much more orderly manner. The graduated braces compel the energy from the player's attack to move from the thin outer part of the bracing to the thicker inner part in an efficient manner. If you were to take a high-speed shot of a V-Class top, you would see it rock back and forth evenly in a pleasing pattern. Because of that V-Class magic, the 812ce 12-Fret sounds so in-tune that it's scary.
Specifications:
Brand | Taylor Guitars |
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Model | 812ce 12-Fret |
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Type | Grand Concert |
Finish Color | Natural |
Top Wood | Solid Sitka Spruce |
Top Finish | Gloss |
Bracing | V-Class |
Back & Sides Wood | Solid East Indian Rosewood |
Back & Sides Finish | Gloss |
Cutaway | Venetian |
Neck Wood | Tropical Mahogany |
Neck Dimensions | .840 1st - .880 7th |
Fretboard Material | West African Crelicam Ebony |
Fingerboard Inlays | Mother-of-Pearl Element |
Frets | 20 |
Scale Length | 24 7/8" |
Width at Nut | 1.75" |
Nut Material | Tusq |
Binding | Pale Non-Figured Maple |
Purfling | Rosewood Top Edge Trim and Rosette Outline |
Rosette | Single-Ring Abalone with Rosewood |
Electronics | Taylor Expression System 2 |
Tuners | Chrome |
Bridge | West African Crelicam Ebony |
Saddle | Micarta |
Pickguard | Rosewood |
Case | Taylor Deluxe Hardshell Case |
Stock Code | A801026111000077000-2611 |
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