MOST OF US know that vintage acoustic guitars can be a little inconsistent in quality. We accept that some are diamonds, while others don’t shine quite so brightly. After all, isn’t that part of the mystique of things built the old-fashioned way? The trouble with that theory is that, while everyone loves a nice, resonant old guitar, no one wants to own one of the bad ones. And that really summarizes what modern luthiers are trying to do through the union of handcraft and technology today: make better guitars, more consistently.
Few companies embody this approach as completely as Furch. In fact, the company, which is based in the Czech Republic, has revolution in its blood. Founder František Furch built his first guitar in 1981 because so few good acoustics were available.
“Back then, Czechoslovakia was under a tight communist regime,” he explains, “which didn’t allow us to travel almost anywhere, let alone to the countries of the Western Bloc. Quality instruments were available in Western European countries, but due to travel bans, these were not accessible to