Description: MORALES BM70 1979 This guitar was made in 1979 at Zen-On’s guitar factory in Suwa, Japan being the high-end model within Morales BM acoustic guitar series. All BM (BIG Mac) models were designed by Mr. Mac Yasuda, who also supervised their production. Founded in early 1930s Zen-On Music Co. is a highly reputable Japanese music score and musical instruments distributor. Zen-On had its own guitar manufacture in Suwa, Japan yet some Zen-On instruments were made by independent workshops led by great Japanese luthiers. There have been countless guitar models and brands sold under Zen-On umbrella, from beginner level to highest end ones.The best-known Zen-On’s lines of acoustic guitars were Morales and Roje, both discontinued by late 1970s. While these guitars must have been made by various workshops none bears any signature nor stamp of actual maker.Even though BM70 is not “all solid woods” model it offers simply terrific sound, far better than many “all solid woods” guitars currently sold by Guitar Center.Guitar offers impressive volume and great response. Its sound is rich and very romantic. The bases are quite deep but also very clean. Trebles are strong yet very sweet at the same time. Therefore, this guitar is an especially great choice for romantic fingerstyle pieces. Being priced 70 000yen in 1979 it was not a cheap guitar. In those years Japanese beginner could easily get decent sounding “all plywood” guitar for 10 000 yen. Despite its age this guitar remains in excellent condition, most likely played for rather a short period of time, and then stored in its case for many years. Its body doesn’t bear any conspicuous cosmetic imperfections. Although this guitar was made based on Martin’s OOO (auditorium) blueprints it has somewhat different dimensions. Specification:Body length: 505mmLower bout width: 410mmUpper bout width: 310mmBody depth: 95mmScale: 650mmNut width: 43mmTop: Solid Spruce /Martin style X bracing with not scalloped braces /ultra-light gloss finishBack & Sides: Rosewood “laminates” / ultra-light gloss finish“Laminated” is quite unfortunate term regarding Japanese made guitars. These plates were made from 2 layers of solid wood glued together with natural resins. They were made so well that they performed as good as solid wood while being far less expensive in guitar production and far more resistant to cracking in regular use. In recent years many guitar makers around the world adopted a new term "semi-solid" to describe these plates.V shape Neck: Mahogany with 2-way truss rodFingerboard: EbonyNut width: 43mmScale: 650 mmThe action is set to 3.00 mm under E6 and 2.50 mm under E1, with very little extra room on the saddle.This guitar will be shipped in a used hard-shell case.THE ONLY PURPOSE OF THIS CASE IS TO PROTECT THE GUITAR DURING SHIPMENT. I WILL NOT PROVIDE ITS DETAILED DESCRIPTION OR MAKE ADDITIONAL PICTURES, NOR I WILL ACCEPT ANY COMPLAINTS. IF YOU DON’T LIKE THIS CASE YOU WILL NEED TO BUY A DIFFERENT ONE. IF YOU BUY A GUITAR, YOU MUST ANTICIPATE TAKING IT TO YOUR LOCAL GUITAR SHOP FOR FINAL ADJUSTMENTS CALLED “SETUP”. STRING BUZZ DOESN’T MEAN THAT GUITAR IS DEFECTIVE. My posted for sale guitars are stored in climate-controlled vault already packed into shipping boxes, with loosen strings. Because the strings are loosened, they don’t pull the neck or soundboard, and the neck may relax (straighten more) and the soundboard flatten a bit, which may result with the string action being lower than my it was with my original settings and lead to buzzes and/or dead notes after guitar arrives to you. Such a change in neck curvature can also happen just because of vibrations during the shipment and/or temperature fluctuations. Therefore, you must be ready to make final action adjustment yourself and or have it done by professional. All that really needs to be done is the simple neck adjustment by using the truss rod (turning the truss rod counterclockwise will relief the neck and strings will move away from the frets). THAT IS WHY TRUSS RODS ARE INSTALLED IN THE NECKS OF ACOUSTIC GUITARS!!! The key to understand value of vintage Japanese guitars is to acknowledge galloping price inflation (devaluation of Japanese yen) during 1960s & 1970s. This inflation slowed down in the 1980s.During 1960s and most of 1970s model numbers of Japanese guitars were strictly interconnected with their prices in Japanese yen. By the early 1980s and during following decades model numbers were no longer strictly associated with their prices. Some Japanese guitar makers introduced model names instead of model numbers. Others were still using model numbers with the addition of letters and/or other symbols. It is then important to understand that two Yamaha GC10 guitars made 10 years apart are two instruments of totally different classes. The same applies to any other Japanese maker/brand. The best way to estimate the true class of any given Japanese made instrument is to compare its price with the average annual salary of wage workers in Japanese private sectors. This salary was 450 600 yen in 1965; 825 900 yen in 1970; 1 868 300 yen in 1975; 2 689 000 yen in 1980; 3 163 000 yen in 1985; 3 761 000 yen in 1990; 4 107 000 yen in 1995; 4 082 000 yen in 2000. Any guitar priced 100 000 yen in 1970 (labelled usually as No10) would be priced 200 000 yen in 1975 (relabeled to No20 or 2000), 300 000 yen in 1977 (labelled as No3, No30 or 3000) and 500 000 yen by 1985 (labelled as No50 or 5000).Starting in 1977 Masaru Kohno introduced his new models No40 priced 400 000 yen and No50 priced 500 000 yen. By 1984 Kohno started using model names instead numbers and was raising their prices as he was pleased. The very top model 50 became model “Special”, and a decade later it became model “Maestro”. Naturally, all other Japanese guitar makers were doing similar pricing (labelling) upgrades.Knowing all of that, you can bet on that Masaru Kohno No50 made in 1982 is practically the same grade instrument as Kohno No20 made in 1972, or Kohno no 30 made in 1975.In the early 1970s the lowest Ryoji Matsuoka (all plywood) model was 10, followed by (solid top) models 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, 80 and (all solid woods) models 100 and 150. Models 50, 60 and 80 were made with non-solid figured Brazilian Rosewood (double) back and sides and top model 150 was the only one made with solid figured Brazilian Rosewood b/s.In 1980 the lowest Matsuoka model was (all plywood) 20, followed by (solid top) models 30,40,50, 60 and all solid woods models 80,100,150 and 200. By 1990 the lowest Matsuoka model was M40 and the highest was M300. By 2010 the lowest Matsuoka model was M50, and the top model was M270. You can bet that Ryoji Matsuoka model 50 from 1980 is of the same grade as model M100 from 2000, model 100 from 1980 is of the same grade as model M150 from 2000, model 150 from 1980 is of the same grade as M200 from 2000 and model 200 from 1980 is of the same grade as model M300 from 2000.It is important to mention that if modern era luthiers are using 40+ years old wood to make an “all solid” wood classical guitar, its price is minimum $8000.All vintage guitars made with Brazilian Rosewood are especially precious, including those made straight grain varieties and those with non-solid b/s.Because response and tonal properties of Spruce soundboards are improving over time, long seasoned Spruces are far more precious than long seasoned Cedars. It is not very difficult to find out what are current prices of such guitars made by the world’s leading luthiers.Return Policy Buyer has the right to return purchased guitar within 2 days from receipt. General TermsItems must be returned in original, as-shipped condition with all original packaging and no signs of use. Buyer assumes responsibility for all return shipping costs unless the item was not received as described.Fees and ChargesBuyer receives full refund in their original payment method, less any shipping costs.Special conditionsYou have 48 hours of trial after receiving the guitar. 48 hours is enough time to inspect the guitar. 1 hour is usually enough to evaluate the guitar’s tonality and if you don’t like it right away you won’t like it a week later. If you realize that you don’t like the guitar enough to keep it, you have the right to return it. If you find a real problem not disclosed in my description, you are covered by eBay’s Money Back Guarantee. If that problem is damage that likely occurred during the shipment I will file an insurance claim with eBay’s Ship Cover Program. If you decide to return the guitar you must notify me within 48 hours after delivery, pack it and ship it back within 24 hours after "return notification". If you expect to receive a full refund, the guitar must be returned in the same condition as I have shipped it to you. If it arrives back to me damaged, I will not issue any refund but cooperate with you on your insurance claim. It is therefore very important that you ship the guitar fully insured. Victor K.
Price: 1800 USD
Location: Alpharetta, Georgia
End Time: 2024-11-30T13:59:24.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Brand: Morales
Type: Acoustic Guitar