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Taylor Big Baby £329

Just how big does this baby sound?

Guitarist (Matthew Wig), Mon 24 Aug 2009, 4:17 pm UTC

The success of Taylor's smallest and by far its least expensive model, the three-quarter size Baby, introduced back in 1996, may have taken the company by surprise, but, unsurprisingly, Taylor responded with the introduction of another similar, but fuller-figured model.

Sticking generally to the same structural and visual template, a full 25.5 inch scale length now replaces the Baby's 22.75 inch scale. An increase in demensions has created a 15/16ths size dreadnought body, although it is, proportionally, slightly shallower than a regular dreadnought.

New Neck

One of the original Baby's unique features was its neck joint. Its development helped pave the way for Taylor's 'new technology' necks. The Big Baby's neck is almost identical except for some internal modifications to the neck block.

A little bit like an electric bolt-on design except the cross-head screws are sunk in through the fingerboard – this virtually heel-less neck is mounted into a precisely machined socket, routed out of the soundboard and the underlying section of the extended L-shape neck-block. This might sound like a flimsy platform for an acoustic neck, but it's really an extremely rigid structure.

Apart from the advantages of being quickly and easily removable/re-settable, this also results in the mahogany neck extending all the way to the end of the ebony fingerboard, with no part of the latter joined to the soundboard. It is this basic principle – avoiding the distortion of the fingerboard due to soundboard movement – that is behind the NT neck, although that is a considerably more complex, intricately machined design.

The remaining construction details couldn't be simpler. Although the top gets a regular X-shape spread of scalloped braces, the Big Baby body doesn't used kerfed linings (apart from a couple of two-inch sections at either of the upper bout's main brace) and there's no bracing on the back.

Instead, the back is given a pronounced arch, for rigidity and improved projection, that looks similar to that of an f-hole jazz guitar, but is pressed rather than carved into this shape. It isn't possible to mould solid wood in this way, showing that Taylor has made creative use of these laminate panels with this design.

With no linings, the internal join between back and sides is, understandably, a little more gluey than we're used to with Taylor. With no purfling, binding or scratchplate, the soundboard is a Spartan affair, but the laser-etched rosette is a subtle yet phenomenally precise work of hi-tech art.

The two-piece neck features the new NT-style finger-jointed headstock, offering a neat, structurally reliable and resource saving alternative to the one-piece concept. Aside from the arguably unsightly crew heads (there for the sake of honesty, apparently) the fingerboard and frets are quite immaculate.

The headstock is veneered with Lexan (a trade name for a polycarbonate material) and houses a mechanically solid sextet of tuners. Though normally purveyors of Tusq nuts and saddles, Taylor has opted for a non-brand substitute here.

The choice is a commonly used, hard, durable phenolic plastic (Micarta is a well-known trade name for phenlic). As you'd expect, they are respectively seated and slotted with extreme accuracy, although they could both do with some smoothing of their sharp corners. It's reassuring to see that the solid ebony bridge is as finely buffed and bevel-edged as you'd expect on any Taylor.

There's a grainy, occasionally rough but natural look to this thin mat-satin finish, which adds to the puritanical, sparse look of the Big Baby, but there's nothing half-baked about the way this guitar has been assembled.

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User comments (2)

Average user rating 5 of 5

  • legend52

    Avatar for legend52

    7 weeks ago.

    User rating 4 of 5

    Mark as inappropriate

  • pdc

    Avatar for pdc

    12 weeks ago.

    User rating 5 of 5


    Have been playing a BB for the past 6 months.
    Very easy to play and has a great fretboard.
    Own two other more expensive and better made guitars, but neither sound as nice as the Taylor or are as fun to play.
    Very easy to pickup and play, but hard to put down again. I was playing mine at 1am last night.
    Taylor are very clever with this, offering a great playing experience - they know you are going to be sorely tempted by their more expensive models.
    Bit of an instant classic.

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MusicRadar rating

4.5 of 5

Pros

The smart economy of the construction and finishing, the encouraging playability and genuinely enthusiastic tone.

Cons

The odd rough patch, a bit too light when flat-picked.

Verdict

Constantly moving on, it's hard to keep up with Taylor's cauldron of steaming ideas, but someone's got to lead the way forward, and it seems we're in reliable hands.

Review Policy

All MusicRadar’s reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.

User rating

5 of 5

Specification Show

Big Baby

Price:
£329
No. of Frets:
20
Scale Length (mm) (mm):
648
Country of Origin:
USA
Weight (kg) (kg):
1.75
Weight (lb) (lb):
3.8
Neck Material:
Mahogany
Top Material:
Spruce
Body Style:
15/16th size dreadnought acoustic
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