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Patrick James Eggle Parlour Cuban £2995

PJE's latest small-body offering is a special that surely earns itself a big fat cigar

Patrick James Eggle Parlour Cuban

Remarkably, the Cuban was a bank cashier's desk in a former life…

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After occasional promptings in the past, Patrick Eggle introduced his first parlour-bodied guitar a few years ago.

The standard model is a spruce/rosewood 12-fretter with a slot headstock, but what we have here is a rather special incarnation, which Patrick lists it as one of his Unique Guitars, since it is presently a one-off.

"The Cuban has an impressively grown-up, open timbre: warm, smooth and, for its body size, richly textured and dynamic"

A significant contributor to its specialness is that the body is formed from pieces of old, very high quality Cuban mahogany that actually once saw service as a bank cashier's desk. Patrick has had this beautiful timber in stock for a few years, and has enough for another three or four instruments.

Designed, as he puts it, as an 'old school' interpretation, there are a number of period constructional aspects. First, the guitar, rather than employing Patrick's usual Titebond white resin adhesive, is put together with hide glue - the type that was used pretty much universally on vintage acoustics and other old stringed instruments.

Applied hot and brushed on, it's not necessarily better than modern adhesives but Patrick cites its good capillary and soaking-in properties as two advantages. He offers it as an option on all his guitars for £100 extra.

Second, the Cuban's beautifully buffed finish - gloss on the body, semi-gloss on the neck - is nitrocellulose, which Eggle is reverting to on all his guitars, not only because he's rediscovered a high-quality supplier, but also because his previous UV-cured lacquer is no longer produced.

Other retro touches include a bar ebony bridge with long saddle and a Brazilian rosewood headplate. The nut and saddle are both unbleached bone, which Eggle prefers because bleaching, he says, tends to soften the material.

One hardware aspect that seemingly bucks the approach is fitting Grover Rotomatic tuners rather than open-geared Waverlys. Patrick's rationale is that since he opted to use his regular peghead design, not the slot variety as on the standard parlour, he felt the die-cast jobs were a better aesthetic match. Feel free to agree or otherwise.

Cosmetics on the 343mm (13.5-inch) wide, 102mm-deep guitar are tastefully discreet. The body and soundhole are bound in ivoroid with thin three-ply dark/light-wood purfling; the markers along the unbound ebony fingerboard are simple pearl dots. The heel cap and endblock inlay both look like headplate-matching Brazilian.

Attached by Eggle's usual Collings-style bolting system, the 632mm-scale one-piece South American mahogany neck is unsurprisingly configured for fingerstyle, with an airy 46.5mm span at the nut and a mainstream bridge string spacing of 55mm.

The width might suggest a bit of a handful (and if that worries you, he will happily fashion a slimmer affair at no extra cost) but in fact the neck's an easy, accessible player, even for smaller hands, thanks to a shallow 'C' profile that graduates gently from just 20mm at the first position to under 22mm prior to the heel turn.

The relatively weighty Grovers prompt a hint of neck heaviness despite the 12-fret configuration, but not annoyingly so. Needless to say, the fretting is immaculately fitted and polished.

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MusicRadar rating

4.5 of 5

Pros

Mature, atypical parlour sound; looks

Cons

Some may prefer open-geared tuners

Verdict

Another world-class guitar from PJE

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.

Specification

Parlour Cuban

Price:
£2995
No. of Frets:
19
Country of Origin:
UK
Hardware:
Nickel Grover Rotomatic
Weight (lb) (lb):
4
Back Material:
Solid Cuban mahogany
Neck Material:
Mahogany
Top Material:
Solid Cuban mahogany
Nut:
46.5mm
Sides Material:
Solid Cuban mahogany
Scale Length (mm) (mm):
632
Weight (kg) (kg):
1.82
Fingerboard Material:
Ebony
Nut Material:
Bone
Body Style:
12-fret parlour acoustic
Available Finish:
Nitrocellulose gloss body, semi-gloss neck

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