Guitar
School
April 1997
Vol. 9 No. 2
Tin Man
MUSIC IS ART, but guitarist Ian Schneller of the
band Falstaff feels musical instruments deserve
similar merit. Schneller started out as a sculptor,
but noticed a change in attitude about his work when
he started building guitars. "People stopped
considering me a sculptor," says Schneller.
"To me, I was building sculptures that happened
to be guitars."
Fortunately for Schneller, the transition from
sculptor to luthier has been lucrative, and he now
manufactures the Specimen line of guitars out of his
Chicago-based repair shop. His brushed aluminum
Specimens are especially eye-catching, but he insists
the material is entirely functional.
"Aluminum provides tremendous sustain and the
overtones and harmonics are incredible," he
insists. "Once you've heard one of my aluminum
guitars, you can't go back to your regular axe. It's
like drinking your first glass of fine wine after
you've become accustomed to rotgut."
Schneller also
has a line of amps. They're similar to a tweed Fender
Champ but significantly beefed up, featuring a
10-watt class A design with a nickel-plated steel
chassis and a solid birch cabinet with steam-bent
paneling. "It has a woody, crunchy tone,"
he says. "The cabinet itself is tonal, like the
body on a classical guitar. And, like my guitars,
it's indestructible. You could drop it off a cliff
and it would be fine."
Schneller's band, Falstaff, has just released
Falstaff II on Homestead Records. The guitarist sees
his two pursuits as interrelated: "One things
fuels the other. I write a lot of songs while I'm in
the shop. I usually record and play gigs after the
shop closes. Now, when prospective customers ask how
my guitars and amps sound, I tell them to get my
album."
Chris Gill
photo/Troy Burt