








|
| |
 |
Illinois
Entertainer
March 2006
If You Build It, They Will Strum
The Chicago School Of Guitar Making
|
- Everybody plays guitar, right? Any
musicians classified section will turn up
10 or more guitar players for every bassist and
keyboardist. Now, try to find someone to setup,
maintain, or rewire all the instruments belonging
to all those guitar players and the list of
reputable candidates gets shorter in a hurry.
Sure, one can find a number of individuals with a
shingle out, offering guitar repair and other
services, but there are often conflicting reports
about the quality of work done and prices
charged.
-
- Wouldnt life be simpler if more guitarists
(and bassists) were knowledgeable enough to do
their own neck adjustments, intonation, and other
common procedures for their instruments
regularly? Enter Ian Schneller, co-owner (with
wife Nadine) of Specimen Products guitar shop
(www.specimenproducts.com) and founder of The
Chicago School Of Guitar Making. Schneller,
formerly of legendary Chicago band Shrimp Boat,
is a highly skilled luthier and builder of custom
tube amplifiers who has been in the business of
building and repairing instruments since the mid
1980s.
-
I think it is a great
benefit to area musicians who want to be closer
in touch with their instruments, he says.
Anybody can benefit from learning more
about how their equipment operates. He
founded the school partly in response to the
years of phone calls and resumes received from
people wanting to apprentice and learn guitar
repair, and partly to try to revive a
time-honored tradition, which was once emblematic
of our fair city.

Surprisingly, in a place once
called The Guitar-Building Capital Of The
World, there was nowhere in the area to
learn the craft before the Chicago School
launched in August 2005, and only a handful of
custom builders were doing business. Schneller is
one of the few who has prospered in this
hardscrabble environment and seen his reputation
as a guitar tech spread across the city and seen
his guitars used by artists including Veruca
Salt, Wilco, Neko Case, and Califone.
- He comes to the guitar world with a background in
sculpture and a degree from the School Of The Art
Institute and brings an artists vision and
regard for tradition to what has become his
lifes work. He also has a desire to pass on
the knowledge he has accumulated over 20 years
spent building and repairing guitars and tube
amps. These qualities have made Schnellers
efforts involving the School an almost instant
success.
-
- Things with the School are going very
well, he says, and Im amazed at
the interest. I have over 130 students now. Many
of them are enrolling for their third class in a
row and were quickly gaining
momentum. Indeed, with the types of classes
offered, it is easy to see why the School keeps
picking up speed. The classes Ive
offered thus far the setup and maintenance
class, the fretting workshop, and the advanced
guitar electronics class are all part of
what I am considering a foundations program
working up to where the students will be able to
make sensible decisions about designing and
constructing an instrument. This year,
Schneller plans to add a glue technologies course
to the foundation series and it will teach
students the proper way to glue and repair
headstocks, cracks, braces, and bridges. Over the
summer he will teach a guitar-building workshop
in which aspiring luthiers will design and build
their own instrument from scratch. There will
also be a tube-amp building class where students
build their own from the ground up.
-
- That he is even willing to teach the kinds of
skills offered in his classes makes Schneller
different from most instrument builders, in
Chicago or anywhere else. Many luthiers are very
secretive about what they do and know and are
worried about losing business to others who
possess the same knowledge. Its very
easy to sense a bit of rivalry and
competitiveness [among luthiers] because it is
sort of a niche vocation. When some guy moves in
a few blocks away doing the same thing, you get a
little nervous about it. Schneller,
however, has seen his clientele continue to
steadily build over the two decades he has been
doing this and is not threatened or worried about
sharing his knowledge. I had received so
many inquiries for internships and
apprenticeships, I had a stack of resumes on my
desk that was approaching a foot tall, he
relates, and it just seemed like a
no-brainer. He reports no drop in his
repair business since beginning to teach his art
to others, and, with the seemingly exponential
growth of the school, may well end up better than
ever and surpassing hose who choose to keep
everything a secret.
-
- There are, of course, other places to learn the
six-string science, including the Roberto-Venn
School Of Luthiery in Arizona and The American
School Of Lutherie in Oregon. Most of these
institutions are, in Schnellers words,
boot camp-style situations that
require students to set up housing on campus for
periods of time ranging from a few weeks to a few
months. What sets The Chicago School Of Guitar
Making apart is Schnellers decision to
offer classes at night and on weekends, keeping
day jobs and personal lives intact. This also
allows students to, as he says, Test the
water and see if it is something they want to
pursue in a fuller way.
-
- Talking with Schneller gives one the sense of
speaking with a man who is doing exactly what he
should be doing. He had already found a niche for
himself in an increasingly hostile business as a
repairman and builder, but, in sharing his
knowledge with others, he may have found what he
will do for the second half of his life. He does
hope to train enough repair people that he will
be able to leave some of the day-to-day setups
and pickup installs to them so that he may have
more time to design and build new instruments.
But it is the teaching itself that seems to be
his passion.
-
- Schneller is an old master in an increasingly
codependent world and represents a huge resource
to the local music scene. Whether you long to
build that dream guitar yourself or just want to
handle your own repairs at home or on the gig,
The Chicago School of Guitar Making can only be a
step in the right direction.
-
- Mike OCull
Photo/David Engel
|