2000 Gibson J-45 Rosewood Slope Dreadnought Guitar
J-45 Rosewood models don't come into the shop very often. This should really be called a J-50 Rosewood, though, considering that natural top. Oh, well! Modern Gibson is nothing if not mildly-confusing. I suppose vintage Gibson was, too.
This is a local customer's guitar and it had a number of problems to address and all got solved -- it wound-up getting a neck reset, fret level/dress, bridge reglue, new bone saddle, and setup work and cleaning. It plays spot-on, now, and despite a prodigious belly under the bridge (I mean, this is what mediums do to guitars like this), it's holding firm and ready to roll.
Just like the D-18/D-28 divide, the difference between a mahogany-backed J-45 and a rosewood-backed one is that you get deeper, fuller bass with a little more sustain but lose some immediacy to the notes and some forward cut and punch. It still has plenty of volume, mind you.
This guitar has been ridden a little hard as it's been in band use but that's just the way we like to see them!
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