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Taylor Guitars Prototype Grand Pacific 327e

$ 1161.07

Availability: 39 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Condition: New
  • Brand: Does not apply
  • Type: Does not apply
  • MPN: 1206090118
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    Wildwoodians, our friends at Taylor have done it again! They’ve sent us another batch of prototype guitars for us to showcase for you all, and we are pleased to report that they are all delightful instruments. Some are one-offs where they tried something new, some became the basis for limited runs, some have upgraded cosmetic appointments, and some have special tonewoods. This particular guitar is a 327e with urban ash back and sides instead of the usual blackwood, giving it a unique voice and appearance. Read on for more info about this rare bird below!
    The Grand Pacific: A Modern Classic
    Wildwoodians, we are proud to present the latest guitar to emerge from Taylor design maestro Andy Powers’s workshop: the Grand Pacific dreadnought. Simply put, this new round-shouldered beast is one of the most inspiring new guitar designs to emerge in the last decade. Though many of Taylor’s classic cornerstones inform its design, the Grand Pacific sounds and feels like nothing else in their entire line. It’s revolutionary, it’s bold, it’s fresh, it’s imaginative, and above all, it is sure to inspire you to reach new heights on your journeys across the fretboard. I (Trevor, the resident Wildwood Guitar Scribe) would like to cordially invite you to journey down the rabbit hole with me and learn a bit more about what makes the Grand Pacific so spectacular.
    California Dreamin’
    Before we get into the specific delights the 327e has to offer, let’s take a step back and talk about what the Grand Pacific body style is and what benefits it offers the player. I was lucky enough to learn straight from the source, because our friends at Taylor were kind enough to fly me out to San Diego to visit their factory in El Cajon and learn about the Grand Pacific from Andy Powers himself.
    Andy Powers is everything you’d hope him to be. He brims with warmth and intelligence, and he is a truly fearsome guitar picker. After setting the fretboard ablaze as he put a Grand Pacific through its paces, he shed some light on what inspired him to build the guitar in the first place.
    While Andy was doing a bunch of work on his new home, he found himself listening to a lot of classic acoustic music: bluegrass, country, and folk. Now, Andy was a renowned repair man before he started work at Taylor. Though he’s too modest to name names, he personally worked on many historic guitars that made appearances on iconic records. As he listened to these albums, he reflected on the time he spent with these classic instruments. Oddly enough, many of them left him wanting something more when he sat down with them. They just didn’t sound like the record! Why? The wheels in Andy’s head started turning, and he started dreaming. How could he design an acoustic guitar that sounded like a record in the room? The seed that would grow into the Grand Pacific began to sprout.
    The Birth of V-Class
    To tell the story of the Grand Pacific, we have to pick up the story of V-Class bracing. Though V-Class bracing made its commercial debut in Taylor’s Grand Auditorium guitars, Andy Powers actually came up with the idea for the Grand Pacific. V-Class bracing is truly revolutionary, and it is one of the reasons for the Grand Pacific’s greatness.
    You see, for years acoustic guitar builders had to compromise between volume and sustain. Flexibility equals volume, and stiffness equals sustain. Obviously, a piece of wood cannot be rigid and flexible at the same time, so builders had to go for one or the other.
    Andy Powers wanted to have his cake and eat it, too. After much tinkering, V-Class bracing was his elegant solution to the problem that has plagued luthiers for centuries. As the name implies, V-Class bracing features two long pieces of wood that make a “V” shape together. The bracing is quite thin and flexible near the rear bout, but it becomes thicker as you get closer to the soundhole.
    So, you get volume from the flexible parts of the bracing, and sustain from the rigid parts! Many areas of the guitar neck that typically sound weak (ninth fret on the G string, for instance) have just as much presence, resonance, and sustain as the low E. As a result, the Grand Pacific sounds supremely balanced.
    Intonation Station
    V-Class bracing also does wonders for the guitar’s intonation. Are you ready to have your mind blown? When I was in El Cajon, Andy explained that an acoustic guitar’s intonation is not necessarily just the sum of the typical adjustments like saddle height, nut slots, and neck angle (though they do play a part). The way that the
    actual guitar itself
    vibrates also has a lot to do with how in-tune it sounds.
    Andy told me to picture it like this: when you take close-up slow-motion footage of a guitar’s top with a high-speed camera as someone plays it, you can see the top move vividly. On a traditional X-braced guitar, the top vibrates in a disorderly, disjointed manner. This can cause a guitar with the perfect saddle height and neck angle to sound out of tune when you play a big open chord.
    By contrast, guitars with V-Class bracing vibrate in a much more orderly manner. The graduated braces compel the energy from the player’s attack to move from the thin outer part of the bracing to the thicker inner part in an efficient manner. If you were to take a high-speed shot of a V-Class top, you would see it rock back and forth evenly. Because of that V-Class magic, the Grand Pacific sounds so in-tune that it’s scary.
    A Metaphor for Monster Sound
    So, how does V-Class bracing sound in the context of a classic dreadnought? Andy loves to talk in metaphors, and he shared one really crystallized my understanding of the Grand Pacific’s tone. Imagine a six-lane highway with six cars traveling side-by-side in their respective lanes. That’s how a Grand Auditorium with V-Class bracing sounds. You can hear each note ring out pure and clear with excellent separation.
    The Grand Pacific sounds more like six boats traveling side by side. Though the boats don’t crash into one another, their wakes interact behind them. When you strum all six strings on a Grand Pacific, the notes “run together” and blend in a way that is symmetrical and orderly but also warm and inviting. Andy kept calling it a “seasoned” sound, and that’s an apt description. The notes bleed into one another and form beautiful vivid, colorful timbres.
    Post-Production Magic
    The reason why most of the iconic guitars Andy repaired left him feeling disappointed is simple: a lot usually happens to acoustic tracks in post-production. Typically, a mixing engineer will use an EQ to roll off woofy low end and cut other “problem frequencies” that sound ugly. They’ll then use a compressor to round off the attack, and a limiter to kill any remaining transients. So, that guitar that sounded gloriously rich in the room during the recording winds up sounded sculpted and well-mannered on the actual record. Thanks to its V-Class bracing, the Grand Pacific sounds like much of this post-production work is already done as you play it live in the room.
    Here’s the best way to explain it, again courtesy of the illustrious Mr. Powers. Put an open palm in front of your mouth and say “PUH PUH PUH PUH PUH” repeatedly (don’t do this in public or you will look foolish). Then say “MM MM MM MM MM” into your palm. Typical dreadnoughts make that “PUH” noise upon attack as woofy low-end escapes the soundhole. The Grand Pacific makes more of a “MM” sound. It may not rattle your rattle your ribs, but it does sound awfully nice—iconic, even.
    Therein lies both the rub and the magic with the Grand Pacific: though it has plenty of muscle and power, it doesn’t necessarily sound like a wooden piano in the room. It sounds produced, and there’s a big difference. For that reason, it’s not going to replace your J-45 or your D-18. Big-sounding, boomy acoustics are a lot of fun, and we love them, too. The Grand Pacific just presents a whole new flavor of acoustic tone that is different but equally enticing. Playing one feels like stepping into a classic record that hasn’t been made yet.
    Add it Up
    So, what does it all add up to, sonically? The Grand Pacific sounds warm, seasoned, and inviting like a classic dreadnought as warm overtones swirl together and mix to form a truly spectacular collage of sound. But, V-Class bracing also gives it a spectacular combination of volume and sustain. Furthermore, V-Class bracing helps sculpt the Grand Pacific’s frequency response to sound balanced and mannered. Not to mention, it helps give the Grand Pacific astoundingly accurate intonation. So, to sum things up: the Grand Pacific is a warm, vintage-style dreadnought with improved volume, sustain, balance, and intonation. I don’t know about you, but I’ll trade a little bass boom for all that any day of the week!
    A Potent Pairing
    The sonic engineers at Taylor altered a classic tonewood formula ever so slightly to give the 327e a fresh, exciting voice. All-mahogany guitars have been around for at least a century, and for good reason. Mahogany’s exceptional warmth, midrange punching power, and natural musical compression have the power to captivate players looking for earthy-sounding acoustic tone. The 327e has a mahogany top, and it certainly exhibits all of these characteristics in spades. However, instead of building the whole guitar out of mahogany, our friends at Taylor elected to make the back and sides out of urban ash.
    This fresh, exciting tonewood (also known as evergreen or Shamel ash) comes from trees within urban environments that had to be chopped down because of age and/or public safety. Before Taylor started using them, most of these removed trees wound up in landfills, which is a crying shame, because urban ash is a world-beating tonewood! It sounds very similar to Honduran mahogany, one of the most sought-after tonewoods in the world. It produces a supremely powerful, warm, clear fundamental, and it is incredibly articulate. If you’re looking for a clear yet lively acoustic tone unfettered by too many overtones, urban ash will get you there. It cuts through a mix like a wooden Ginsu, too!
    Keeping it 300
    The 300 series iteration of the Grand Pacific continues Taylor’s proud tradition of building workhorse guitars brimming with inspiring sounds. Though it may not have as many high-end appointments as its Builder’s Edition cousins, it still delivers just as much sonic horsepower at an incredible value. The 327e also features Taylor’s NT neck profile for superior ergonomics, smooth satin on the neck, back, and sides and stylish acrylic gemstone inlays. Finally, an ES-2 pickup system ensures that you will always have hi-fi sound whenever you need to plug in. We are honored to showcase such an inspiring instrument, and we know it will prove a steadfast companion throughout all your acoustic adventures.
    Specifications:
    Brand:
    Taylor Guitars
    Model
    : Prototype 327e
    Type
    : Grand Pacific
    Top Wood
    : Solid Mahogany
    Top Finish
    : Satin Shaded Edgeburst
    Bracing
    : V-Class
    Back & Sides Wood
    : Solid Urban Ash
    Cutaway
    : Venetian
    Neck Wood
    : Tropical Mahogany
    Neck Dimensions
    : .840 1st - .870 9th
    Fretboard Material
    : West African Crelicam Ebony
    Fingerboard Inlays
    : Acrylic Gemstones
    Scale Length
    : 25.5"
    Width at Nut
    : 1 3/4"
    Nut Material
    : Black Graphite-Infused Tusq
    Binding
    : Black
    Rosette
    : 3-Ring
    Electronics
    : Taylor Expression System 2
    Tuners
    : Taylor Satin Black
    Bridge
    : West African Crelicam Ebony
    Saddle
    : Micarta
    Case
    : Taylor Western Floral Hardshell Case