A Sound idea.Forest-Friendly Instruments Make Sweet Music Greg Gaylord, a self-employed drum maker, works with wood almost every day. The lone owner and operator of aptly named Drum Solo A drum solo is an instrumental solo played on a drum kit. A drum solo may be set or improvised, and of any length, up to being the main performance. In rock, drum solos are unique in that traditionally they are always unaccompanied, whereas other instruments may play solos in Novato, California Novato is a city located in the North Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, in northern Marin County. As of a 2000 census, the city population was 47,630. Novato is 30 miles north of San Francisco on US 101. , Gaylord spends his waking hours laboring over the many intricacies of his handcrafted hand·craft n. Variant of handicraft. tr.v. hand·craft·ed, hand·craft·ing, hand·crafts To fashion or make by hand. hand·craft snare drums. Each finished drum--its shell hewed from domestic woods like cherry, maple or walnut, or from exotic species like Paraguayan cancharana or peroba--is, in Gaylord's own words, "great-sounding from the get-go." Each drum is also utterly unique, extremely durable and, in most cases, because Gaylord buys the majority of his wood from a nearby lumber company called EcoTimber, socially and environmentally friendly Environmentally friendly, also referred to as nature friendly, is a term used to refer to goods and services considered to inflict minimal harm on the environment.[1] . A Global Scale Welcome to the latest development in the war against deforestation deforestation Process of clearing forests. Rates of deforestation are particularly high in the tropics, where the poor quality of the soil has led to the practice of routine clear-cutting to make new soil available for agricultural use. , species extinction and social and economic exploitation. An increasing number of musical-instrument makers, ranging from companies as small as Drum Solo to those as large and well known as Nashville's Gibson Guitars, are carving, sawing and sanding their products from certified-ecological wood. "The wood is tracked from the forest floor to the sales floor and every place in between," explains Francine Stephens, a spokesperson for Richmond, Vermont-based SmartWood one of the country's biggest certifying agencies. SmartWood, a program of the Rainforest Alliance The Rainforest Alliance is a non-governmental organization (NGO) founded in 1987. In is based in New York, United States. Their stated mission is to protect ecosystems and the people and wildlife that depend on them by transforming land-use practices, business practices and and accredited accredited recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria. accredited herds cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g. by the Forest Stewardship Council The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) is a non-profit organization based in Bonn, Germany. The Council's stated mission is "to promote environmentally appropriate, socially beneficial and economically viable management of the world's forests". to certify forests and forest products that are ecologically sound, considers numerous factors when doing so--everything from the environmental sustainability of forest management and timber-harvesting methods to the effect those methods have on indigenous communities. Through programs like SmartWood and Oakland-based Scientific Certification Systems, as well as similar programs in Canada, Europe and Africa, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC FSC See: Foreign Sales Corporation ) has put its stamp of approval on nearly 50 million acres of forest worldwide. To be sure, only an extremely small percentage of certified land's trees goes to the "green" musical instrument industry. But also true is that only an extremely small percentage of all the world's trees are used in making musical instruments of any kind. Traditionally, guitars are made from the world's finest World's Finest may refer to:
2. It differed from a usufruct in this, that the usufructuary might have applied the house to any purpose, as, a store or manufactory; whereas . Inhospitable jungle often turns to farmland. Fortunately, such practices are falling out of favor. Instead of pulling logs without regard to the consequences, many forestry operations are now following the guidelines of groups like the FSC. The result is eco-friendly wood and, for sectors like the musical-instrument industry, a brand-new market. Its success depends on a number of factors. For one, consumers have been told for years that the best instruments are made from precious tropical woods like mahogany, ebony and rosewood--the very species most in danger. The thought of buying a guitar with an American red-cedar neck may, consequently, be less than appealing. Another problem is supply. Major manufacturers gripe gripe v. To have sharp pains in the bowels. n. 1. gripes Sharp, spasmodic pains in the bowels. 2. A firm hold; a grasp. over a lack of raw materials, claiming there just isn't enough high-quality certified wood to meet their production needs and make the process financially feasible. Certified woods are nevertheless gaining ground among musicians, and by all accounts a program known as SoundWood is leading the way. A component of Britain's Fauna and Flora International and now based in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , SoundWood works directly with the music industry, harvesters, scientists, governments and consumers to develop species-conservation solutions. "SoundWood doesn't tell the music industry what they should and should not do," explains Robert Garner, the program's director. "We work in collaboration with the industry." In fact, the group has enjoyed the endorsement of an array of big-name musicians, including the Blues Travelers, Roseanne Cash, Don Henley and Bonnie Raitt Bonnie Lynn Raitt (born November 8, 1949) is a nine-time Grammy award-winning American blues singer-songwriter and guitarist who was born in Burbank, California, the daughter of Broadway musical star John Raitt. . Playing It Out Dispelling the belief that certified woods are inferior to traditionally harvested tropical varieties, and so not suitable for instruments, is high priority. "Certified woods come from the same trees" says Garner. "They just come from forests managed in a sustainable way." According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Garner, environmentally conscious consumers are catching on. He compares it to the market for organically grown food: "The more people understand and ask for these products, the more it's expected. The market is getting bigger every year." One of the major movers has been the Gibson Guitar Corporation The Gibson Guitar Corporation, of Nashville, Tennessee, USA, is one of the world's best-known manufacturers of acoustic and electric guitars. The company's most popular guitar, the Les Paul Standard, a solid-body electric, sells for about $US 2,300. . The company produced what it billed as the first cost-effective, high-quality, forest-friendly guitar, the SmartWood Les Paul This article is about the musician. For the guitar, see Gibson Les Paul. Les Paul (born Lester William Polsfuss on June 9 1915) is an American jazz guitarist and inventor. , in 1996. Today, Gibson offers a line of six certified-wood guitars known as the Les Paul Exotics. The instruments feature mahogany backs, curupay fingerboards and tops carved from Paraguayan hardwoods like taperyva, guasa, cancharana, peroba, banara and ambay guasa. Each guitar retails for $1,299, and a portion of all sales is donated to the Rainforest Alliance. Many other guitar manufacturers, including Fender, Martin, Modulus, the Santa Cruz Santa Cruz, city, United States Santa Cruz (săn`tə kr z), city (1990 pop. 49,040), seat of Santa Cruz co., W Calif., on the north shore of Monterey Bay; inc. 1866. Guitar Company and Taylor, have followed suit. Novato, California's Modulus, for one, offers several certified woods for the necks, fingerboards and bodies of their electric guitars and basses; their handmade instruments blend sustainably harvested granadillo, chechen, red cedar, chakte kok and soma with high-tech carbon fiber. Up the coast, at Dave Maize Acoustic Guitars in Cave Junction, Oregon Cave Junction, incorporated in 1948, is a city in Josephine County, Oregon, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 1,363. Its motto is the "Gateway to the Oregon Caves,"[1] , where owner Dave Maize custom builds just a handful of high-quality guitars each year, instruments are crafted from less-utilized, sustainably harvested, or non-endangered timbers. "I've always been concerned about the state of the world's forests," says Maize. "I decided to make sure my work didn't make the situation any worse." Much of the wood Maize mills is from "reclaimed" sources: walnut trees downed in road-building, bug-killed Canadian red cedar and Engelmann spruce, Sitka spruce salvaged from old logging rafts, and pear trees from demolished orchards. His clients include Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead, Adam Clayton of U2 and Jeff Ament of Pearl Jam. In another conscious effort to preserve rare trees, Yamaha has developed a guitar line and series of snare drums made largely from bamboo, which grows one-third faster than the fastest growing tree. Many other eco-friendly instruments--from wood whistles and violins to marimbas--are also available to musicians, amateur and professional alike. Instrument maker Boosey & Hawkes, for example, offers a line of oboes and clarinets made from a heat-treated mix of African blackwood sawdust, carbon fiber and epoxy glue. The manufacturing process utilizes the entire tree, not just the traditional cuts. The same technique permits old instruments to be ground down and recycled into new ones. Ultimately, instrument makers may choose certified woods over other varieties as a matter of industry survival. According to a recent joint report by the World Resources Institute Founded in 1982, the World Resources Institute (WRI) is an environmental think tank based in Washington, D.C. WRI is an independent, non-partisan and nonprofit organization with a staff of more than 100 scientists, economists, policy experts, business analysts, statistical , the United Nations and the World Bank, the Earth is losing nearly 34 million acres of tropical forest every year. The trees everyone loves so much--for their instruments, furniture and homes--are fast disappearing. A complete shift to sustainable forestry may be the only answer. As Adam Wiskind, retail sales manager at Berkeley, California-based EcoTimber puts it, "There just aren't enough forests. We have to do it this way. There's just no other choice" CONTACT: Boosey & Hawkes Musical Instruments, Inc., (847)816-2500, www.boosey.com; Dave Maize Acoustic Guitars, (888)242-0846, www. maizeguitars.com; Drum Solo, (415)898-2647, www.drumsolo.cc; EarthSource, (800)675-7257, www.earthsourcewood. com; EcoTimber, (888)801-0855, www. ecotimber.com; Forest Stewardship Council, 52-951-46905, www.fscoax.org; Gibson Guitar Corporation, (615) 871-4500, www.gibson.com; Modulus Guitars, (415)884-2300, www.modulusguitars .com; Rainforest Alliance, (888)MY-EARTH, www.rainforest-alliance.org; Scientific Certification Systems, (510) 832-1415, www.scs1.com; SmartWood, (802)434-5491, www.smartwood.org; SoundWood, (415)346-7412, soundwood@hotmail.com; Yamaha, (714) 522-9011,www.yamahaguitars.com. CHRIS HAYHURST plays the keyboard at his desk in Fort Collins, CO. |
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