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Author: Subject: question re 1st oud
omoelegua
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[*] posted on 8-3-2006 at 03:18 AM
question re 1st oud


hi

I am ready to purchase my first oud to pursue a study of the instrument & I was wondering if anyone could help me with some questions:

> are the ouds made by Haluk Eraydin of decent enough performance quality? in comparison with those made by Ahmet Gokce? Haluk's has a very attractive price ($380), around $400 less than Ahmet's; what are the trade-offs here?

> what is the incidence of damage during shipping of an oud? what guarantees or options do I, the buyer, have in case of this?

> Does anyone have any experiences w/ this oudmaker and his products they'd like to share?

Even with shipping charges, Haluk's oud seems the most affordable for my budget...is this a good value oud I can learn on and play for at least 3-4 years?

Thanks everyone for your help!
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Jason
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[*] posted on 8-3-2006 at 09:10 AM


I have the beginner oud by Haluk, which was $300. I'm not sure if it's the same oud you're talking about but I think it's definately good enough to perform on. You will probably want to install a good set of strings if it's the beginner oud... mine were decent enough but there was a big difference when I put on new strings.

My oud was shipped in large wooden crate and it arrived in perfect condition. I believe the packages are insured but you should ask Haluk to be certain. Mine was delivered by the USPS..

It's hard to say if the oud will last you 3-4 years. IMO that's too long to stay on a beginner instrument if you are going to take playing seriously. That said, I don't think you're going to become dissatisfied with the oud over time. You may just start wanting something with more volume, projection, nicer woods, etc.
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omoelegua
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[*] posted on 8-4-2006 at 11:22 AM


Thank you Jason. I keep hearing about 'more volume, projection' w/ ouds; are they inherently soft-sounding.....are they (the beginner ouds anyway)softer than acoustic nylon-stringed Spanish guitars? do ouds have something like an f-hole or soundhole for resonance? And, I've been playing guitar for years...what's the learning curve for the oud like? Thanks much!
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Jason
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[*] posted on 8-4-2006 at 05:12 PM


I would say my oud is similar to the volume of most classical guitars. I've heard some people say removing the rosettes in ouds helps the volume. Most ouds have 3 soundholes, one large and two small which have rosettes in them. Lots of makers today leave out the rosettes, however.

I've played a lot of fretless bass and upright bass over the years so the learning curve as far as intonation wasn't too bad for me. I'd say that if you have a good ear you won't have much problem either. The real difficulty is in learning to play eastern music because it's so different from everything I've played before.
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Haluk
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[*] posted on 8-4-2006 at 06:15 PM


I will make ouds without rosettes when requested.I never tried on ouds but I let some sazs without rosette,sounds were more louder.



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