Luthier finds passion in fixing not playing guitars - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:35 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
SaskatchewanMADE TO LAST

Luthier finds passion in fixing not playing guitars

Peter Sawchyn, whose Regina-based shop shares his name, started doing repairs and customization work on guitars about 47 years ago, although the retail space is much newer.

Nearly 5 decades on, Reginas Sawchyn Guitars still going strong

Peter Allen Sawchyn, of Sawchyn Guitars, started working on instruments as a teen. Today, hes still doing what he loves out of a shop on Dewdney Avenue in Regina. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

Made to Last is a series of profiles of Regina-area artisans who have a passion and talent for hands-on jobs creating or repairing unique, high-quality pieces that require time and personal care. These arts stand to be lost in the age of mass production and planned obsolescence.

A humidifier gently puffs steam into the air, keeping rows of guitars safe from the chilly, dry Saskatchewan air outside, while Peter Sawchyn works to repair a guitar on his shop table.

Sawchyn, whose Regina-based shop shares his name, started doing repairs and customization work on guitars about 47 years ago, although the retail space is much newer.

He's one of only a handful of people in the province who do this kind of work and he's garnered some famous clients for it. He's made a guitar model for Colin James and while he spoke with CBC News, he was repairing a guitar for a member of Saskatchewan's own The Dead South.

"I've always been interested in instruments for some reason I don't know why just the mechanical part of the instrument, not really playing an instrument," Sawchyn said.

He remembers looking at his brother's guitar and his sister's mandolin and wondering how they work.

Sawchyn produces two models of stringed instruments on a regular basis. Beaver Tail Mandolins and Colin James models are produced at a large scale, and he also tackles custom products, although he is slowing down the number of custom jobs hes doing. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

For Sawchyn, building guitars comes with the anticipation of guessing how the guitar will feel for the player and what it's going to sound like.

Meanwhile, repairing guitarsmight seem comparatively repetitive and uninteresting, but Sawchyn said each guitar is unique, lending creativity to the process.

Sawchyn said the experiences learned from one side of the job translate to the other part of the job.

This ad was the first one Sawchyn hung at the Dewdney Avenue location. Prior to moving to that location about eight years ago, Sawchyn did his work out of a small shop in Regina. He started off in his parents basement and has also worked out of his garage. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

"When you're initially starting, when you're young, you learn from all of those experiences so every time you fix a guitar for somebody, you find out why that problem existed and you as a builder can put it into your own guitars to try to counteract [that problem]," he said.

"That's why you keep going; you get hooked on that 'what's new, what's next' tomorrow's going to bring something new."

Sawchyn cuts frets to size during a repair job for a member of The Dead South. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

Being in the businessfor so long, Sawchyn has seen a shift in quality when it comes to string instruments.

In the last 15 to 20 years, Sawchyn said he's seen an influx of cheaply made guitars coming from Asian countries. While these may be more accessible to the wallet-conscious consumer, he said buying a more expensive product will save money in the long run.

Sawchyn feels "pretty good" being part of a legacy of Luthiers that dates back centuries, but he's finding it challenging tracking down people who have the right tools to carry on the tradition. It's the issue of finding someone who has the right balance between skill and passion.

Sawchyn says the Guild of American Luthiers was one source of information sharing as he learned to build and repair guitars. While the guild still exists, Sawchyn said much of the information thats shared is done in different online spaces today. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

"On the repairing side of things, it's a little bit easier to find someone who's been tinkering on their own they've maybe already been adjusting guitar actions or these kind of things and changing pickups and whatever you need to do," Sawchyn said.

But on the production side of things, he's having challenges finding a younger person who has knowledge of power tools.

"You used to learn that in school. Now you don't, you just don't. You have to go learn it yourself now," he said. "Lots of people are interested in building guitars, but they have no skill set to do it."

Skills aside, teachability has also been a problem with some Sawchyn has hoped to enlist to help build instruments.

Sawchyn says it was in part due to his own stubbornness that he never started working for a major guitar manufacturer. He said there wasnt anyone in Regina who could do what he does and he wanted to stay in the Queen City. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

He used to work with a person with formal training from Italy, who referred to him as "master," and although Sawchyn said that's not really required, he said it showed that person was willing to accept there was someone out there who knows more about the craft than he does.

In the Internet era, Sawchyn said that's not always the case anymore.

"I really believe there's a culture [in Europe] of respecting older people and what they've accomplished and what they know," Sawchyn said. "Some guys here think they know a lot already and they don't. They don't know anything."

Guitar builder's rare talents attract famous artists and acts | Made to Last

5 years ago
Duration 3:19
Peter Sawchyn has been building and repairing guitars for about 47 years, attracting famous musical acts including Colin James and The Dead South.

Read other pieces from the Made to Last series: