C. F. Martin D-21 Flat Top Acoustic Guitar (1966)

C. F. Martin  D-21 Flat Top Acoustic Guitar  (1966)
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Item # 10709
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C. F. Martin D-21 Model Flat Top Acoustic Guitar (1966), made in Nazareth, PA, serial # 210760, natural lacquer finish, Brazilian rosewood back and sides, spruce top; mahogany neck with rosewood fingerboard, black tolex hard shell case.
All we can say on this one is; this is one fantastic-sounding, super clean, mid-1960s D-21. As our Uncle Buck used to say, "What's not to like?"

The D-21 may be Martin's most overlooked guitar, among the rarest of 1960's Dreadnoughts. It basically combines the plainer Style-18 cosmetics with the Brazilian rosewood body of the D-28. Although $60 less expensive than the D-28 at $315 in early 1966 (up to $345 just months later) only 200 were produced that year compared to nearly ten times that number of D-28's. Apparently regarded as neither fish nor fowl among Dreadnought customers, the D-21 languished sales-wise despite (reportedly) being C.F. Martin III's personal favorite model.

This is a really superb 1966 example. The nicely aged ambered spruce top has a tortoise shell celluloid pickguard and binding, with the then-new short-saddle rosewood bridge. The bridge plate is still the older style small maple piece, which Martin would change about two years later by substituting a big block of rosewood.

The Brazilian rosewood back and sides have a dramatic grain pattern with rich figuring on either side of the chain-pattern backstrip. At the time Martin was still bound by Germanic tradition and preferred straight-grain woods; the wilder figure seen on this guitar would have been graded at the bottom of the heap, hence its use on the less expensive model!

The unbound rosewood fretboard has pearl dot markers. The headstock shows the rounded-corners typical of this era (when Martin's shaping templates having become very worn from use) and carries original PAT. PEND. Grover Rotomatic tuners. Although built in Martin's then-new larger factory this guitar retains the older handmade feel that would increasingly become obscured as the decade turned.

Some old guitar hounds insist that the D-21 is actually the best-sounding of all postwar Dreadnoughts; something about the combination of the rosewood body and the narrower binding channel at the edge of the top. Fact or voodoo? We're not sure, but we have encountered some really splendid examples of this model -- and here's another one!
 
Overall length is 40 3/4 in. (103.5 cm.), 15 3/4 in. (40 cm.) wide at lower bout, and 4 15/16 in. (12.5 cm.) in depth at side, taken at the end block. Scale length is 25 1/2 in. (648 mm.). Width of nut is 1 11/16 in. (43 mm.).

This 55+ year old D-21 is a simply a very clean example, showing only a little real wear overall. The finish has light checking and some very small dings, dents and scrapes but hardly any serious play wear, just a couple of spots of finish worn through on the back of the neck in first position. The only alteration is a carefully installed strap button in the heel.

We believe the neck has been reset but it is such a clean job there is very little evidence. The original frets have been dressed and have plenty of life left. This is not only a great looking guitar but an excellent player with a nice chunky sound; we would think some serious play time would bring out even more. It is housed in a recent fine grade Martin HSC. Overall Excellent Condition.