Martin Keith may be a newcomer to the boutique scene brand-wise, but he’s
no dilettante. A long-time colleague of veteran
Woodstock luthier Joe Veillette, Keith
helped build and design basses, as well as
assist in administrating Veillette’s successful
shop. Capitalizing on this invaluable
experience, Keith has recently hung his
own shingle, making basses conceptually
different than Veillette’s, but sharing their
exceptional quality and thoughtful design.
Like many boutique builders, Keith seeks
to provide customers with a musically satisfying
instrument, whatever that might
mean to a given player. Numerous facets
of his designs are customizable to achieve
this goal, but certain priorities are consistent
throughout his work, especially
ergonomics and playability.
Martin Keith offers four body shapes.
Our test basses are both the Elfin style,
which means a single-cutaway bolt-on
(although he’ll do a set-neck as an option).
Keith’s also offers the Leo, a single-cut similar to the Elfin, but with a more vintage
aesthetic. Across the line, Keith tends to
favor ash, poplar, mahogany, or walnut for
bodies and a variety of fingerboard woods.
The two test basses Keith sent exhibit
the diversity of his skill set and approach,
although to my eye both reveal a tendency
to favor subtlety over gaudiness. For example,
the fretted Elfin’s AAA English maple
top is beautifully figured, but in a refined,
mellow way. So to is its gorgeous birdseye
maple fingerboard. The fretless is also
low-key, with its atypical-for-an-electric
spruce top, walnut body, and richly figured
ziricote fingerboard.
Both instruments were faultlessly constructed
from components intrinsic to their
high price. The Hipshot hardware was topnotch,
the fretwork was detailed and
smooth, and the neck joinery felt solid and
substantial. Each instruments finish was
without blemish and skillfully applied; I
particularly liked the smooth satin feel of
each bass’s maple neck. Since excellent
playability is one of Keith’s stated goals, I
took special note of the instruments’ balance,
string spacing, and neck profile. Each
bass was well balanced, sitting in a perfect
playing position with no right-hand support
when I played seated, and falling into a comfortable spot when I stood up with a
strap. The string spacing of each was on the
wide side of normal to my hands, although
this is a subjective matter. The neck profiles
were of medium depth, chunky but not
clunky. The fretted bass’s radius is also fairly
flat, so that, coupled with the wide spacing,
made it an easy bass to play evenly and precisely
at quick tempos.
FRETTED ELFIN SOUND
The fretted Elfin is the first bass I’ve encountered,
other than Lace’s own instruments,
to use the Lace Alumitone pickups. As we’ve
observed in the past, these unusual pickups
have a rich and dark sonic signature
with a furry lower midrange hump and mellow
top. On our tester, Keith coupled the
Alumintones with active Bartolini electronics,
a preamp also known for its slightly
dark, more midrange-focused personality.
Well aware of these qualities, Keith intentionally
coupled the dark and reservedsounding
electronics with a bass made with
a traditionally bright-sounding ash body
and maple fingerboard combination, thinking
that the resulting tone would strike an
intriguing middle sonic ground.
The fretted Elfin had a slightly aggressive
vibe with a highly detailed midrange.
With both pickup blended, the tone was
fuller in the lows and mids than highs,
though not exactly dark. It did yield a
remarkable amount of color and authority
on the front-end of notes, but wasn’t harsh.
It arrived strung with D’Addario XLs, a
string I’m intimately a familiar with. It
seemed like a perfect pairing, with the XL’s
resonant low-mid hump mating sweetly
with the Elfin’s midrange clarity and
propulsion. Soloing the bridge pickup gets
at the typical monster-mid vibe, but it’s definitely
no J-Bass. The neck pickup, conversely,
is more P-ish, with that special
combination of big bass response and
punchy presence. I particularly favored the
neck with the well-voiced treble rolled off.
Considering all these qualities, this Elfin
was an excellent and authoritative fingerstyle
and pick-style bass. It did not offer
the sucked-out-mid, pickups-blended slap
tone, although I’m sure a different electronics
package would easily get there with
this wood combination.
FRETLESS ELFIN SOUND
Happily, Keith chose to go the passive route
with the fretless. I’ve long championed the
power of passive, and I think fretless basses
are a particularly good venue for passive
electronics’ surprising versatility. Passive
electronics are especially well served by
good pickups, so I was also happy to find
Citron humbuckers on the Elfin, courtesy
fellow Woodstock-resident Harvey Citron.
All told, this bass exuded a promising vibe
straight away.
The Elfin fretless delivered on its promise.
It was everything that a fan of long-sustaining,
sweet-and-singing fretless tone
craves, and its simple electronics offered a
big spectrum of universally usable tone.
With both pickups blended and the tone
rolled off, the bass sounded rich and thick,
but with a musical and dynamic sensitivity
that helped high notes burst out with grace
and presence. The soloed back pickup was
pretty Jaco-ish, especially with the tone
slightly rolled off. The soloed neck tone was
dark and woody, but the bass’s long sustain
was not anything like an upright.
Because Keith is a big fan of passive
electronics, he dreamt up a clever bit of
wiring to extend his circuit’s versatility even
further. The tone knob is on a push/pull
pot. When pushed down, the blend control
blends between both pickups, as expected.
When pulled up, both pickups remain on,
but the blend selects between the two pickups
outside and inside coils. The results are
a new palette of sounds, from a hollow and
open sound with the outside coils to a more
focused Music Man-style sound with the
inside coils full up.
The Martin Keith basses are an excellent
addition to the boutique bass marketplace.
They have a player-focused design that’s
extensively customizable, and offer an
opportunity to partner with a builder that
thinks creatively about achieving musical
goals.
MARTIN KEITH ELFIN BASSES
List Fretted, $3,350; fretless, $3,210
Pros Comfortable and customizable with
excellent construction; beautiful singing fretless
tone
Cons None
TECH SPECS
Weight Fretted, 9.2 lbs.; fretless, 8.8 lbs.
Included Custom gig bag
Made in U.S.A.
Warranty Limited lifetime
Contact www.martinkeithguitars.com
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