Roger Sadowsky

Roger Sadowsky is one of the most highly respected instrument makers in the world. His guitars, basses, and archtop guitars are played by many of the world’s greatest artists, past and present. The list includes guitarists Jim Hall, John Abercrombie, Pat Metheny, Lee Ritenour, Andy Summers, Juan Luis Guerra, Chuck Loeb, Prince, and Paul Simon. Bass players include Will Lee, Rickey Minor, Verdine White, Colin Greenwood, Tully Kennedy, and Jason Newsted. The Sadowsky Custom Shop is currently located in Long Island City, just a few minutes from Manhattan by subway.

Roger grew up in New York City in the 1950s with a Dad who listened to Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole and a Mom who loved listening to songs from Broadway musicals. He began playing guitar in the spring of his junior year in college, learning to fingerpick by playing Gordon Lightfoot and Paul Simon tunes.

While working his way through a PhD program in psychobiology at Rutgers University, Roger became friends with a group of professional folk musicians and immediately admired their wonderful vintage Martin guitars. He soon became obsessed with the guitar and began writing to guitar makers all over the world to seek an apprenticeship. A year later, he left his PhD goals behind and began working with luthier Augie LoPrinzi building acoustic guitars in New Jersey.

After two years with LoPrinzi, Roger took over a well-known guitar repair shop in Philadelphia where he spent the next five years gaining a reputation for outstanding repair and restoration work on guitars and basses. In 1979, as a direct result of his increasing reputation, he moved back to his hometown of New York City to serve the repair and restoration needs of the city’s top studio players.

Within months of opening his workshop in Manhattan, Roger was servicing the guitars and basses of the top session players in town.  Bassists such as Will Lee, Neil Jason, Oscar Cartaya, Hugh McDonald, and others were having Roger customize their basses and installing an active treble/bass boost tone circuit he was working with. The immediate feedback was that they never sounded better and engineers were noticing how perfectly the bass tracks sat in the mix and cut through live.  The legendary “Sadowsky Sound" was born.

In those early years, working musicians would approach Roger wanting advice on getting a good guitar or bass. He would have them buy an early-’60s Fender, which at the time could be purchased for about $800. They would bring those instruments to Sadowsky Guitars, where Roger would do his magic. At the end of the day, for the reasonable sum of around $1,300-$1500 (including the purchase price of the instrument), Roger would provide to them a first-class instrument.

In the early 1980s, with a heated vintage market increasingly pushing guitars and basses out of reach for working musicians, Roger realized that it would make more sense to simply build an instrument from scratch that incorporated everything great about a Fender bass, plus everything his valued improvements brought to the table. His background in acoustic guitar building helped him to build a lightweight, acoustically resonant instrument. His studio-proven expertise in shielding and hum cancelling technology produced instruments that were significantly quieter than many others on the market. And his longstanding reputation for employing only the highest quality materials and workmanship resulted in the creation of superior instruments.

Guitarists also received the significant benefits of Roger’s success in bass building. In addition to creating a very popular line of chambered solidbody guitars, including an especially renowned Electric Nylon guitar, he developed a very special line of archtop hollowbody and semi-hollowbody electric guitars. These instruments have become standards in the industry for superior tone, feel, playability and especially value.

Notwithstanding his increasing success in the marketplace, Roger maintains his commitment to staying small and wanting to primarily sell directly to the working musician rather than to music stores. He enjoys dealing personally with the player and seeing the entire guitar building process through from design to completion. And after many decades of producing some of the world’s most coveted instruments, Roger’s greatest joy continues to be witnessing the complete satisfaction a customer receives when making music with a Sadowsky instrument.

Timeline

1972
The Beginning
Roger begins making acoustic guitars with Augie LoPrinzi of LoPrinzi Guitars, Rosemont NJ
1974
Medley Music
Takes over repair department at Medley Music, Ardmore PA
1979
Repair Shop
Establishes repair shop at 33rd and Madison Ave, Manhattan, New York City
1980
Making Electric Guitars
Begins making electric guitars under the name Dr. Frets; Customizes 1977 Jazz Bass for Marcus Miller
1982
First Bass Guitar
Makes first bass guitar; begins doing repair work and building guitars for Paul Simon
1984
Prince – Purple Rain tour
Makes 6 guitars for Prince’s for Purple Rain tour
1985
Hiring
Hires first full time employee, JW Black
1986
Moving to Broadway
Moves shop to 1600 Broadway @ 48th Street
1992
Walter Becker of Steely Dan
Sells first of many guitars and basses to Walter Becker of Steely Dan
2002
Moving to Brooklyn
Moves shop to 20 Jay Street, Brooklyn NY
2003
Manufacturing in Japan
Begins manufacturing in Japan…introduces MetroLine basses and Jim Hall model archtop guitar
2004
Tal Wilkenfeld
Makes first of many basses for Tal Wilkenfeld
2009
Will Lee
Introduces Will Lee signature model bass
2011
Moving to Long Island City
Moves shop to 2107 41st Ave, Long Island City, Queens
2016
2016
Introduces the Single Cut bass
Satin Series Basses
Introduces the Satin Series Basses
Broadway Line
Introduces the Broadway Line of guitars
2017
Satin Deluxe
Introduces the Satin Deluxe
2018
Metro Express
Introduces the Metro Express