Larrivee
Instruments currently
produced in Vancouver, British Columbia (Canada), since 1982 and Oxnard, CA
since 2001. Previously produced in Toronto, Ontario between 1968 and 1977 and
in Victoria, British Columbia between 1977 and 1982. Distributed by Larrivée
Guitars, Ltd. in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and in the U.S. by Jean
Larrivée Guitars USA Inc. in Oxnard, CA.
|
Luthier Jean Larrivée met German classical guitar luthier Edgar Mönch and began studying classical guitar at the age of
20. Larrivée moved to Toronto and apprenticed with Mönch and learned to build classical guitars. Larrivée built two guitars under Mönch's
leadership and then he began to build guitars by himself at his home
workshop. Larrivée guitars was officially started
in 1968, and he moved into his first true workshop in 1970, which was above a
theater. After exclusively building classical guitars, Larrivée
built his first steel string guitar in 1971. Larrivée
continued to experiment with guitar building by introducing his own body
styles/shapes, different bracings, and other technologies not previously
used. In 1972, Jean Larrivée married his wife
Wendy, who designs and engraves inlays on many of Larrivée's
guitars.
Larrivée grew throughout the 1970s, and by 1976, Larrivée had eight employees and they were building
between twenty-five and thirty guitars a month. In 1977, Larrivée
moved operations to the island city of Victoria, British Columbia, which
provided access to the wet coastal forests on the west coast of North
America. In 1982, Larrivée decided to move to the
mainland of British Columbia just as most acoustic guitar manufacturers were
going through their toughest times. Instead of consolidating operations, Larrivée began building solidbody
electric guitars in 1983. Larrivée's first electric
line lasted through 1989 when the acoustic guitar market improved to the
point where he solely focus on acoustics again.
The 1990s marked a resurgence in guitar building as they moved to an 11,000
square foot factory in 1991 where they employed thirty-five people and built
twenty-five guitars a day. In 1997, Larrivée
introduced their lowest priced model in their lineup with the D-03, which
would firmly establish Larrivée in the acoustic
guitar world. In 1998, they moved into another new factory with 33,000 square
foot and by now they had 100 employees and they were producing sixty to
seventy-two guitars per day. In 2001, Larrivée
opened a new factory in southern California ten days before 9/11. Although
production slowed for the next two years, Larrivée
overhauled some of their production and streamlined production where only the
3 Series of guitars are produced in Canada, and all remaining models are
built in the U.S. In 2005, Larrivée introduced
their Traditional Series of guitars that are based on traditional designs of
the "golden era" of guitar manufacturing.
|