René François Lacôte
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
René François Lacôte (1785–1871) was a Romantic guitar luthier from Paris, France. His guitars were played by guitarists such as Fernando Sor, Ferdinando Carulli, Dionisio Aguado, Napoléon Coste, and Marco Aurelio Zani de Ferranti. Musicologist René Vannes referred to Lacôte as the "Stradivarius of the guitar" in his book Universal Dictionary of Luthiers. Lacôte apprenticed to the luthier Joseph Pons. Fernando Sor mentioned in his book Méthode pour la Guitare that "M. Lacote, a French maker, the only person who, besides his talents, has proved to me that he possesses the quality of not being inflexible to reasoning".
Gallery
[edit]-
1836 Lacôte guitar
-
1827 Lacôte 9-string guitar (top-right)
-
Lacôte guitar ca. 1835
-
Napoléon Coste with a Lacôte Heptacorde (left)
-
1828 Lacôte guitar label
-
Three Lacôte guitars (bottom row, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th guitars)
References
[edit]Pierre-René Lacôte | Guitar | French Maker Builders of the early 19th Century [1] Builders of the early 19th Century Lacote multi-course harp guitars [2] [3] René Lacôte - 1835 at SICCAS GUITARS - The world's finest guitars in one place