Tonewoods that truly resonate
Master grade timbers producing concert-quality tones
While it’s true that you can make an instrument out of any wood, it takes a true tonewood to produce a concert quality instrument. While some of the big names in the luthier world scour the planet for an ever-dwindling supply of traditional tonewoods, Laurie has dedicated his career to exploring the unique and beautiful indigenous woods of New Zealand.
Living and building in the temperate Far North of New Zealand, Laurie has been privileged to discover and introduce to the world some of the most exquisitely beautiful woods used in musical instruments today. For over thirty years, Laurie has immersed himself in mastering the art and techniques of building with many of these new tonewoods, and in the process, has shown the quality of his skill as a luthier and the world class character of his tonewoods.
Sustainably sourced
In New Zealand today, considered from an environmental perspective, “indigenous timber can only be produced from forests that are sustainably managed in a way that maintains continuous forest cover and ecological balance. Only single trees and small groups of trees can be felled for timber production.”
Consequently, New Zealand does not have a large indigenous forestry industry, with native timbers very hard to source, and of those, only a limited number suitable for musical instrument production. Therefore, all of the species Laurie builds with have been sourced personally, often travelling many miles to view, resaw, and dry timber to his own exacting specifications, as and when opportunity presents itself.
The Laurie Williams tonewood inventory includes wood from recovered old mill logs (sinkers), and swamp logs (ancient kauri), as well as a few sustainably felled trees. The result is a curated collection of the most rare, exceptional, and beautiful NZ tonewoods that you will not find anywhere else in the world.
Below is a current selection of tonewoods from Laurie’s private inventory, along with the stories that accompany them.
Waingarara Kauri
Species: Modern Kauri (Agathis australis)
Luthier uses: Soundboards, bracing.
Tap tonal properties: Its tap tone is clear and bell like. As a soundboard it is alive with rich, warm harmonics and subtleties which, combined with exceptional sustain, gives this tonewood a musicality well suited to solo fingerstyle.
Visual properties: The grain is generally straight. Summer and winter lines are less distinct than the traditional spruces, being more homogeneous in density. It is a cream/gold colour when aged and can have streaking within a narrow colour range. The wood can, at times, exhibit a subtle figure or wave in the grain, giving it a shimmery and holographic appearance.
Description: Designated ‘modern’ kauri to distinguish it from the ancient kauri used for back and sides, Laurie’s stock of this tonewood comes from a tree of around eighty to one hundred years old and was selected personally by Laurie specifically for use as soundboard tonewood. In 2006, after years of building with this tonewood from salvaged sources, Laurie had the opportunity to select his own kauri tree growing in a private forest in Waingarara. It was a rare opportunity and he personally oversaw the felling and milling of the timber. This project was recorded in a feature documentary called ‘Song of the Kauri’.
It is also worth noting all soundboard bracing for his steel string acoustics, irrespective of what species is used for the soundboard, is also made from Waingarara kauri stock. This harnesses the excellent sustain of kauri and creates a greater degree of consistency across all his instruments, irrespective of the soundboard selected.