Classical Guitars PLUS

flamenco, contemporary nylon string, jazz & acoustic guitars
Prices include mainland UK delivery and VAT

Phone 01363 881174
Open Monday-Friday 9-5:30

Guitarist Magazine March 2008 reviews the Alhambra Crossover CS-3 CW E5

Is it a steel-string, is it a nylon? Alhambra’s Crossover is genuinely confused – but this high performance electro shouldn’t be overlooked by Dave Burrluck

Reproduced by kind permission of Guitarist Magazine www.musicradar.com

Alhambra is a Spanish maker located in Muro de Alcoy, in the province of Alicante, that has been successfully making nylon string guitars for over 40 years. Along with its standard classical instruments, Alhambra is known for its electros like the 5P CT we reviewed back in issue 225. And while some feature a slightly thinner-than-classical-standard neck width, to most electric players, and many steel-string players, the classical neck still feels massive and invariably has a flat fingerboard. The Crossover, however, is a full-depth cutaway released in 2007 that aims to bridge the gap between steel and nylon: a purpose-designed electro for those used to steel-strings.

Visually it displays a strong steel-string vibe thanks to its natural finished spruce top which contrasts the dark chocolate coloured rosewood back and sides. The white face is contrasted again by an ebony bridge with its maple ‘V’ inserts, which mirror the V-shaped, ‘A’ logo’d maple insert in the rosewood headstock facing the inlaid rosette is suitably dark and gothic too.

Construction is very clean, the maple edge bindings and inner purflings are sharp and not overfancy. The head and main shaft of the mahogany neck is one piece with a central ebony strip for reinforcement, there’s no trussrod while the heel is a separate piece and has quite a complex carve as it joins the cutaway body. Internally you can see a fairly classic Spanish-style foot, kerfed mahogany linings top and bottom, mahogany back braces and spruce top strutting (and hidden standard seven fan braces). It all looks very clean and considered.

The fretwire is cleanly installed on the radiused ebony fingerboard. Another break from tradition, though hardly radical,are the side-only dots at the third, fifth, seventh and ninth frets and the neck joins at the 12th so position orientation should be easy enough. While the scale is fairly standard at 650mm things are slightly narrower than usual, in Spanish terms, at the nut which is just over 48mm wide (as opposed to 50-52mm or more) and a gnat’s under 60mm at the 12th.

Yet at 20.4mm at the first fret, and 25mm at the 10th, you’ll not feel the neck is over large. The shape is quite flat-backed with square shoulders and we have to say the neck is very comfortable and easy especially compared to a quality concert classical.

You can order the Crossover with various Fishman preamps (seespec check) to manipulate the undersaddle piezo. The E5 system here is Fishman’s top-end Prefix Premium Blend and includes both under-saddle piezo pickup and a separate gooseneck mic that is installed on the bass side shoulder. The two pickups meet up on the pretty complex control panel that flips out forswift battery changes and also access to a mono/stereo switch.

The preamp’s controls are well laid out but with white legends on a light grey fascia the contrast is low and in low lighting, compounded by the sheen of the facia, it’s very difficult to read. But the spec is high with slider controls for mic/piezo balance, frequency (10khz-250k), and treble, contour and bass with a range of +/- 17db (all centre notched). While the treble and bass frequencies are fixed, the contour affects whatever frequency you’ve set with the frequency slider. A pair of pushbuttons engage the phase switch for feedback rejection and the onboard tuner that is easier to see and very accurate. Finally, two rotary controls affect overall volume very nicely placed at the top corner and with a very tactile rubber knob and the notch filter which ranges from off to 300Hz and removes a very narrow band for feedback rejection. A red LED battery indicator completes the fulsome spec.

Strung with Alhambra-branded D’Addario extra high tension strings, the supplied set-up is also lower than a standard classical ( 3.5mm bass, 2.2mm treble). But although the saddle noticeably leans back in its slot, there’s no actual compensation, especially for the thick G (unwound) string that proves a little sharp. That aside, the combination of the neckshape, fingerboard radius and cutaway make the Crossover a fluid player. The tuners seem a little spongy, but once new strings settle in, tuning is stable.

Sounds

Factor in this guitar’s cutaway and there’s an impressive robustness and depth to the acoustic tone. Yes, it sounds a little tight, yet the dynamic range is acceptable for a factory-built, gloss-finished instrument although a little more give, certainly in the higher registers, wouldn’t go amiss.

Yet it’s the amplified sound that we’re primarily interested in and that’s where, along with fairly effortless playability, the Crossover scores. Amplified nylons can be surprisingly bright and brittle and there’s some of that here, but with careful EQ’ing it avoids sounding too thin and plastic-y: in fact there’s a richness and plumbiness to the tone that keeps us playing this one. The mic adds a diffused, less direct sound, but keeping it under control especially in a live environment, isn’t easy. That said, with nylon strings the onboard tuner is a Godsend particularly as it can be used unplugged.

Verdict

Bearing in mind the base price of this guitar, it’s very well made, sharp and clean. The cutaway might well limit it’s acoustic volume but it’s enough for small room ensemble use. Amplified it performs to a high standard and the easy playability makes it hard to return to a larger-necked traditional classical.

The E5 electronics package adds considerably to the price but even with the basic E1 system (a total of approx £877) you’d be purchasing a lot of guitar. But the dual-pickup Fishman system fitted here despite the excellent onboard tuner might be too much for more general use.

By design the Crossover should appeal to anyone working in a jazz, Latin or pop field that wants to add some nylon magic one we’d recommend you try.

The bottom line

We like: Easy playability; acoustic and amplified sound; Fishman preamp/tuner; overall design and build

We dislike: The preamp is very expensive and the mic hard to use live; average tuners; lack of saddle intonation

Guitarist says: If you’ve found the majority of nylon electros too unwieldy the Crossover provides slick playability, with the performance ethic of a high-line steel string electro

Test results

Build quality 4/5

Playability 4.5/5

Sound 4.5/5

Value for money 3.5/5

Guitarist Rating 4/5

See Alhambra's CS3 and other cutaway classical models...

More Articles...

Closed because of illness...

Sorry but the shop is temporarily closed.

Buy over the internet with complete confidence

See our no-quibble returns policy.

Classical Guitars PLUS is a part of a family-run company which has been doing business on the internet since the 1990s. If there is more you want to know or more you think we could do, please don't hesitate to contact us.

Our Customers Write

"Dear Nicholas, Just wanted to let you know that the guitar arrived safe and sound first thing this morning! Thank you for the fanstastic service! Kind regards, Alison" 16/12/2011

"I want to thank you, and whoever else there is to thank in your company for the wonderful service you have. Correspondence with you has always been very swift and pleasant, and in a good sense not at all "business-like". Also extra thanks for the special attention to us lefty players, it's amazing that you and Alhambra went with all the trouble just for one guitar. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! Yours sincerely, Patrik Nummi" 16/12/2011

"Hi Nicholas thanks for everything ,one does not usually get such caring business relations. I am happy that the guitar sounds nice and I hope that my son will make the most out of it. Best Massimo" 15/12/2011

"I would also like to thank you for your excellent service and will certainly shop with you again. Merry Christmas! Kind regards Anne Parham" 14/12/2012

"I found your service exemplary. Many thanks, enjoy the festive season, and no reply needed. Yours greatfully, ER" 5/12/2012

"Nick Your range of guitars in second to none and your expertise and advice is invaluable in helping customers make the right purchase for them  Thank you!" Kyle Davies, 4/7/2011

"I thought I should drop you a line just to say thanks, again, for your excellent service. My new guitar arrived, safe and well, and bang on time. It’s a joy to play and easily matches my expectations.  I’ve already recommended you to some of my colleagues. Best wishes," Professor Chris Gane, 23/2/2011

"Hi Nicholas, Just to let you know that the guitar arrived safely and oh I am ever so happy with it ... Last but not least: your customer service is super. All in all, thank you very much" Roberto Cassani, 10/11/2010

"Thanks for your going the extra mile. I will certainly recommend you to all. Best regards" Chris Hayter 19/10/2007

"The guitar arrived safe and well. Looks great sounds great. Thanks for all your help." Ian Harding, Suffolk, 25/9/2006.

and lots more...

Articles and tips

Have a look at our growing Articles section. Strings and stringing tips. Humidity. Tone Woods. Luthiers. And more...

Delivery Charges and Orders Outside the Mainland UK

Delivery throughout the mainland UK is free as usual. If you are not in the mainland UK, please phone (+44 (0)1363 881174) or email for delivery charges to your location - please tell us what you want to buy as well as your full postal address. Alternatively just place your order using our secure checkout and we will email you with delivery costs - we will not take payment until you reply confirming your order. Orders delivered outside Europe and to the Channel Islands are free of VAT.

5 February 2012