Ed Roman on the Roberto-Venn School
Ed Roman fully recommends the Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery. Ed Roman
Guitars has hired several graduates of this renowned institution throughout his
career and currently employs 2 graduates. Ed's pal
Rick Turner also utilizes alumni of the
Roberto-Venn School in his guitar building shop.
Since 1975
The Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery in Phoenix, Arizona is the longest
running guitar making school in the US. Since its founding in 1975, the school
has trained over 1300 students from North and South America, Europe, and the
Orient. Located on a three-acre site in south Phoenix, the school provides all
necessary power equipment, jigs, and fixtures for guitar building.
The Program
The five-month program of Guitar Building and Repair is offered twice a year,
beginning in September and February. During the first fifteen weeks, each
student builds one electric and one acoustic guitar. All instruments are built
from scratch, with no pre-made or kit parts. Both written material and
demonstrations of all processes guide the intense work. The final five weeks are
an in-depth concentration on guitar repair. Visits by guest lecturers and
industry professionals augment the information presented by the staff of seven
full- and part-time instructors.
The Roberto-Venn School is proud of the accomplishments of their alumni. R-V
graduates can be found throughout the guitar industry: building fine custom
guitars under their own names, running busy repair shops, working in instrument
sales, and on the production floors and custom shops of almost every
manufacturer in the country!
Fully Accredited
The Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery is accredited by the Accrediting
Commission of Career Schools and Colleges of Technology.
History and Founders
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 |
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| John Roberts |
Robert Venn |
William Eaton |
The Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery is the longest running guitar making
school in the U.S. Students have traveled from every continent except
Antarctica, to attend. Since its founding in 1975, over 1000 students have
graduated.
The Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery is situated on a three acre lot in the
old world atmosphere of South Phoenix. A collection of buildings and sheds is
the unassuming facade for the birth of finely crafted guitar art. The idea for a
guitar making school grew out of an apprenticeship program that John Roberts
(1921 - 1999) started back in 1969 called the Juan Roberto Guitar Works. Before
this, John found himself in the jungles of Nicaragua, flying airplanes for a
wood import company. Much of the rosewood and mahogany used at the school was
collected with the help of the Miskito Indians and shipped to Phoenix where John
began his guitar making endeavor. John Roberts passed away in the summer of
1999. We think of him daily.
Robert Venn (1926 - 1991) joined with John in 1973, and brought custom
electric guitar making expertise to the guitar partnership. Bob was one a
handful of guitar makers in the 1950's and 60's to wind his own pickups and use
wooden pickup covers aesthetically matched with the highly figured hardwoods he
used in the body and neck of his instruments. Bob built or repaired for fine
guitarists such as: Phil Baugh, Maurice Anderson, Tom Morrell, Bud Isaacs, Norm
Hamlet, and Tiny Moore. We miss him.
William Eaton apprenticed with John Roberts in 1971. He wrote a business plan
for a guitar making school in 1974, while acquiring an MBA degree from the
Stanford Graduate School of Business. The plan became the blueprint for the
Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery, which John, Bob, William, and Bruce Scotten
incorporated and founded in 1975. William added new elements of stringed
instrument design and innovations, creating multi-stringed, one-of-a-kind
instruments at the school since 1976. Presently, William is the Director of
Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery.
