Well, I finally got my hands on one of these today. Empire Music had one in stock. Being a fan of Maple, I was eager to check it out.
The first thing that struck me was the aesthetics. I really have to admit: Taylor hit it out of the park with the dark stain on the Maple; it really highlights the figuring well without hiding it. The other appointments were very nice and worked well with the darkly-stained Maple. On the whole, I give Taylor high marks on the new 600 aesthetics.
Sat down and began my typical ELO-based guitar-testing playlist, starting with "Turn To Stone" and an "E" chord. "Wow," I thought. "Pretty impressive bass, especially considering it's Maple!" But the buzz-kill (for me) came with the next few chord changes; as I went from the introductory "E" to "F#" and then to "F#m", it sounded like all the bright, sparkly highs that I'd come to expect and love from Maple had been clipped away... To my ears, Maple's characteristically-balanced brightness (at least as it had been done by Taylor in the past) had been ruined... I was really trying to be open and objective, and give the new 614ce a fair chance; but when I grabbed some of the other guitars off the wall to compare it against (e.g., a Cocobolo PS14ce), it only confirmed for me what I was hearing...
I get what Bob Taylor wants to do, and I can respect his foresight here: Maple is plentiful in North America and probably the most sustainable wood source for the future of guitars. But it has not been a popular choice because natural-finish Maple doesn't have mass visual appeal; and the brightly-focused tone also doesn't seem to capture the ear of most guitar customers. So, I must be one of the 'odd-ball' consumers that actually preferred Taylor's former visual and sonic treatment of Maple... In fairness, if Bob Taylor and Andy Power's objective was to create a Maple guitar that neither sounds nor looks like a Maple guitar, they've succeeded admirably: mission accomplished. And on the whole, the new 614ce sounds reasonably good; Taylor will probably sell more of the newer 600 Series than their older 600 series, based solely on its ability to give customers the impression that they are purchasing a more conventional-looking and -sounding guitar. Sadly, the new 600 Series is just not going to be for me...