...Do you often encounter musical instruments in your wanderings?
Not that anything fancy would come along
Every so often; they're usually old student grade stuff. Some old
50s and 60s Sears-level guitars. A few older violins did surface
once, but I saw them as someone else was buying them. They weren't
the good stuff either.
itemsantiques. They often increase the value of some Pacific island
Perhaps because evidence of repairs speaks to antiquity andAll of the above, I'd think. It's especially true for bowls and the
authenticity. Or perhaps the repairs require as much skill as
the original fashioning of the merchandise?
like.
It's bad for the tone as well as the structural integrity.I'm not surprised. There are some seriously good luthiers out there.
Of course, in a blind test at Kresge Auditorium a couple
decades ago, it was proven quite conclusively that expertly
made modern violins sound better than famous old masters, and
even respected musicians could barely tell the difference at
a distance beyond a few meters. In the case of Strads, the
all the other violins were Gaglianos of one generation or theHorrors! Girl germs on the violin!
other, and I was playing on a fresh minted Wallin from the
1990s, and my instrument, if not my playing, blew the others
away. It was not a great classic instrument of a famous make,
nor ancient, and, horrors, it was made by a woman. In those
days, women did not make violins! She made four based on the
It's kept me company for maybe 500000 of my 3 or 4 million airNot that the latter commands much as often as not, but even so.
miles and has remained mostly intact. She persisted and went on
to become the first woman president of the Violin Society of
America, and her instruments command more than a house in Detroit.
To some extent, but really eminent instruments have a livingLikely, but it would still have to be easier than dealing with
history, and in most cases their condition and that of their
owners is an open book. That puts the kibosh on the extremes
of portability and some conditions on the saleability.
something you can't pick up and move.
So did my 10th-grade math teacher, as it turns out. I'm given toThat would describe a lot of us.
understand he's now going with one of my classmates despite having
been plumpish, nerdlyish, and a little awkward back in the day.
I've never had a paper towel stuffed into a pocket get shreddedCan't say I've ever run one through the wash.
in the wash, not that I'd know.
Butter is made from a waste product, at least if you're a cow, soThese days however, people don't want to hear it.It along with schmaltz and other good things are low on the
ecological soundness scale, requiring as they do the sacrifice
of the original grower. As do vegetable oils, I may point out,
which cause the deaths of trillions of corns, canolas, and
soybeans. It would seem that by that criterion too butter is
best.
it's ecologically more sound than soy or corn oil.
weren't50s and 60s Sears-level guitars. A few older violins did surface
once, but I saw them as someone else was buying them. They
andthe good stuff either.
It's highly unlikely that you would see the good stuff. A little
more possible to make interesting finds, such as lesser Italians or
Germans or French or English or instruments made by otherwise
well-regarded amateurs. I once played on an FE & FO Stanley violin
mentioned that to Robert Shelton, the curator at the Library ofCongress,
and he was interested in acquiring it, but the instrument was gonewhen
I went looking for it. But that's the sort of thing one might findmore
easily in your venues than through normal channels.
Reminds me of the phenomenon I discovered during my briefsmaller
flirtation with stamp collecting. Normally, unused mint-condition
stamps are the most sought after, but during the '40s-50s some
countries such as Tonga and San Marino discovered philately as aas
potential source of revenue, so they commissioned big presses, such
the American Bank Note Company, to print vast numbers of stamps,which
were sold directly to collectors, most never setting glue in theand
countries whose name was on the face. These were of course unused,
at some point hobbyists decided that was bogus, and so used stampsof
these varieties became much more valuable than new ones, whichaffected
the market to the degree that fake cancellations started happening.
A most amusing sidebar.
all the other violins were Gaglianos of one generation or theHorrors! Girl germs on the violin!
other, and I was playing on a fresh minted Wallin from the
1990s, and my instrument, if not my playing, blew the others
away. It was not a great classic instrument of a famous make,
nor ancient, and, horrors, it was made by a woman. In those
days, women did not make violins! She made four based on the
Worse, girl germs in the design.
When my sister's father-in-law died, I could have bought his house, unattractive and somewhat rundown but in a goodish neighborhoodinsofar
as such can be in Detroit, for 17K. Now, the average house inDetroit
is worth 60K, though this one probably would go for less, if it'sstill
standing.
Likely, but it would still have to be easier than dealing with
something you can't pick up and move.
Real estate has generally good return but is involved to transfer.
It was one of the Bond villains who kept his assets liquid and
portable using postage stamps as above and Venezuelan bolivars;
in the long run, stamps would have been a decent investment, with
hardly anything more portable or cachable, but lost his shirt on
the currency, which as of Ian Fleming's writing, was indeed one
of the most stable in the world, backed by vast natural resources,
but in the last decades of turmiol, a bolivar from that period
would have devalued by now by a factor of 10^8. My Venezuelan
uncle once gave me a silver bolivar, then valued at 33c, maybe
close to its metal value. Now the metal value would be a buck or
so, but the purchasing power would be a billionth of a dollar.
toSo did my 10th-grade math teacher, as it turns out. I'm given
havingunderstand he's now going with one of my classmates despite
been plumpish, nerdlyish, and a little awkward back in the day.That would describe a lot of us.
Well, yeah, but his story shows that there may be some hope.
I've never had a paper towel stuffed into a pocket get shreddedCan't say I've ever run one through the wash.
in the wash, not that I'd know.
Since I use paper towels extensively, sometimes cramming a
double in my back pocket while cooking the way sous-chefs do
a dishrag, ... .
Butter is made from a waste product, at least if you're a cow, so
it's ecologically more sound than soy or corn oil.
Except for the methane.
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