View Full Version : Bizarro mandolins of note
Richard Walz
Jun-18-2009, 1:14am
I think Neil should have this instrument, it would go well as a fringe example of 'art-deco' mandolin design :
http://cgi.ebay.fr/rare-et-original-mandoline-signee-1930_W0QQitemZ180369174341QQcmdZViewItemQQptZFR_YO _OInstrumentsMusique_Cordes?hash=item29fed72f45&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14&_trkparms=65%3A12%7C66%3A2%7C39%3A1%7C72%3A1526%7C 240%3A1318%7C301%3A0%7C293%3A1%7C294%3A50
For the time being, the price is right...
Neil Gladd
Jun-18-2009, 5:17am
I think not. Feel free to bid, yourself.
Richard Walz
Jun-18-2009, 6:27am
Ok, it doesn't have curves and you can't call it a bowl back, but it does have points of interest... sorry, I might just bid on it, might double as a canoe paddle or a cricket bat. Who knows what's in that red box?
brunello97
Jun-18-2009, 6:38am
Yes, I am pretty certain that is an actual diamond inlaid into the back. The seller probably isn't aware of its true value.
Just right for that obscure piece by Satie "Trois Morceaux en Forme de un Artichaut."
Richard, despite its curious design, it does appear to be quite carefully made. I didn't think PBS was around back in those days......
Mick
Jim Garber
Jun-18-2009, 7:26am
For the archive, here are the pics. I do have to say that the French were most experimental with instrument design including JTL, Gelas, Savart, etc.
The oddest thing is that neck joint.
Bob A
Jun-18-2009, 11:39am
Permit me to point to another candidate for this week's ugliest mandolin, this one at Bernunzio's.
http://bernunzio.com/products/0913508
vkioulaphides
Jun-18-2009, 11:45am
I believe that instrument was once a 3D-prop for the designers at the Max Fleischer Studios-- as they worked on Popeye the Sailor, that is. :))
LOVE this thread... :popcorn:
Cheers,
Victor
brunello97
Jun-18-2009, 12:00pm
Victor! I love Max Fleischer's work. No doubt Breton and the Surrealists did as well.
Likewise, if Smokey Stover had played a mandolin duet with Orville Wright, he would have commissioned a mandolin from one of these two sources.
Mick
vkioulaphides
Jun-18-2009, 12:56pm
Being just a musician, after all, I am always profoundly apologetic for my taste in the visual arts, and doubly so for my lifelong love of cartooning; I always tend to assume that, well... others OUGHT to know better about such things. What do I know? :confused:
But now that Mick, whose opinion and expertise I value greatly, concurs, I will begin to be, ah... a wee bit less apologetic. ;)
Cheers,
Victor
journeybear
Jun-18-2009, 1:51pm
Here are some lovely bowlbacks ...
The decorated one is Russian - at least it is signed in Russian - and looks like it has been played. The bridge needs some adjustment, though.
The mirror mandolin is either built for a lefty or a mirror image. :))
The last one is carved from alabaster by Giorgio Pecchioni, in a museum in Volterra, Italy. I don't think it's playable - it has a pretty short neck and the intonation doesn't look right. ;)
Gutbucket
Jun-18-2009, 2:02pm
The first one would make a great casket for a squirrel. The second one is actually a viking axe.:grin:
Eddie Sheehy
Jun-18-2009, 3:52pm
The first one would make a great casket for a squirrel. The second one is actually a viking axe.:grin:
We don't bury squirrels - we eat them.... even roadkill... Now they could be converted into squirrel traps...
Jim Garber
Jun-18-2009, 7:25pm
For those unaware of this longtime-running thread: Mandolin oddities (http://www.mandolincafe.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1137)
You will find lots to marvel at there.
Eugene
Jun-20-2009, 9:45am
Staggeringly awesome! ...to observe from afar.
etbarbaric
Jun-22-2009, 7:16am
>> Staggeringly awesome! ...to observe from afar.
Eugene... I think you misspelled "a fire" above... :-) :-) :-)