303-279-1111 | 10395 W Colfax Ave Lakewood CO 80215 | info@goldenmusic.co | Open MON-THUR 11-7, SAT/SuN 10-5, closed Friday 303-279-1111 | 10395 W Colfax Ave Lakewood CO 80215 | info@goldenmusic.co | OPEN MON-THUR 11am-7pm, SAT/SUN 10am-5pm, closed Friday

Music Music Music

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!

Golden Music has many goals and plans to continue in our mission to support the music community in 2019.  Primarily, we are striving to build our music school to be the place where music education is available for everyone wanting to learn.  We are improving our physical environment with new furniture and fixtures.   Our web page is getting a makeover which will bring out the many talents of our teachers to you.  Our wonderful staff are digging in deeper to their roles in the store and we see amazing talent and devotion coming through daily.  As an owner, I strive to bring balance to my life and all those involved with our wonderful work and a healthy lifestyle.  Best wishes to you and your family and friends!  Love to all,  Mary

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Christmas Events Shaping Up to Be Full of Interesting Music and Presentations!

Christmas Events Shaping Up to Be Full of Interesting Music and Presentations!

Our second annual Christmas Season full of events is planned and ready for the season to roll in!  Starting on November 17th with another great Uke event, then November 24th with the Non Traditional Music Day.  We are planning to feature house accordion teacher Joanne Birsa with selections from German folk repertoire, Rebecca Moritzky demonstrating the #guzheng and Gregory Walker on electric strings.  In the month of December we are planning:

Dec 1st - Contemporary Strings Day 🎻
Dec 8th - Ukulele Day & Guitar Days 
Dec 15th - Guitar Days
Dec 22nd - Ukulele Day & Guitar Days 

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Wonderful Turnout at our First Fall Uke Event!

Wonderful Turnout at our First Fall Uke Event!

We've planned a series of Uke events for fall and the end of the year and our first one, October 27th had a great turn out.  Jim led two groups, kids in one and adults in the other in beginning and advancing songs and uke techniques.  Our next classes are schedule for November 17, December 8th and December 22.  Every event will have a Special Giveaway.  Also, loaner instruments are available to all participants.  Jim Venis is the teacher at Golden Music and has openings for private lesson students.   

Read more about Jim here:   JIM VENIS

 

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CSO Cellist Andrew Briggs Rents Golden Music Master Cello for his Summer Concert Performances

Last Week, Andrew Briggs came by Golden Music to try out some cellos.  We got the pleasure of hearing our set of Apprentice and Master cellos performed by an amazing professional.  If that wasn't great enough, he went ahead and took one of our cellos home to use at his outdoor concerts this summer.   Here are some clips of the different cellos and him playing:

https://youtu.be/uM8c1dTBHQw

https://youtu.be/kY8iBJ_YYuU

 

 

 

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Renzo Bechini, Italian Violin Maker

Renzo Bechini, Italian Violin Maker

From Tuscany, Renzo Bechini led a long life and wrote his own biography at age 80.  He built his first bow at the age of sixty.  He was born in 1911 and died in 1995.  He was self taught until 1955 when he trained with a maker from Milan.  

He wrote in his autobiograph:  
"If you exclude prodigious and individual moments that destiny can give us , to love our own job (which unfortunately is the privilege of a few) is the best real approximation to the happiness on earth, but this is a truth that many do not know."

Renzo held many jobs in his life:  he was a blacksmith at his father's shop when he was a child, dental technician, musician (he was graduated in viola), mechanic, jewelery dealer, jazz bassist, and of course , at first a luthier and then a bowmaker.  The passion for bows and instruments was born, as in many cases at the time, by necessity. Wishing to study the violin professionally, and not coming from a wealthy family who could afford such an important expense, he decided to build one for himself.  The first attempts, obviously, gave mixed results, but he did not loose heart, and throughout years and experience, things improved a lot.
In 1952, he attend as a hobbyist, the national competition of contemporary violin making at the Academy of Santa Cecilia in Rome, hoping, at least, to display his works. To his surprise, not only the instrument was chosen by the commission, but he also won the second prize. 

In 1971, the year of his retirement (because obviously he was a luthier in his spare time left him by his job) he won the biennial in Cremona with a cello, after which he decided to devote himself entirely to bows.

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Piero Badalassi 1915-1991 - Golden Music has a 16.5" Viola


Piero was a native of the Pisa region and taught himself violin making from the age of 16. After the second WW he became associated with the Soderci family. His output is small, probably less than 100 instruments. His violas are highly regarded, winning the gold medal for viola in the 1976 International Triennal Competition.

Badalassi had a personal and classical model; his instruments are known to be well finished. He was highly respected as a repairer and restorer. His other awards include at Cremona 1937, 1965, 1973. Piero Badalassi in Pisa / Faceva l’Anno 1946 Piero Badalassi-fece / in Pisa l’Anno 1952.

 

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Dennis Plowright - British Violin Maker

Dennis Plowright, mechanical engineer and violin-maker, was born on January 11, 1925. He died on October 26, 2007, aged 82.  He grew up in Mill Hill, North London. His interest in stringed instruments began when, at 15, he came across a book on violins. Having an aptitude for all things mechanical he joined the Navy as an engineer. He later established himself as a chartered mechanical engineer and consultant.

His practical skills would stand him in good stead when he began to make violins. Initially he studied violin-making with Raymond Franks, who was active in London from the 1930s until the mid-1950s. Later, he received much helpful advice 
from two highly regarded professional violin experts, Paul Voigt and Clifford Hoing.

Plowright produced his first instrument in 1951 and in the next 45 years he completed an impressive 51 violins, 98 violas and 27 cellos. In addition to constructing new instruments he also carried out repairs for string 
musicians.

British violin-makers, modern and historical, were his specific area of interest, and he compiled accurate details of every instrument he came across. This labour bore fruit in the publication of two books: a comprehensive and very 
useful Dictionary of British Violin and Bow Makers (1994, revised & enlarged 1996) and Aspects of the Violin - A Handbook for Makers and Players (1994).

Plowright was also a keen amateur cellist and pianist.

In 1984 he retired to Exmouth, but not from the world of instruments - he made his last instrument in 2005 despite his failing eyesight.  Plowright is survived by his wife, Mary, and the daughter and son from his previous marriage.

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Golden Music 5th Annual Summer String Sales Starts Today June 1, 2018

FEATURED INSTRUMENT OF THE DAY - PAUL HILAIRE VIOLA - MIRECOURT FRANCE

Here we are in the first day of our 5th Annual Violin Sale - we've already had two happy families purchase instruments! We are planning a post on an instrument every day this month through the end of the sale: Today, the Elite 16.5" 1964 Viola by Paul Hilaire French Luthier. 

Born in 1906, Paul was trained by George Apparut in the famous Mirecourt workshop (called the Victor Joseph Charotte workshop). Paul took over the workshop in 1945 after Apparut's death. The instrument Golden Music has was made in 1964, only three years before his death in 1967. Mirecourt is a small town in Northeastern France, known for it's lace making and musical instrument workshops. From Wiki - "The Lutherie (violin making) dates back to the end of the sixteenth century and the travels of the Dukes of Lorraine and their retinues to Italy. It was particularly in Mirecourt that the business of making stringed instruments took off, with 43 luthiers in 1635, and the business continued to grow into the twentieth century, by when it was claimed that Mirecourt was producing more than 80,000 instruments annually." links to more information: https://goo.gl/GqVUXM, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirecourt

Paul Hilaire

Mirecourt

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Franco Barozzi, Contemporary Italian Violin Maker

A Contemporary Italian Violin Maker (he has a Facebook page!). Golden Music has a fine 16" Viola by Barozzi. Here is a video of him playing: https://www.facebook.com/barozziviolins/videos/804622906323451/

About
A lover of violinmaking since he was a boy, he began his activity as self-taught, following the advice of famous masters and friends violinmakers.
https://goo.gl/DD5wZb



History
He studied violin with Valentino Marlettini at the Civica Scuola Musicale "R. Zandonai "and later with Giannino Carpi at the Conservatory of Bolzano where he graduated. He then graduated in viola at the Conservatory of Verona with Tito Riccardi perfected at the Accademia Chigiana in Siena with Bruno Giuranna. He has performed concerts in Italy and abroad. In 1975 he obtained from the "Giuseppe Verdi" Conservatory of Milan the nomination for violin teaching in the section of Riva del Garda where he remained until 1999.

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How good an investment is a violin? better than gold or property

Stringed instruments can be a better financial bet than shares, gold or property, says Ivan Hewett, as he goes behind the scenes at Beares auction house

When it comes to a safe haven for your money, little can beat a rare old violin. Other things always have their ups and downs. In the boom years of the 1990s, everyone assumed property was “safe as houses,” but then came the crash of 2007.

Gold was the miracle investment from 2005 to 2012, but in the last two years it has bombed. Shares are good for the long-term, but in the short-term they can be scarily volatile. In the crash year of 2008 they fell around 30 per cent, and bounced back by the same amount the following year.

Compare that with the steady rise of stringed instruments, particularly violins. A study quoted in the Economist concluded that the annual rate of return for a Stradivarius violin between 1980 and 2011 was 15.4 per cent, without any of the sudden surges and drops that send investors’ stress levels through the roof.

Until now, the virtues of instruments as an investment vehicle has been hidden from view. Instrument dealers inhabit an old-fashioned world, shut away from the rough-and-tumble of the financial world. That may be about to change, if the recent on-line instrument auction from Beares, one of the most venerable violin dealers in the world, is any sign. Simon Morris, one of Beares’s directors, says the motive was to show the world that the trade is moving with the times.

“Not so long ago there were just a handful of dealers in Europe and America, who were on first-name terms with buyers and sellers,” he says, “but it’s changing fast. The trade is becoming much more international, and we have to reflect that, and open ourselves up to a new market.” However, Beares isn’t about to abandon its old ways. Visiting their premises near Oxford Circus is like stepping back into the past.

n the workshops, the craftsmen still work with tools barely changed since the days of the great Cremonese makers of violins and cellos, such asGuarneri and Stradivari. Racks of wood slumber in quiet corridors, maturing like fine wines. And Simon Morris himself has the comforting air of unshakeable probity that was once the hallmark of the English banker.

He takes me up to a showroom where two would-be buyers are putting a couple of instruments through their paces. “Here they are,” he says, gesturing airily at the wall-racks where nearly all the 29 violins available in the auction are hanging. On the other walls are the bows, violas and cellos being sold alongside them.

Missing from the racks are the so-called “Cabriac” violin by Antonio Stradivari and another Cremonese violin made a century later by Guadagnini. These are the two most valuable instruments in the auction, with guide prices of $2.5-3.5 million (£1.5-£2.2 million) and $1-1.5 million (£630,000-945,000) respectively. The other violins are priced at anything between £4,000 and £500,000. “Generally auctions are clearing-houses, and the rule of caveat emptor [buyer beware] definitely applies,” says Harris.

“That’s not the way we want to go. We’re only prepared to have an auction where absolutely everything has been authenticated by ourselves.” Is he ever caught out himself? “No, but I don’t always get it right at a first look, when someone tests me.” I can’t resist pointing quizzically at one of the violins. “Well, hmmm... it looks like a French copy of a Guarneri pattern,” he says. Sure enough, the label says it’s exactly that.

Back in his office, I ask Morris whether he agrees that stringed instruments, especially violins, make good investments. “They do, because it’s an almost completely risk-free investment. At the top end there’s a diminishing supply, because certain instruments are bought by banks or foundations and will probably never come onto the market again.

"And on the other hand, the demand is constantly increasing, as new countries enter the market. It’s especially strong in the Far East, where excelling at the violin is a way of demonstrating that you’ve reached the West’s level in cultural terms.

"First it was Japan, where there are now around 35 Strads, then South Korea, then Taiwan. In China there are apparently 30 million people learning the violin, and it can’t be long before we see Chinese collectors in the market.”

 from the Economist:  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/classicalmusic/11211888/How-good-an-investment-is-a-violin.html

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