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The Art of Not Selling a Mandolin

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Vintage Gibson Mandolins

A couple of months ago, a customer came in with one of the cleanest Gibson A model mandolins I'd seen. Perfect like the day it first left the factory in 1916. He came in to sell it. I'm always curious why folks decide to sell their instruments, particularly vintage pieces and I make a point of finding out the details before negotiating a deal. Here are some reasons I've heard in no particular order:

• I don't play it anymore. It just sits around gathering dust

• I'm bored with it. I think there's something better out there.

• I need the money (very common these days and always hard to hear)

• My husband/wife (95% the latter) says I have too many. One has to go

• Found it at a garage sale and heard they're worth a lot of money
  
This particular customer gave me the first on the list, gathering dust. I just don't use it anymore, he said, and I feel like someone out there should play it.  I gladly negotiated a deal with him, he left with a nice check and I had a fine mandolin to sell, which I promptly did the following day. A nice turnaround and exceptionally quick. I wish they were all that easy. However, this one had an interesting twist.
 
A couple of days later, the seller came back in the store and rather sheepishly asked if I still had his mandolin. He regretted selling it and asked if I would reverse the deal and return it to him. Uh oh. He explained how he had first acquired the mandolin, some 20 years prior, what he had paid (peanuts) and how fond he was of the memory of that purchase. My heart went out to him and it was with great difficulty that I told him of its sale the previous day. Naturally, he was completely dumbstruck by this news, but there was nothing I could do.
 
The gentleman who purchased the mandolin was a long-time customer with whom I'd done a lot of business. He'd been looking for just such a piece and happened to walk in the day I was cleaning it up on my bench. He didn't even bat an eye when I gave him the price. It was a very satisfying transaction, not so much for the profit gained but the thrill on the his face when he found the mandolin of his dreams. Clearly not something I was about to undo with a request for the mandolin's return. In the end, the original seller left, quite dejected, and I went back to my business of facilitating matches between buyers and sellers, somewhat sobered by the exchange.
 
This brings me, rather belatedly, to the point of this article: never sell an instrument unless you absolutely have to. And before you decide to sell a piece out of boredom, do the following first:
 
1. Change the strings. Fresh strings inject sparkle and life into any instrument, no matter the quality.
2. Consider having it set up by your local repairman. Poor action can diminish an instrument's musical returns.
3. Put the instrument away for a few days. A certain day's mood can temporarily dull the enjoyment derived from what has been up to that point a favorite guitar or mandolin. 
4. Have a friend play it. Note his reaction and listen to how it sounds out in front. In short, get a second opinion.
 
If you still feel like it's time to move on, come on in to the shop. I'll be there to offer a final consult.
 
Happy picking! 
 

Comments

Excellent commentary. I have been in the business of selling old books and related material for over 30 years. As much as I need new material, I prefer to buy from estates after the owner has passed on. I have had too many experiences where someone wishes they had not sold their books - sometimes they are still available, but like this story, many times they are not. I always ask people to be really sure they want to sell.
Posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 6:16 PM by Bill Healy
boy is this true! I sold an amazing guitar by Michael Heiden (nope not selling the Heiden Mandolin) because of various stooopid reasons, regretted it ever since. Sold a Gurian, ditto....
Posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 7:09 PM by Spencer Capier
Bill, Thanks, glad you liked it. Funny to be in a business that in many ways hinges on someone's desire, misguided or otherwise, to sell their treasures. 
Posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 8:08 PM by Joe Caruso
Spencer, I'll be sure to contact you should either instrument show up in my shop. And hold on tight to that Heiden mando!
Posted @ Monday, January 25, 2010 8:10 PM by Joe Caruso
defintely hit the spot, i traded my Guild T50 slim line acoustic electric for an acoustic and have regretted it since, i had been thinking of selling my Flatiron A5 Artist since i have a Cohen now but you have made me reconsider now. think i will go change the strings...
Posted @ Tuesday, January 26, 2010 10:16 AM by Jeff Stephens
@Jeff, Glad I could help. Those early A5's are wonderful mandolins. Who signed yours?
Posted @ Tuesday, January 26, 2010 11:22 AM by Joe Caruso
Bruce signed it, i believe it is dated 1996, i know i bought it in '96
Posted @ Tuesday, January 26, 2010 12:26 PM by Jeff Stephens
Very true and good advice, Joe. It's easy to grow a little bored sometimes with an instrument. Putting it away and doing other things for a while lets you see and hear it afresh. And new strings is always a good idea. 
 
On the in need of cash reason, I can readily understand these days why someone would want to sell a cherished instrument. But unless it generates a lot<i/> of money, you're better off keeping it. Even though $1,000 to $2,000 sounds like a lot, it isn't and will vanish as fast as a drop of water in a hot pan.
Posted @ Wednesday, January 27, 2010 9:52 PM by Ken Sternberg
I'd go as far as to say: Try to hear it better. When you play a mandolin, the sound projects _away_ from you---so being behind it, you're in the worst position to hear it. Try sitting in front of a wall---or if you have a good-quality recorder, record yourself and listen. Your instrument will sound much better than you realized.
Posted @ Saturday, February 27, 2010 2:04 AM by ander
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