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Old January-19th-2005, 12:12 AM   #1
Lois Gilbert
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Memorabilia from jazz legends to be auctioned at Lincoln Center

Memorabilia from jazz legends to be auctioned at Lincoln Center


NEW YORK (AP) _ A treasure trove of jazz memorabilia including saxophones that belonged to Charlie "Bird" Parker and John Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie's trumpet and a gown in which Peggy Lee sang "Fever" will go on the auction block next month.

"It's the first truly major auction focusing on jazz," Arlan Ettinger, president of Guernsey's, which is holding the auction Feb. 20, said Tuesday.

Most of the nearly 400 lots were consigned by the families of the jazz legends to whom they belonged, Ettinger said. Several of the family members will donate proceeds to foundations that promote jazz and provide scholarships to young musicians, he said.

Among the items to be sold are a 27-page letter handwritten by Louis Armstrong, a smoking jacket worn by Thelonious Monk, an unreleased tape of a 1951 performance by Parker and original Al Hirschfeld caricatures.

Most of the lots will be sold with no reserve price.

Ettinger estimated that Parker's sax and Coltrane's tenor sax each could sell for as much as $1 million.

"It has his name engraved in it," he said of Parker's instrument. "He's pictured in hundreds of photographs with it."

The auction will take place at the Time Warner Center in Manhattan, the new home of Jazz at Lincoln Center, and buyers can bid by telephone, through eBay or in person.



Guernsey's: http://www.guernseys.com


Copyright © 2005, The Associated Press
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Old January-19th-2005, 11:46 AM   #2
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Rich people gotta have fun too.
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Old January-20th-2005, 04:09 PM   #3
jesus marion joseph
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Damn! Just spent that spare million $$!
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Old January-20th-2005, 04:25 PM   #4
jazzy mary
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If you're in the NYC area and want to check out the items, you can do so between Feb. 17 and 20 at jazz@LC. I'm thinking of doing that. I won't make any bids but it could be interesting. Guernsey's is the auction house that always doeds kindof weird auctions like that.
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Old January-20th-2005, 06:52 PM   #5
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Why does this make me feel bad?

Well hopefully some museums will bid for this priceless material.
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Old January-20th-2005, 07:41 PM   #6
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No picture of it online, but the print edition of the New York Times this morning had a picture of an address book (probably Coltrane's?) open to the C-D pages showing entries for Paul Desmond, Al DeRisi, Jay Cameron, Bob Donovan, Willie Dennis and "Diz and Lorraine". Sweet.

Scott, what I found unusual about this is that a bunch of scholarly material (original sketches for "A Love Supreme") is getting sold off at the same time as Monk's old high school book reports. Is this standard operating procedure with most auctions? The wheat and the chaff together (albeit in separate lots)?
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Old January-20th-2005, 10:34 PM   #7
Lois Gilbert
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Before you jump to conclusions, please read carefully -
"Most of the nearly 400 lots were consigned by the families of the jazz legends to whom they belonged," Ettinger said. Several of the family members will donate proceeds to foundations that promote jazz and provide scholarships to young musicians, he said.

So before you put Lincoln Center in the mix which is ridiculous since that is just the venue... why don't you investigate and find out if the families consented. I know 2 families that did. Since so many heirs got ripped off by the publishers since is a way that they raise money.
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Old January-20th-2005, 10:38 PM   #8
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Here's a little more info from Reuters

Portions of the proceeds will go toward several foundations, including the John Coltrane Foundation, a scholarship fund for young jazz musicians, churches and hospitals in Los Angeles and Detroit, the Red Cross and a foundation set up in memory of Benny Goodman, she said.

The auction is the first in the United States entirely devoted to jazz items, organizers said.

The auction will be held at Rose Hall, the new headquarters of Jazz at Lincoln Center, in the Time Warner Center at the southwest corner of Central Park. Public previews of the items will be held on Feb. 18 and 19.
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Old January-20th-2005, 10:50 PM   #9
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http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/20/ar...ic/20jazz.html

January 20, 2005
Pieces of Jazz History Head to Auction Block
By BEN RATLIFF

There is Charlie Parker's King alto saxophone, with mother-of-pearl keys,
his primary horn in the 1950's. There is Benny Goodman's clarinet, John
Coltrane's soprano and tenor saxophones, Gerry Mulligan's baritone.
Thelonious Monk's tailored jacket. A ribald 27-page letter from Louis
Armstrong to his manager. One of Ornette Coleman's notebooks from the late
1950's, with his practice exercises and, on one of the last pages, one of
his greatest compositions, "Focus on Sanity," written in pencil. Home movies
of Coltrane shoveling snow outside his house in Philadelphia in the late
1950's. Charlie Parker concert recordings made by his wife, Chan, and high
school book reports by Monk.

On Feb. 20 at the Allen Room in Jazz at Lincoln Center's Rose Hall,
Guernsey's Auction House will put all these items, and many others, on the
block at a special jazz auction. Previews will be held on Feb. 18 and 19,
but Guernsey's would not estimate how much the auction will make.
"It would be folly to try to come up with a number," said Guernsey's owner,
Arlan Ettinger. Very few of the lots have reserves - the secret minimum
prices agreed upon by the sellers and the house. Nor is the house listing
estimates in its catalog.

Jazz artifacts have been auctioned before, through Christie's and Sotheby's,
but there has been no single auction of this size entirely dedicated to
jazz. And though there have been jazz collectors of one kind or another
since the 1930's, it seems to have taken many of the families of jazz's
royalty this long to dislodge the once mundane items, long buried in
closets, that now have great value not only to jazz aficionados but also to
the larger community of collectors.

But just because these memorabilia are now turning up at a public auction
does not mean they will end up in public hands, at least not right away.
Instruments and sheet music have entered the collections of institutions
like the Smithsonian and the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers
University - the country's greatest academic center for jazz studies - which
preserve them and make them available for scholars. (The city of Kansas
City, Mo., owns one of Parker's plastic alto saxophones, sold at auction by
Sotheby's in 1995 for around $140,000, and it has become the centerpiece of
the town's American Jazz Museum. The University of Wisconsin owns the bass
that belonged to the great Ellington bassist Jimmy Blanton and occasionally
lets students play it.) But institutions, which have limited budgets and
often rely on donations by the artists' families to acquire material, may
not have the money to buy many of the items at Guernsey's auction.
Instead the pieces may be bought by collectors of modest means who dearly
cling to their scraps of history, perhaps without giving them proper care.
Or they might be acquired by wealthy collectors who eventually lose interest
in them and, after death, release them to museums.

"If I were to guess," Mr. Ettinger said, "sooner or later, the majority of
this material will end up in museums. But it could take a decade."
In the Smithsonian's collection lie reams of unpublished Duke Ellington
music, Lionel Hampton's vibraphone and Ella Fitzgerald's entire archive,
among thousands of other items. In nearly every case, the material was
donated.

"We'd love to have some of these things in this auction," said John Edward
Hasse, the Smithsonian's curator of American music. "But we don't get a
penny from the federal budget for acquisitions. So we rely heavily on the
good will, generosity and public spiritedness of musicians and their
families."

Alice Coltrane, the widow of John Coltrane, is the source for much of the
Coltrane material in the auction, including the saxophones and paperwork. In
a telephone interview yesterday, she said she had been approached by several museums in the past, including the Smithsonian, but the circumstances had never seemed right for her to donate material.
"We got a letter about this auction in New York," she explained, "and I had
never before considered anything like that. All of the instruments that we
have are kept here in our family. But once I thought it through, I thought
it would be O.K. if we presented some of the memorabilia."

Some of the proceeds, she explained, will go to the John Coltrane
Foundation, a fund that has supported young jazz musicians for 18 years by
giving them scholarships to music schools. Some will go to Jowcol, the
Coltrane publishing company; some to her own charities, including churches
and hospitals in Los Angeles and Detroit, the Red Cross, and a small school
for orphaned children in Puttaparthi, India, near Madras. She still expects
at some point, she said, to strike a deal with the Smithsonian.
One auction piece from Ms. Coltrane's house in California - the original
sheet-music sketches for Coltrane's 1964 suite "A Love Supreme," among the
most important works in jazz - bears explicit notes and markings in
Coltrane's hand. ("Make ending attempt to reach transcendent level"; "Rising
harmonies to a level of blissful stability at end"; "Last chord to sound
like final chord of 'Alabama.' ") These two pages, which have never been
seen by scholars, aren't just a curio: they will affect scholarship.

Many objects are more important than they seem at first glance, revealing
something about an artist's early interests, his psychology or the culture
of the times. Also in the Coltrane collection is a fifth-grade school
scrapbook, solemnly emblazoned in cut-out block letters with the words
"Negro History Book," which indicates who made an impression on him in the
1930's. In it, he copied out poems by Langston Hughes and James Weldon
Johnson, and pasted pictures of black entertainers like the Dancing Nicholas
Brothers, Marian Anderson and Fletcher Henderson, as well as the etiquette
teacher Charlotte Hawkins Brown.

In Monk's school essay books, from 1933 (he was 15), there is a book report
on "A Tale of Two Cities," an essay in an exquisite, old-fashioned
serif-spangled hand about why Boys' Life is his favorite magazine, and one
on the topic of good newspaper journalism. And in the left cuff of one of
his tailored jackets, sewn in gold thread, is the phrase "Crepé Scole With
Nellie." It refers, via a misspelling, to his tune "Crepuscule With Nellie,"
written for his wife, Nellie. That Monk would stash a secret phrase to
himself in a hidden place says something about the hidden compartments of
his character and his great affection for his wife.

"My hope is that the purchasers are the more sharing institutions and
collectors," said the jazz historian Phil Schaap, who helped Guernsey's
evaluate the objects. "Things tended to go more to repositories until
recently. Which means, to me, the suggestion that repositories don't have
the money to buy these things." He paused. "The pageantry of it, though, is
pretty impressive," he said. "It's all going to be in one room."
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Old January-21st-2005, 03:05 AM   #10
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Yes, sorry, this does make me a bit ill.
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Old January-21st-2005, 03:33 AM   #11
Ron Thorne
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I don't think that one has to jump to any conclusions to wonder where some of these priceless artifacts may wind up, frankly. And, under what conditions they'll be stored. And, who will get to enjoy them, etc.

An American Jazz Museum with a knowledgable curator would be a wonderful place for these treasures. However ...

Sounds as if this auction could yield very mixed results for all concerned.
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Old January-21st-2005, 09:23 AM   #12
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Coltrane shoveling snow.





I'll bet he was the best shoveler on his block.
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Old January-21st-2005, 09:50 AM   #13
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I'm sorry, but Coltrane's late-period snow shoveling completely lost me.
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Old January-21st-2005, 10:27 AM   #14
Chris D
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It was his '50s shoveling, when he was into the pure sheets of snow.
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Old January-21st-2005, 02:32 PM   #15
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Amazingly, I have plans to be in NYC that week. I will definitely be there. Probably on Friday to avoid the crowds as much as possible.

Anyone thinking of going to NY soon, that would be a great time to go. Aside from this auction, Christo is erecting his "Gates" project (on 2/12 for only 2 weeks) and the Charles Tolliver Big Band is at the Jazz Standard from 2/17-2/20.
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Old January-21st-2005, 03:44 PM   #16
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I deleted my post. The tone in that post was my attempt at humor and in response to the Kenny G on Leno thread except the Lincoln Center auction seemed more worthy of discussion (and predictable sniping) than Leno. I don't have anything against Lincoln Center or anyone attached to it and don't care to be associated with the notion that there is something inherently wrong with the Center or it's supporters.
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Old January-21st-2005, 04:06 PM   #17
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"Home movies of Coltrane shoveling snow outside his house in Philadelphia in the late 1950's."


If anyone's interested, I will be shoveling snow outside MY house in Philadelphia this weekend, and would be happy to make a DVD of it available for auction.
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Old January-21st-2005, 04:15 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris D
It was his '50s shoveling, when he was into the pure sheets of snow.

DAMN!...Got there before me! Way too fast!


This one's on Bluenote!

RC.
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Old January-21st-2005, 05:58 PM   #19
jazzy mary
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I think the auction might be interesting. Although a bit strange. Again, I think Jazz@LC is simply the venue. BFrank, that *is* an incredible week to be in NYC! Maybe I'll see you at Lincoln Center or the Tolliver BB.

Last edited by jazzy mary; January-21st-2005 at 05:59 PM.
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Old February-21st-2005, 02:01 AM   #20
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After spending the better part of 50 years under a bed, a saxophone belonging to legendary jazz virtuoso Charlie Parker sold for more than quarter-of-a-million dollars at an historic auction.

The alto sax, which Parker often pawned and then redeemed when he needed fast cash, went for 261,750 dollars at the sale in New York by auction house Guernsey's.

Following Parker's death in 1955, his wife Chan Parker hid the instrument under her bed, finally bequeathing it to her daughter just before her death in 1999.

The Parker lot was just one of the highlights of an auction that included instruments, clothing and musical scores that were played, worn and written by such icons as Louis Armstrong, Benny Goodman, John Coltrane and Stan Getz.

Along with the actual saxophones, trumpets and drum sets, there was a lot of bidder interest in the hand-written items, including a profanity-laced letter from Armstrong to his agent which sold for 29,500 dollars.

Another highlight was the original musical arrangement for Coltrane's classic song, "A Love Supreme," written by the musician himself in pencil and blue ink.

The three sheets of manuscript that made up the lot were the target of some aggressive bidding and finally sold for 129,500 dollars.

"Today is kind of sacred," said T.S. Monk, who attended the auction as the son of jazz great Thelonious Monk and an award-winning musician in his own right.

"They are all so alive," Monk said of the musicians represented at the sale. "They're alive in our hearts, they're alive in our collective souls.

"Sometimes their message was muted by racism, other times by politics and even artistic snobbery.

"But their music has flourished. It's grown and profoundly influenced all those that it has touched," he said.

Unusual for such a high-profile collection, Guernsey's had provided no estimates, and the vast majority of lots had no reserve price attached.

However, a tenor saxophone that belonged to John Coltrane
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Old February-21st-2005, 02:22 AM   #21
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BTW, I was given the catalogue by Clark Terry's wife, and trust me when I tell you it's awesome. I think it sells for $30, and everyone I've shown it to wants one. It's really a coffee table high quality book.

The musicians' or the estates get 80% and Guernsey's gets 20%
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Old February-21st-2005, 03:08 AM   #22
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I went to the preview on Friday. Amazing. As Lois says, the catalog is worth picking up, too.

Once in a lifetime chance to see that stuff. Glad I was in town.
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Old February-21st-2005, 03:55 AM   #23
Ron Thorne
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lois Gilbert
However, a tenor saxophone that belonged to John Coltrane
Lois-

What's the rest of the story?



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Old April-13th-2005, 05:58 PM   #24
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FYI - Guernsey's finally posted the "realized" prices of the auction. You can download a PDF of an Excel file HERE.

The only caveat is that the list is by Lot #, and not otherwise identified. So if you don't have the catalog, it won't be much help.
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