The top 5 most expensive instruments in the world
1
The Vieuxtemps
Guarneri Violin - $16million/£10.5million
This Guarneri del Gesù instrument is now the most expensive
violin in the world, selling for an estimated $16million. Its new owner
anonymously donated the historic instrument to violinist Anne Akiko
Meyers, on loan for the rest of her life.
The violin is said to be in perfect condition, with no
patching work at all. It gained its name after being owned by the Belgian 19th
century violinist Henri Vieuxtemps and was later used by Yehudi Menuhin and
Pinchas Zukerman, among others.
The Vieuxtemps Guarneri Violin
2
The Paganini
Stradivarius Cello - >$6million
Even if you don't play a string instrument, you've probably
heard of Antonio Stradivari, the famous Italian luthier. This beautifully
preserved Stradivarius cello was once owned by Nicolò Paganini and most
recently by Bernard Greenhouse. After his death the Greenhouse family decided
to sell it, hoping it would go to a deserving musician.
The purchaser was a “patroness of the arts from Montreal” who
lent the cello to Stéphane Tétreault, a young musician with a budding
career.
The Paganini Stradivarius Cello
The Heintzman
Crystal Piano - $3.2million
This extraordinary instrument was introduced to the world during
the opening ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, performed by our
global ambassador Lang Lang, to a global audience of almost a billion people.
Designed by Canadian piano manufacturer Heintzman Pianos, this
exquisitely-crafted instrument retired early after its only performance and was
sold at auction to an anonymous bidder.
The Heintzman Crystal Piano
4
The Reach Out To Asia
Fender Stratocaster - $2.7million
To help raise money for the relief efforts for the 2004
Indian Ocean Tsunami, a signed Fender Strat was auctioned off - and it wasn’t
signed by just anybody! This epic instrument features the signatures of music
legends including Paul McCartney, Eric Clapton, Bryan Adams, Keith Richards,
Mick Jagger, Brian May, Jimmy Page, David Gilmour, Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend,
Mark Knopfler, Ray Davies, Liam Gallagher, Ronnie Wood, Tony Iommi, Angus and
Malcolm Young, Sting, Ritchie Blackmore and Def Leppard.
Reach Out To Asia Fender Stratocaster
5
Charlie Parker’s
Grafton Alto Saxophone - £93,500 in 1994
The Grafton Saxophone was an acrylic plastic alto
saxophone, designed by Hector Sommaruga in the late 1940s. Commercial
production of the sax commenced in 1950 with a selling price of only
£55 - half the cost of a conventional brass saxophone at that time.
The most notable player of the Grafton was Charlie Parker. The
stories say that a sales representative for Grafton asked Parker to use one for
a recorded gig in Toronto in 1953. Parker can be heard playing the Grafton on
the gig’s CD, titled Jazz at Massey Hall, with Bud Powell, Dizzy Gillespie,
Charles Mingus and Max Roach.
Parker’s saxophone was later sold at Christie's auction house in
London in September 1994 for £93,500 (an estimated £168,000 in today’s money).
The buyer was the American Jazz Museum, located in Parker's home town of
Kansas City, Missouri, where the legendary saxophone is still displayed.
Charlie Parker Grafton Alto Saxophone





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