PDA

View Full Version : Don Messer Fiddle Sells for $ 11,750


Jesse Joe
07-24-2006, 07:37 AM
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~downhome/donmesser1.JPG


Messer fiddle sells for $11,750


St. Stephen man has high bid on instrument bought for $105 by N.B.-born fiddling legend


HALIFAX (CP) - A 77-year-old fiddle that was played by Don Messer years before he became a Canadian television icon was sold for $11,750 on Sunday at an auction in Nova Scotia.

The winning bid at the auction in Coldbrook came over the phone from a man in St. Stephen, who didn't want to be identified.

The bidder was one of a half-dozen people vying for the fiddle, which Messer bought for $105 in 1930, a year after the instrument was built.

"It felt great, it was wonderful," auctioneer Blain Henshaw, who also sold another of Messer's fiddles two years ago, said by phone from Coldbrook.

"When I was a kid, I grew up on Don Messer's music, I respected his music. And twice now, I've had the privilege - and it is a privilege - to sell fiddles that were owned by Don Messer."

Messer played the auctioned-off fiddle in the 1930s on a radio show in Saint John. Two decades later, he started hosting the hugely popular CBC-TV program Don Messer's Jubilee, which ran from 1958 to 1969 and introduced Canadians to his trademark style that he called "way-down East."

The fiddle that was auctioned Sunday was handed over to the Nova Scotia Archives after Messer died of a heart attack in 1973.

It attracted bids from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Edmonton, and brought in far more than the $7,000 organizers initially predicted.

The starting bid for the fiddle was $2,000, and about five minutes later - a long time as far as auctions go - all but two bidders had bowed out. A young Nova Scotia man, who was in Coldbrook for the auction but also didn't want to be identified, put in his final bid of $11,500. The fiddle's new owner won after offering $250 more.

Messer's daughter, Dawn Messer Attis, decided to sell the fiddle after another sold for $8,000 two years ago. Some of Messer's 14 fiddles have been given to friends, while Attis has kept one of his favourites.

[ July 24, 2006, 07:45: Message edited by: Jesse -Joe ]

Cathy
07-24-2006, 08:16 AM
Boy, what I'd give to own that! Not $11,750, though!

Jesse Joe
07-24-2006, 08:28 AM
Hello Cathy, yes Im pretty sure, you being a fiddle player. Were you familiar with The Don Messer Show.

I had a post about maybe a month and a half ago, you were not on then, it was about Don Messer's pianist who had died.

Your the only one who get's back at these stories, I guess it's because you are from Maine your almost a maritimer.

The others dont know who the hell Im talking about, so it's Ok.

Cathy
07-24-2006, 09:17 AM
I have two fiddles... one handmade by an old fiddle maker in New Brunswick, and the other a Palantino copy of a stratavarius, which I paid $109 for at a pawn shop. I took the cheap one and placed it next to the subwoofer in my car, and blasted heavy metal rock music, and turned it into a great sounding instrument. Everyone comments how great it sounds for a cheap violin. There's something about loud, thumping music that actually does something to the wood molecules to make it vibrate more freely.

Cathy
07-24-2006, 09:39 AM
I used to watch Don Messer's Jubilee every Saturday night with my parents, on CHSJ channel 6 our of St. John. That was one of the advantages of living so close to New Brunswick. Even though we probably originated from the same people, we had two distinctly different cultures, and I was exposed to both from a very young age. I always say I feel I'm as much a Canadian as an American.