Reading about Django's 503 and guitars being burned in funeral pyre's makes me wonder how many playable Henri Selmer guitars remain in existence. My definition of "playable" is pretty loose, I'm just using it to distinguish a guitar that is in one piece and can still stand to be strung up from one that is a box full of pieces.
I've wondered about this for some time. My guess is less than a hundred, but I really have no idea.
Anyone want to take a stab at it?
Edit: Well, maybe more than a hundred. Jacques Mazzoleni's website shows 40 distinct Selmers having passed though his gypsyguitar.com store alone. Course that includes some tenor, classical, and Hawaiian guitars. I was thinking the styles Django used, petite and gran bouche models, but no need to be so picky.
CB
Comments
So in that vein, #181 is alive and well
Oh, certainly. I'm not proposing to try to account for them all, just an educated guess. My point there was just that if 40 passed through one shop alone, quite likely there are considerably more out there. Over 800 made originally. There were and still are other shops that specialize in Selmers like Francois Charle in Paris and Djangobooks through which a number have passed. I site gypsyguitars.com because Jacques has a ready list of formerly sold Selmer's.
There are also a fair number of 2nd and 3rd generation players who bought used Selmers before the market went out of reach for most players. Fapy, Stochelo, Christophe Lartilleux, John Jorgenson, for instance, and many others I'm sure, have Selmers. There are a number in the hands of collectors but I have no feel at all for that side of the equation.
But it still seems like a fairly small number. There was a Selmer registry page going for a while, but I can't find it now.
As to #181, who has that? You?
Craig
Beyond that, I have no idea. I have come face-to-face with numbers 103 (Incorrectly logged as a Hawaiian, but really a d-hole Modele Jazz), 233 (tenor), 520 (four-brace oval), 763 and 862. I have also compared notes with the former owner of 863. I'd be tempted to guess a couple hundred are out there somewhere, but we may never know.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXqs7_ltWNQ
Not me, a collector. This is the unknown variable i would imagine on getting an accurate guess.
(If you haven't figured out what I mean, see page 126 of Francois Charle's The Story of Selmer Maccaferri Guitars for the answer.)
So a lot of those guitars should change owners within the next 10 ~ 15 years, and maybe show up on the market.
Of couse, that's also valid for all types of gypsy guitars of the time that might be not as good as a real Selmer.... sometimes old doesn't mean good... but just old.
So there is still a chance to find a Selmer at the flea marker for $20 !
Swang on,
I know for certain (or could have said for certain a few years ago, anyway) that there are a couple collectors in Europe with 20+ guitars. There are also more than a few guitars in the hands of people in the USA who are not part of any "gypsy jazz" community. I think that quite a few of these guitars survived.