How to sell your violin and keep it

How to sell your violin and keep it

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norman lebrecht

November 09, 2018

We reported yesterday that the violinist Arve Tellefsen had become the top taxpayer in Norway after selling his Guarnerius to a German investor.

But the story gets more interesting by the day.

We know that Arve bought his 1739 Guarneri ‘Del Gesù’ in 1970 for a million krone (NOK) and sold it for 80 times the amount, which is pretty good going.

But the sweetener is he gets to keep the violin, and keep on playing it, so long as he’s alive, after which it heads to Germany.

Good deal.

 

Comments

  • Bruce says:

    Top taxpayer in the entertainment sector. I would guess that even in a “socialist hell hole” like Norway, there are industrialists and maybe even athletes who are worth more.

  • Doug says:

    Nice photo. He looks like a smart cookie. More power to him.

  • aj says:

    Who was it that noted “There’s a sucker born every minute.”
    He must have been laughing all the way to the bank .

  • Bill says:

    He’s NOT the top taxpayer in Norway, he’s #47 this past year (and this is the only year he’ll be anywhere close to the top). The top taxpayer paid about 11 times as much as Tellefsen did.

    Top 100 list can be found at https://www.nrk.no/norge/disse-bidro-mest-til-fellesskapet-i-2017-1.14282499

  • Peter says:

    Rather sensible arrangement, if the buyer is a financial investor, as so many are these days.

  • aj says:

    It’s buying a label , which is so deplorable .
    The story has nothing to do with music even as a
    by product .

  • Lilas Pastia says:

    It is a very sensible arrangement. Tellefsen, who has had a very respectable career as a soloist, teacher and as concert master of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra )1977-1981), is still an active musician and administrator, but is 81 years old. His very valuable instrument will of itself be of little use for his family, so he now realizes the value of the instrument. He is quoted in the Norwegian press as wanting to use the proceeds to fund young Norwegian musicians. The buyer will lend the violin to other musicians after Tellefsen dies,

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