Categories
Bluegrass Banjo

Uncle Dave Macon’s Banjo For Sale

Happy Easter, everyone! Since I started my new job last month, I have lost five pounds from the continual walking. However, I am sure that I will gain it back this week by OD-ing on Peeps, jelly beans and Cadbury Eggs.

Anyway, one of my YouTube subscriptions is with Elderly Instruments in Lansing, Michigan. Every few days they send me a short video highlighting one of the instruments they have for sale. Usually it is a guitar, either acoustic or electric, or an occasional mandolin. Last week, they sent a video entitled “We’ve got a piece of Grand Ole Opry history.”

It turns out that Elderly has for sale a Gibson open-back banjo custom made for Uncle Dave Macon. Unless you are completely unaware, Uncle Dave was one of the original stars of the Grand Ole Opry. He was a complete entertainer, telling jokes and stories along with humorous folk and early country songs. His flailing/clawhammer style of banjo playing was pre-Scruggs, and he used the banjo more like a prop than a skilled instrument. As country music matured, his style of entertainment faded from the stage. However, stalwart bluegrass and old-time music fans still hold Uncle Dave in high regard, and there is an annual music festival in Tennessee called Uncle Dave Macon Days.

After Uncle Dave’s passing, the banjo was sold to another Opry star known for his flailing banjo style – Grandpa Jones. While Grandpa was better known for working with a resonator banjo, it is wonderful to imagine that two of the greatest Opry stars owned and play this particular instrument. Of course, I had to go to Elderly’s website to see the price tag. Wow! $50,000! It is being sold in as-is fair condition, with one rim hook missing and a hole in the rim that Elderly assumes was meant for mounting an armrest.

Is that a way-too-high price? Perhaps, but considering that the Fender Stratocaster that David Gilmour of Pink Floyd used on “Comfortably Numb” sold at a recent auction for $14.5 million, celebrity-owned musical instruments can command high prices. However, modern music memorabilia collectors are not as interested in Opry legends such as Uncle Dave Macon or Grandpa Jones.

I am sure that Elderly is totally open to negotiate the price, and are keeping the banjo in its current condition figuring that the potential buyer is looking at it as a museum piece rather than a player instrument. I hope that it finds a good home, particularly a museum that will display it for the historical value it has. In the meantime, here are some Uncle Dave Macon and Grandpa Jones clips.

Chew on it and comment.

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