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This was left behind by a relative that used them professionally, playing in jazz quartets and also playing in several very high end clubs throughout the 40s, 50s and 60s. He was primarily a "brush man".

2007-07-25 17:09:51 · 3 answers · asked by revsuzanne 7 in Entertainment & Music Music Jazz

3 answers

RE: Answer # 1

No investment counselor is going to be able to appraise a vintage drumset. In addition, you would not appraise the value of each part unless it is a complete mixture of different drum parts. If, indeed, it is the original Ludwig set AS IT WAS SOLD, then you have a completely different story and one of a much greater value than the sum of its parts.

You may well be sitting on a goldmine as these old sets are hard to find. It is definitely a collector's dream.

I hope the references at the site below will help you. You will definitely want to take photos (and lots of them) to submit to interested buyers.

http://www.drummingweb.com/drumvintage.htm

Kabum

2007-07-28 11:08:21 · answer #1 · answered by kabum 7 · 2 0

New York

2015-02-09 07:15:59 · answer #2 · answered by Logan 1 · 0 0

Generally speaking, to find the value of something, first you have to find the value of every single part. Especially with a drum set, the snare drum could be more valuable than the crash cymbals. I would ask a financial expert.

2007-07-26 10:05:09 · answer #3 · answered by ? 1 · 0 4

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