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SunWuKong
05-19-2004, 12:29 PM
who the hell leaves a $3.5m musical instrument lying around on his porch???

Rare cello escapes CD rack fate

A rare 320-year-old stolen Stradivarius cello had a narrow escape - from being converted into a CD holder.

The $3.5m instrument, made in 1684 and owned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, was found by nurse Melanie Stevens lying by a rubbish bin.

Initially unaware of its value, she had asked her cabinet-maker boyfriend to fix it or turn it into a CD rack.

Orchestra bosses breathed a sigh of relief at the return of the cello, which suffered only slight damage.

The cello was stolen from the porch of the Philharmonic's principal cellist, Peter Stumpf, by a thief on a bicycle, police said.

Three weeks later, Ms Stevens found it - about a mile from Mr Stumpf's home - as she was on her way to visit a patient.

The cello was still inside its silver-coated plastic case.

She said she took it home and asked her boyfriend, Igal Asseraf, to either repair it or turn it into a unique holder for her CD collection.

'Enormous cheer'

"I had the idea to possibly put a hinge on the front... He would install little shelves inside," said the 30-year-old.

"It would be a very elaborate CD case. I know it sounds crazy."

It was only when she saw a news report that Ms Stevens realised what she had and turned it over to the police.

Philharmonic bosses said an "enormous cheer" went up around the orchestra when they were told of the Stradivarius's return.

Mr Stumpf said the return of the cello, nicknamed General Kyd, made him "probably the happiest man in Los Angeles today".

"I'm just incredibly relieved the cello has been found," said the musician who has played the cello since October 2002.

"It's been an enormous weight on me for the last three weeks."

String repair technician Robert Cauer said the cracks were "routine", and the instrument would be restored to full health by October.

Los Angeles assistant police chief Jim McDonnell warned that the "case is by no means solved".

tvbdude
05-19-2004, 10:42 PM
they shouldn't bring the cello out, instead they should put it up in a display case.

applehead
05-19-2004, 10:50 PM
why the hell would you put a 3.5 million dollar cello
on your porch?

amietron
05-20-2004, 01:23 AM
i wonder what it's like to be his neighbor. he must practice a lot. if he's comfortable with leaving his cello on the porch this time, he must have done it tons of other times before. though i'm sure after this incident, he'll never do it again.

i think it'd be nice to have a cellist neighbor who practices outside. imagine how lovely it'd be to listen to a world famous cellist perform live, while say, you're relaxing on your porch, reading a book, or gardening.

what good samaritans.

>:^|
05-20-2004, 08:55 AM
why the hell would you put a 3.5 million dollar cello
on your porch?

There have been multiple stories about people leaving expensive instruments here and there. It makes you wonder if they take them for granted after a while. I would have my instrument soldered to my arm if it were worth 3.5 mil. There was one violinist who left his instrument in a taxi, and another guy who left a cello on the sidewalk in front of the airport.

amietron, I have to disagree about it being nice to have a professional musician neighbor. I had neighbors who were professional musicians and they drove me batty. One of the problems is that they tend to play parts of pieces over and over and over again. And when they practice pieces for an orchestra, that's the worst of all.

As a random off-topic comment, people who play their radios and hang windchimes outside should also be shot.

applehead
05-20-2004, 09:17 AM
There have been multiple stories about people leaving expensive instruments here and there. It makes you wonder if they take them for granted after a while. I would have my instrument soldered to my arm if it were worth 3.5 mil. There was one violinist who left his instrument in a taxi, and another guy who left a cello on the sidewalk in front of the airport.

it's just weird because my aunt is a cellist
who owns a cello that's also a couple of million
dollars worth.
and i've seen and heard about how she treats it.
how about this other violinist who left
it in a BAR?
this happened in nyc.