Isn't that pretty much true of any wooden horn on any phonograph?rgordon939 wrote:Odd that nobody mentions that the Spruce Music Master Horn itself is worth more than the Victor VI itself.
Rich Gordon
As for Music Masters in particular, I'm all for them on Edisons (especially if they have the decals pictured!), but I'm kind of a purist, and I don't like machines that were obviously altered later, even if it was the original owner who did the "upgrade." If it wasn't something you could do at the dealer's, I don't want it. I remember going to Jasper's house after Union more than 20 years ago (!), and he had SIX Victor VI's, all with Victor horns. Some may not have been original to the machine (I didn't dare ask!), but at least they were all Victor horns. So I imagine he, at least, felt the same way about defining originality. I wonder how many others out there do?
Interestingly, it was seeing all of those Victor VI's in one place back then that made me start to think that maybe they weren't the holy grail of phonographs, after all. (I have since found one, and I enjoy it, but not more than I do other machines.) Which also makes me wonder if, as someone else on this thread seemed to imply, does rarity necessarily correspond to value?