Hi all,
I recently came across this photo with Dutch immigrants to the USA that I like to share with you.
It's one that I like a lot!
Best greetings from Holland ,
Alex
Hi all,
I recently came across this photo with Dutch immigrants to the USA that I like to share with you.
It's one that I like a lot!
Best greetings from Holland ,
Alex
Last edited by Alex Timmerman; Sep-10-2010 at 11:14am.
Terrific photo, lots of pipes, ties. And the picker has the mandolin strapped right (north of the first keys!)
WONDERFUL! A very "old New York" image... LOVE it! :-)
Cheers,
Victor
It is not man that lives but his work. (Ioannis Kapodistrias)
Accordions and mandolins. What could be better?
Thanks, Alex.
Mick
Ever tried, ever failed? No matter. Try again, fail again. Fail better.--Samuel Beckett
______________________
'05 Cuisinart Toaster
'93 Chuck Taylor lowtops
'12 Stetson Open Road
'06 Bialetti expresso maker
'14 Irish Linen Ramon Puig
Here's one
I Pick, Therefore I Grin! ... "Good Music Any OLD-TIME"
1922 Gibson F2
2006 Gibson F5 Goldrush
2015 Martin HD28-V
2017 Gibson J45
A mighty young looking Del McC...... When was this photo taken?
Mick
Ever tried, ever failed? No matter. Try again, fail again. Fail better.--Samuel Beckett
______________________
'05 Cuisinart Toaster
'93 Chuck Taylor lowtops
'12 Stetson Open Road
'06 Bialetti expresso maker
'14 Irish Linen Ramon Puig
I Pick, Therefore I Grin! ... "Good Music Any OLD-TIME"
1922 Gibson F2
2006 Gibson F5 Goldrush
2015 Martin HD28-V
2017 Gibson J45
Very cool photo, Plami. What more do you know about it?
Is it the angle of the photo or does that ceiling look VERY low? (Maybe it is sloping..... I love the way the mandolins appear to float above the man's head like helium balloons at a party.
Mick
Ever tried, ever failed? No matter. Try again, fail again. Fail better.--Samuel Beckett
______________________
'05 Cuisinart Toaster
'93 Chuck Taylor lowtops
'12 Stetson Open Road
'06 Bialetti expresso maker
'14 Irish Linen Ramon Puig
Keep them coming, keep them coming... We co-conspirators of the New York Mandolin Ensemble have decided to use some such image, with that classic, heart-warming yet gritty pose of straight-off-the-boat immigrants, for the publicity of our upcoming performances. After all, as co-director Antonelli correctly points out, with last names like ours, it is only fitting ;-)
So please keep these wonderful images coming. With your permission, we may in fact use one of them for "associative value". Some of the elders in our audiences did in fact pose for such pictures, upon their arrival in America. What better way, then, to do them honor, and bring some fond recollections of a near-mythical past back to life, vivid, vibrant, and ringing with the sound of mandolins?
Cheers,
Victor
It is not man that lives but his work. (Ioannis Kapodistrias)
It's impossible not to love such pictures! It reminds me of my great-grandaunt (or what it is called) that went to Chicago from Norway with not much more than her violin and a toothbrush. She ended up playing in the philharmonic there, after what my grandma told me. More photos!
Exactly Victor!
This particular photo with which I started this thread, was in fact taken immediately after these Dutch immigrants had disembarked and set foot at Ellis Island, the island West of Manhattan that was made especially with the purpose to control the flow of immigrants from all over the World at that time (c.1900). The precise place where the photographer shot this photo was just outside the 'Registry Room', better know as the "The Great Hall". The Dutch were indeed "straight-off-the-boat"!
Best,
Alex.
Rather than post a bunch of my own again, I refer you to this thread: Antique Photo of a Mandolin of the Day.
Jim
My Stream on Soundcloud
19th Century Tunes
Playing lately:
1924 Gibson A4 - 2018 Campanella A-5 - 2007 Brentrup A4C - 1915 Frank Merwin Ashley violin - Huss & Dalton DS - 1923 Gibson A2 black snakehead - '83 Flatiron A5-2 - 1939 Gibson L-00 - 1936 Epiphone Deluxe - 1928 Gibson L-5 - ca. 1890s Fairbanks Senator Banjo - ca. 1923 Vega Style M tenor banjo - ca. 1920 Weymann Style 25 Mandolin-Banjo - National RM-1
Indeed! Believe it or not, I once attended a formal dinner in that very same hall! A former employer of mine, the third-oldest corporation in the City of New York, with a charter going back to the late 17th century, once hired the entire Ellis Island to commemorate its 300 anniversary. So we were "wined and dined" in that most amazing space. What an experience that was! Docking gently at the island's marina around nightfall, in our chartered boat, one could not help imagining...
So it is fitting to celebrate the lovely mandolin as part of the fabric of America, part of what made this country what it is. (In fact, I recall writing a MOST profusely poetic plea to some officer of the Department of Labor, copying also his/her counterpart at the Immigration & Naturalization Service, on behalf of a present-day mandolinist who wished to move to the U.S. I'm not ~quite~ sure they were moved by my fervent oratory...)
Cheers,
Victor
It is not man that lives but his work. (Ioannis Kapodistrias)
Hi Mick,
I'd guess it is the premise right under the roof of a house, that's why it looks like this.
It is a picture from the first workshop that have produced instruments in a manufacture way. They built quality instruments through the years and the factory is still in business, they just don't build mandolins anymore because of the low demand. But i used to play a flatback mandolin built by this factory and it was a decent instrument.
Here you can find out more and see some more interesting pictures like this one:
Last edited by Plamen Ivanov; Sep-13-2010 at 2:49am.
Hi Alison!
Thanks for sharing and you know what(?); there IS a bit of mandolin in the photo: your father is playing a mandolinbanjo! Wonderful .
Cheers,
Alex.
I like to share this photo. It has nothing to do with immigrants in the USA, but with the history of the mandolin in Greece. It is a photo of a mandolinschool at the Ioanian islands. I found it on the website of Ano Kato, a Dutch group that plays Greek music.foto mandolineschooltje.doc
(Hope this works properly)
Deeply heartwarming, especially considering the poverty and hardship of those bygone days. Thank you for posting this!
Cheers,
Victor
It is not man that lives but his work. (Ioannis Kapodistrias)
Hello Margriet and Victor,
I flipped the photo of the Mandolinschool at the Ioanian islands that Margriet found into my computer to post it here. Here it is. Thanks Margriet; a lovely picture!
See you both soon,
Alex
Thanks, Alex. I am not yet so handy and experienced with this. I took it from the website of Ano Kato, but had problems to copy it here, so I copied it in "word". Will be a long way around.... I saw a type mistake I made, which is going on now: it must be Ionian
I hope to place another old Greek photo with a mandolin player, first asking permission to the owner.
Yes, that's what it is, named after the early Ionians, one of the original, Bronze-Age Hellenic tribes.
Sometimes, a thing too obvious, too plain, too humble to mean ANYthing in particular, ends up striking a deeply emotional chord. You know... like a picture of a WWII refugee, holding a can that reads "Sardines"— a near impossibility that it would have ever actually contained sardines at that dreadful time, and most likely to have become a second-hand container for some pitiful, water-boiled broth of, say... roadside weeds.
So the picture that Margriet was kind enough to post reads "Elementary School". Such a thing brings both a smile, and a tear.
Sentimentally yours,
Victor
It is not man that lives but his work. (Ioannis Kapodistrias)
Found those two online for sale on turkish version of ebay
the text on the second one says "graduation day"/"the day of graduation"
I have the exact same book they have, and the same mandolin the girl at the right end has.
Sweet!
That's exactly what we need: more youngsters, playing the mandolin!
Cheers,
Victor
It is not man that lives but his work. (Ioannis Kapodistrias)
Bookmarks