fyi guys calm down I don't mind ovations! the point of this vid is to highlight how anything can be valuable depending on it's context. Also, an ovation was one of the first guitars I played that cost over £100. I really loved it. My first lutherie mentor who was a total wanker told me that I should hate it. I should’ve said that I don’t approve of this mentality, I think it’s lame and all guitars are awesome if they inspire something in anyone ❤
I have an Ovation Custom Legend that plays and sounds wonderfully. But after 33 years, it start's to disintegrate a bit. I guess that won't happen to a luthier built guitar made of a 5k year old oak tree from a bog.
Guitars are like any other instrument, they are tools for music making. There is snake oil and snobbery in abundance within the industry. I’ve played wonderful £500 instruments and not so great £20k ones. Ovation made the quintessential stage guitars throughout the 70s and well into the 90s. Very different designs to traditional steel-string instruments but they were very good for their intended purpose. And that’s exactly why musicians of Mark Knopfler’s calibre used them extensively. They were never for me but that doesn’t mean I cannot recognise the contribution Ovation made.
As an aside, I love the auctioneer's style. Smooth, softly-spoken and witty, but when it gets busy she's right on top of it. Very cool. It's also brilliant that they not only plonked some guitars in a fancy room, but celebrated the art of guitars with the stuff you did.
Agreed. Nice to be able to understand what the auctioneer is actually saying and not blurting out an inane and incomprehensible load of utter gibberish!
The young man holding the Les Paul seems increasingly amused and alarmed as the bid price keeps going up. He's telling himself:"I better not drop this thing".
Wouldn't it be cool if he strapped it on, plugged in and started played Brothers In Arms while the bidding was on. Man, that would bring the house down......
More than 50 years ago, I wanted to grow up to be you. I actually tried to build a guitar once didn't get very far. But it was a great experience. I stayed in woodworking, but as a box maker. And I once owned an Ovation. I wish you long life and success.
Another Excellent Video Daisy! You are spot on! Story telling: Past, Present, and looking to the future is very, very important! You are with out a doubt one of the best Young Persons I've heard! Congrats on Your Success! 🙂
Ovations were big here in the States in the 90's. Everyone had one. Glad they went to a good cause and it's so cool to see Ms. Spender there too. Also, it's very cool that you got to share your craftsmanship with other guitarists. Thanks for sharing.
Daisy, there is hope for humankind when people like you are in the world. Your skill and dedication to your craft is exemplary, and it's products will be around for a very long time. Your guitars are beautiful... I just wish I could play a guitar... I am trying...
Hi Daisy ,your wonderful channel and this video has taken me back 37 years to me attending Merton collage on the instrument repair course and memories of one of my first in class repairs on an Ovation 12 string which was gradually falling to bits (neck and top needed removing and re-gluing). Great content thankyou (makes me think about getting back into making and repairing again) Cheers Jason
Fun video. I watched the auction live and was duly astounded! How lovely to see female luthiers.. I lived for many years in Sacromonte, Granada, Spain. I was surrounded by luthiers. All of them men!! So keep it up and good luck...
Great video and Mary Spender being there makes it even better🎸 followed you both for ages now, I watched a lot of the auction live at the time and it was amazing to watch! Keep up the great work 👍
1:17 Hey that’s me! (Well, the top my head, in the second row on the other side of the aisle.) Great video on a memorable event. Thank you for sharing your talent and experience with us here on your wonderful channel! (Btw, once the Ovation went for that much, I quietly put my paddle away and enjoyed the rest of the event as a mere but enthralled spectator.)
@@DaisyTempest As a Knopfler fan and a guitar enthusiast (I am very happy I made the last minute decision to come over from California), I had a wonderful time at the event meeting other enthusiasts (I even chatted to Mary Spender in the queue waiting for our paddles - name drop). Thank you for your video and sharing your insights on your channel!
Very interesting and fun to watch the auction. And congrats to you, Daisy, for the honor of doing a demonstration and giving a talk. My choice of guitar? Your "penguin" guitar -- can't resist the unique combination of the moon spruce and 5000-year-old black oak (plus your expertise in the build). ~ ml
Totally agree that the love of an instrument (or anything/anyone for that matter) is totally subjective. Even after owning, playing, making and being gifted guitars over the years, the one closest to my heart is still my first 20£ guitar that went all round the world with me
I enjoyed your video. I’ve always liked Mark’s songs and guitar playing. Glad you were invited. You have a wonderful way of explaining your profession, you’re one of a kind. Keep up the good work.
Well done Daisy. I'm glad you were able to go to the Auction and see the guitars and show some of your own. Nice exposure for you hope it produces some clients. Stay safe and healthy. It was good that so much was raised for the charities what ever they were.
@@DaisyTempestI do hope that you with all the orders that you have, You will be adjusting your price point to reflect the immense demand for the quality of your product.
That would certainly be a humbling experience. Kudos on getting to speak there. Addressing your question, my most precious guitar is a satin finished Larrivee OM-03R that I’ve owned for 18 years. It was my first all solid wood guitar and it was actually a gift from a pooled collection of fellow musicians. I went on to play it in church for about ten years. Ia sitka top was initially pale but warmed to a nice honey color but it is not so much vintage as it is “distressed.” One of my sons has autism and had a meltdown where it suffered a key crack. To the guitar’s credit the dovetail neck joint held and the guitar didn’t even go out of tune. I did not get angry but was able to reach inside and repair it to the best of my ability. The process inspired me to learn how to build guitars (thanks to a friend who does so much like you do) and have finished two so far, with a third and fourth currently on my workbench. During my breaks I calm myself by playing that Larrivee.
That must of been a honour to be able to go to Chris’s and experience the sale of Mark Knopfler’s guitars, 🎸, which intern raised incredible amount of money for charity, you as a Lithia obviously appreciate how musical instruments are made, you are certainly gifted, and I wish you all the success for the future, you never know one day your guitar will be on stage. I’m selling for amazing price.,
Very interesting and fun to watch the auction. And congrats to you, Daisy, for the honor of doing a demonstration and a talk there. My choice of guitar? Your "penguin" guitar. Can't resist the moon spruce and 5000-year-old oak. ~ ml
Been looking forward to this vid since you mentioned you were exhibiting there. I really wanted the Ovation 12 string, but my £3,500 bid didn't quite make the £95,000 cut.
Congratulations being there to show your guitars and skills. I bought a copy of the catalogue and went up the week prior to see the guitars and went around them 3 times with lots of photos of those that caught my eye. On the day, I watched the auction for the 6 hours or so it took to deal with them all.
Luke at Gardiner Houlgate Auction house. He's the fountain of knowledge and you can find some gems their. Don't think you would get champagne but the tea and cakes nice. Well done Daisy
Great video, thanks for sharing. I fully understand the excitement. I attended the 2 Clapton Crossroads auctions in NY. MK is such an iconic player, but to have your instruments and vision as part of the event…and to include Rosie H., very, well done Daisy.
I was there too and yes, the ovation was funny! A very special day, I hope you got one of the guides/catalogues, I missed out, but they looked incredible!
What a great experience on both the auction and exhibiting front. So amazing to see, thanks for sharing it all with us. Hope you're having a great week.
The noun ovation has origins in the Latin word ovare, meaning "exult, rejoice, triumph.” Ancient Romans used it to describe a ceremony honoring a general entering Rome following a minor triumph.
So happy you got to experience that event and was also able to show case your work. Would LOVE to hear the entire interview with you and Rosie. Any chance you'll be posting it?
I'm reminded of an auction years ago of some of Eric Clapton's collection being sold to support The Crossroads Center. It was thought the auction would raise maybe 500,000 dollars. One guitar, Brownie, sold for that amount with fees and commissions. Brownie was a three-color sunburst Stratocaster with a maple fingerboard. A nice guitar to be sure but it was the guitar he was playing when Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs was recorded.
Back in 1978-ish, my cousin had an Ovation Country Artist. It was the easiest guitar I have ever played. The action was perfect throughout the whole neck. Wish I could find one like that today!
As guitar player and a fan of Mark Knopfler, I still cannot believe these guitars went for that much money. Totally blown away. I thought a few of those guitarist would only go for a few hundred grand if that. I wonder who is buying these???
I've been a Martin owner since 1970 (still have that D28), but when a roommate bought his Ovation I shuddered, however, in time I really enjoyed playing that guitar (other than the lap slip when the rubber piece fell off). 🙂😊
Wow and congratulations on your display of your skills at this prestige auction. It makes you wonder how much other collections would make maybe Pink Floyd, The Who, Segovia etc.
I always thought that Ovations were a nasty fad - until I got one! Love it - a really verstile, easy to play guitar. Recorded everything from jangly chorus-laden acoustic to dirty metal solos on it. Not sure I'd have paid 100 grand for it though. Great video - thanks for dropping unexpectedly into my algorithm.
I heard two things that I really liked. Hugo and the blues. Super cool that you were able to showcase there, and your jokes while presenting were unfortunately missed by the majority of the audience.
It is very refreshing to see someone like yourself who is just as good at their job as they are at networking and marketing themselves. In most cases, people are either one or the other, leading in one case to the rise of snake oil salesmen, and in the other to experts/artisans being left behind in obscurity. You are going to be a force to be reckoned with, Daisy, and in many respects, you already are.
To be fair, it is an Adamas guitar, which was cutting edge with its carbon fibre soundboard and ornate carving on the neck. They were really expensive when they came out in the late '70s, or early '80s
The Pensa Sur that he is playing in the photo on the wall would be worth millions going off what the other guitars are selling for. The Pensa Sur is amazing to play. Being his fave guitar, I would be surprised if it was even in this collection.
Glen Campbell used Ovations. I think I remember Nancy Wilson did too. To me, a Martin guy, it's a guitar you can take camping or off to college cuz if it walks away you aren't losing a Martin HD-28.
Glen Campbell played an Ovation acoustic. He was a great guitar player. They are different type of instrument to a standard acoustic and have to be appreciated as such. Back in the early 80's they were the only game in town for an electrified acoustic. When I was at the LCF there were a couple of students building wooden bowl back guitars and they didn't sound that different to the Ovations
Having bought an Ovation in ignorance of the intricacies of luthery, I tend to agree - fan bracing and steel stings don’t work! I’ve had the bridge properly glued down, but still wary of concert pitch tuning. Fortunately I also have a Gibson 2017 HP series, so the Ovation is way down on the pecking order, but it did me fairly well for 30 years!
This was a cool topic to do a video on. I don't know if you changed the way you shot your talking bit in the beginning or edited it differently but it did not feel smooth to the point I thought my internet was cutting out or my phone was skipping around by itself.
Not the red Stat I think you’re inferring ( the one on Sultans?). But 3 other red Strats he owned were there all each reaching near the £100,000 region.
And that wasn't any old Ovation, it was an Adamas. I have two Ovations and have loved them since I first saw them in the 70's and then fell in love even more when I finally was able to play one. I think people either love them or hate them. Shame on your mentor for putting more hate on Ovations - but that mentor seems to be in the majority which keeps the price of older ones from getting out of control - unless of course, Mark Knopfler, David Gilmour or Nancy Wilson played them. Your attention to detail and passion for your craft is inspiring and you make fun videos as well. Imagine, someday they'll be auctioning off one of your beautiful instruments.
Great stuff, as always, Daisy, and good to see Rosie too. But did you refer to Christie's as "infamous" in the intro?...........err.......... I'd edit and re-upload I were you before they get to hear it! It's hard to put a positive slant on that word.......you surely meant to say "famous"? Seriously, though, it's good to see all that money going to good causes. Nice to see Mary S there too!
fyi guys calm down I don't mind ovations! the point of this vid is to highlight how anything can be valuable depending on it's context.
Also, an ovation was one of the first guitars I played that cost over £100. I really loved it. My first lutherie mentor who was a total wanker told me that I should hate it. I should’ve said that I don’t approve of this mentality, I think it’s lame and all guitars are awesome if they inspire something in anyone ❤
I have an Ovation Custom Legend that plays and sounds wonderfully. But after 33 years, it start's to disintegrate a bit. I guess that won't happen to a luthier built guitar made of a 5k year old oak tree from a bog.
I'm calm... I'm calm... I practicing my breathing exercises... 😉
yeh you have seriously touched a nerve here I'm afraid...
Guitars are like any other instrument, they are tools for music making. There is snake oil and snobbery in abundance within the industry. I’ve played wonderful £500 instruments and not so great £20k ones. Ovation made the quintessential stage guitars throughout the 70s and well into the 90s. Very different designs to traditional steel-string instruments but they were very good for their intended purpose. And that’s exactly why musicians of Mark Knopfler’s calibre used them extensively. They were never for me but that doesn’t mean I cannot recognise the contribution Ovation made.
@@elektrolyte I'll just sidle quietly out of the room while no-one's looking... 😬
As an aside, I love the auctioneer's style. Smooth, softly-spoken and witty, but when it gets busy she's right on top of it. Very cool. It's also brilliant that they not only plonked some guitars in a fancy room, but celebrated the art of guitars with the stuff you did.
Agreed. Nice to be able to understand what the auctioneer is actually saying and not blurting out an inane and incomprehensible load of utter gibberish!
She was just brilliant!
The young man holding the Les Paul seems increasingly amused and alarmed as the bid price keeps going up. He's telling himself:"I better not drop this thing".
If you know how heavy Les Pauls are you know why hes starting to struggle.
@@emerald_archer They are indeed heavy, but I think he is getting more and more nervous as the price goes up 😀
Wouldn't it be cool if he strapped it on, plugged in and started played Brothers In Arms while the bidding was on. Man, that would bring the house down......
Kind of dumb not to have a strap on it or a stage stand.🤪
My thought exacly !
What a great time. I love that auctioneer
More than 50 years ago, I wanted to grow up to be you. I actually tried to build a guitar once didn't get very far. But it was a great experience. I stayed in woodworking, but as a box maker. And I once owned an Ovation. I wish you long life and success.
Try that guitar build again I say! Thanks for the comment ❤️
@@DaisyTempestthis comment will make me try my luck again. I tried building guitar but gave up a year ago after only 4 builds out of frustration.
and a Mary Spender cameo. I'm so glad you two are professional cohorts. That makes my heart soar like a Hawk.
Another Excellent Video Daisy! You are spot on! Story telling: Past, Present, and looking to the future is very, very important! You are with out a doubt one of the best Young Persons I've heard! Congrats on Your Success! 🙂
Ovations were big here in the States in the 90's. Everyone had one. Glad they went to a good cause and it's so cool to see Ms. Spender there too. Also, it's very cool that you got to share your craftsmanship with other guitarists. Thanks for sharing.
They were still pretty "cool" by the 00's too. Remember me and my friends looking at them when we were first learning to play.
They started being cool in the 70s - something totally different. I think it was a resurgence in the 90s
I still have two of them. :)
One of my Ovations gets played nearly every day.
God they sounded awful and fell out of your lap in a millisecond
The invite was a nice compliment for your work.
Daisy, there is hope for humankind when people like you are in the world. Your skill and dedication to your craft is exemplary, and it's products will be around for a very long time. Your guitars are beautiful... I just wish I could play a guitar... I am trying...
Hi Daisy ,your wonderful channel and this video has taken me back 37 years to me attending Merton collage on the instrument repair course and memories of one of my first in class repairs on an Ovation 12 string which was gradually falling to bits (neck and top needed removing and re-gluing).
Great content thankyou (makes me think about getting back into making and repairing again)
Cheers Jason
Very cool! Thanks for sharing with us.
Fun video. I watched the auction live and was duly astounded! How lovely to see female luthiers.. I lived for many years in Sacromonte, Granada, Spain. I was surrounded by luthiers. All of them men!! So keep it up and good luck...
Congratulations Daisy, and thanks for the insight into this event that I know interested so many of us.
Thank you for watching!
Great video and Mary Spender being there makes it even better🎸 followed you both for ages now, I watched a lot of the auction live at the time and it was amazing to watch! Keep up the great work 👍
Good name to take to an auction!
1:17 Hey that’s me! (Well, the top my head, in the second row on the other side of the aisle.) Great video on a memorable event. Thank you for sharing your talent and experience with us here on your wonderful channel! (Btw, once the Ovation went for that much, I quietly put my paddle away and enjoyed the rest of the event as a mere but enthralled spectator.)
Hahaha! Amazing - glad you enjoyed spectating nonetheless. :)
@@DaisyTempest As a Knopfler fan and a guitar enthusiast (I am very happy I made the last minute decision to come over from California), I had a wonderful time at the event meeting other enthusiasts (I even chatted to Mary Spender in the queue waiting for our paddles - name drop). Thank you for your video and sharing your insights on your channel!
Very interesting and fun to watch the auction. And congrats to you, Daisy, for the honor of doing a demonstration and giving a talk. My choice of guitar? Your "penguin" guitar -- can't resist the unique combination of the moon spruce and 5000-year-old black oak (plus your expertise in the build). ~ ml
You’re so kind! Thank you for the comment. ❤️
Congrats and well deserved Daisy! What people are willing to pay for ordinary items that were once owned by a celebrity always amazes me.
Totally agree that the love of an instrument (or anything/anyone for that matter) is totally subjective. Even after owning, playing, making and being gifted guitars over the years, the one closest to my heart is still my first 20£ guitar that went all round the world with me
Love this :)
That must have been so exciting! And you found Mary Spender!
I did! Thanks Michael
I enjoyed your video. I’ve always liked Mark’s songs and guitar playing. Glad you were invited. You have a wonderful way of explaining your profession, you’re one of a kind. Keep up the good work.
Well done Daisy. I'm glad you were able to go to the Auction and see the guitars and show some of your own. Nice exposure for you hope it produces some clients. Stay safe and healthy. It was good that so much was raised for the charities what ever they were.
Thank you so much for the comment!
Wow, exciting event and amazing to be able to show your excellent work!
This has to be a huge boost to your business. Nicely done.
Order books are still shut but hopefully it’s nice for my existing clients to know I’ve had work in Christie’s for sure ❤️
@@DaisyTempestI do hope that you with all the orders that you have, You will be adjusting your price point to reflect the immense demand for the quality of your product.
Thanks for sharing this extraordinary video of the auction with us. Congrats to you and Rosie for your informative lecture. Well done!
what a cool honor to show your work at such a prestigious event!
That would certainly be a humbling experience. Kudos on getting to speak there.
Addressing your question, my most precious guitar is a satin finished Larrivee OM-03R that I’ve owned for 18 years. It was my first all solid wood guitar and it was actually a gift from a pooled collection of fellow musicians. I went on to play it in church for about ten years. Ia sitka top was initially pale but warmed to a nice honey color but it is not so much vintage as it is “distressed.” One of my sons has autism and had a meltdown where it suffered a key crack. To the guitar’s credit the dovetail neck joint held and the guitar didn’t even go out of tune. I did not get angry but was able to reach inside and repair it to the best of my ability. The process inspired me to learn how to build guitars (thanks to a friend who does so much like you do) and have finished two so far, with a third and fourth currently on my workbench. During my breaks I calm myself by playing that Larrivee.
Good on you Daisy Tempest Luthier Extrodinare!😉🤙
That must of been a honour to be able to go to Chris’s and experience the sale of Mark Knopfler’s guitars, 🎸, which intern raised incredible amount of money for charity, you as a Lithia obviously appreciate how musical instruments are made, you are certainly gifted, and I wish you all the success for the future, you never know one day your guitar will be on stage. I’m selling for amazing price.,
Thank you so much ❤️
Very interesting and fun to watch the auction. And congrats to you, Daisy, for the honor of doing a demonstration and a talk there. My choice of guitar? Your "penguin" guitar. Can't resist the moon spruce and 5000-year-old oak. ~ ml
It's so great to see that you had an opportunity to display and discuss your expertise at this event! So well deserved!
Been looking forward to this vid since you mentioned you were exhibiting there. I really wanted the Ovation 12 string, but my £3,500 bid didn't quite make the £95,000 cut.
Congratulations being there to show your guitars and skills. I bought a copy of the catalogue and went up the week prior to see the guitars and went around them 3 times with lots of photos of those that caught my eye. On the day, I watched the auction for the 6 hours or so it took to deal with them all.
It was quite something! Thanks for the kind words :)
Well done Daisy. Your talent is wonderful and being able to follow your work is most enlightening. Thank you for your superb videos.
Thank you so much for this lovely comment ❤️
This is so huge Daisy. So happy for you, getting the credit you deserve. Congratulations!
Wow this is so kind. Thank you.
Luke at Gardiner Houlgate Auction house.
He's the fountain of knowledge and you can find some gems their.
Don't think you would get champagne but the tea and cakes nice.
Well done Daisy
Great video, thanks for sharing. I fully understand the excitement. I attended the 2 Clapton Crossroads auctions in NY. MK is such an iconic player, but to have your instruments and vision as part of the event…and to include Rosie H., very, well done Daisy.
Thank you so much for the kind words ❤️
I was there too and yes, the ovation was funny! A very special day, I hope you got one of the guides/catalogues, I missed out, but they looked incredible!
Congrats for being invited and thanks for sharing the experience
Thank you for watching! ❤️
good for you! very proud of your achievements you deserve all the recognition
Thank you so much! So kind.
Brilliant! Great event to be a part of. Nice to see Mary there also. Girls with guitars, what could be better?
What a great experience on both the auction and exhibiting front. So amazing to see, thanks for sharing it all with us. Hope you're having a great week.
Hope you’re having a great week too! Thank you so much!
This must be a milestone in your luthierie journey. Hoping many more to come.
Thank you so much
Great video! Thanks for sharing! I really like the stories you tell about the guitar builds and where the materials are sourced from.
The noun ovation has origins in the Latin word ovare, meaning "exult, rejoice, triumph.” Ancient Romans used it to describe a ceremony honoring a general entering Rome following a minor triumph.
Great opertunity for you .glad you had the chance to display and talk about your work !!!
What a wonderful thing to be able to do. Im sure Mark doesn't need the money but 11,000,000 will benefit many people. 😊
I am so glad to see you're a friend of Mary Spender! Excellent taste in people, both of you.
Super cool!
Congratulations on being able to show your creativity to even more people!
Thanks so much for watching!
Thank you for sharing that unforgettable experience with us!
So happy you got to experience that event and was also able to show case your work. Would LOVE to hear the entire interview with you and Rosie. Any chance you'll be posting it?
I’m not sure but I’ll look into it!!! Thanks for the comment ❤️
Nice work Daisy! A nice feather in your cap! Love and success moving forward girl!
Thanks so much ❤️
Thanks for the video Daisy - Cheers from Canada
Thanks for watching!
Mark pulled some fine sounds out of that 'burst! Another very entertaining video, thanks Daisy !!! 🙂
Wonderful video! Thank you!
Some amazing people are happy within themselves to assist the charity far greater than cost of the famous owner.
Daisy, YOU ROCK! Thank you!
You rock!!!
DT, diggin those high tops. Rocking brilliant !!!
Un gran gesto de una leyenda como Mark. Felicidades Daisy!! Tu carrera va en ascenso!! Ole por ti!!
What a wonderful experience. Looks like a lot of fun!!!
It was! Thank you!
That was great. Much appreciated. 😊
Pretty interesting indeed! Thanks, Daisy! 😊
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
And you with yours!!!
I'm reminded of an auction years ago of some of Eric Clapton's collection being sold to support The Crossroads Center. It was thought the auction would raise maybe 500,000 dollars.
One guitar, Brownie, sold for that amount with fees and commissions. Brownie was a three-color sunburst Stratocaster with a maple fingerboard. A nice guitar to be sure but it was the guitar he was playing when Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs was recorded.
Back in 1978-ish, my cousin had an Ovation Country Artist. It was the easiest guitar I have ever played. The action was perfect throughout the whole neck. Wish I could find one like that today!
As guitar player and a fan of Mark Knopfler, I still cannot believe these guitars went for that much money. Totally blown away. I thought a few of those guitarist would only go for a few hundred grand if that. I wonder who is buying these???
Congratulations on being able to do something that cool.
Congrats Daisy!
Thank you so much ❤️
Wow! What an amazing experience.
I've been a Martin owner since 1970 (still have that D28), but when a roommate bought his Ovation I shuddered, however, in time I really enjoyed playing that guitar (other than the lap slip when the rubber piece fell off). 🙂😊
Wow and congratulations on your display of your skills at this prestige auction. It makes you wonder how much other collections would make maybe Pink Floyd, The Who, Segovia etc.
Great to see Mary pop up in your video. I would be curious to see what you two could come up with together.
I always thought that Ovations were a nasty fad - until I got one! Love it - a really verstile, easy to play guitar. Recorded everything from jangly chorus-laden acoustic to dirty metal solos on it. Not sure I'd have paid 100 grand for it though. Great video - thanks for dropping unexpectedly into my algorithm.
I heard two things that I really liked. Hugo and the blues. Super cool that you were able to showcase there, and your jokes while presenting were unfortunately missed by the majority of the audience.
8:02
Fascinating story about the back and sides.
Very interesting.
Good things happening to a Good Person!! Congrats!
That’s so kind. Thank you for the comment!
It is very refreshing to see someone like yourself who is just as good at their job as they are at networking and marketing themselves. In most cases, people are either one or the other, leading in one case to the rise of snake oil salesmen, and in the other to experts/artisans being left behind in obscurity. You are going to be a force to be reckoned with, Daisy, and in many respects, you already are.
I really really appreciated this comment. Thank you so much for that.
To be fair, it is an Adamas guitar, which was cutting edge with its carbon fibre soundboard and ornate carving on the neck. They were really expensive when they came out in the late '70s, or early '80s
What an amazing experience!!
It really was!
Inspiring, guitars are more than meets the eye for sure.
The Pensa Sur that he is playing in the photo on the wall would be worth millions going off what the other guitars are selling for. The Pensa Sur is amazing to play. Being his fave guitar, I would be surprised if it was even in this collection.
Glen Campbell used Ovations. I think I remember Nancy Wilson did too. To me, a Martin guy, it's a guitar you can take camping or off to college cuz if it walks away you aren't losing a Martin HD-28.
The auctioneer was clearly having a great time 😂
Omg she was so cool honestly
Glen Campbell played an Ovation acoustic. He was a great guitar player. They are different type of instrument to a standard acoustic and have to be appreciated as such. Back in the early 80's they were the only game in town for an electrified acoustic. When I was at the LCF there were a couple of students building wooden bowl back guitars and they didn't sound that different to the Ovations
You’re amazing! Have you ever heard of James Olsen? He built James Taylor guitar.
The lady auctioning these guitars is absolutly stellar at her job!
Fantastic and i have to say very funny auctioneer i saw the auction a while back
someone clever said
"You name it, you give it life; you describe it, you give it spirit."
Love this!
Super video. Definitely the GLPS 59.
Well done Daisy. You should be proud.
Thank you so much
There was tons of incredible stuff on that auction, but i would pick out two: blonde single pu ES175 from 1958 and that rosewood celebrity J200.
Your old friend is a stunner.
Having bought an Ovation in ignorance of the intricacies of luthery, I tend to agree - fan bracing and steel stings don’t work! I’ve had the bridge properly glued down, but still wary of concert pitch tuning. Fortunately I also have a Gibson 2017 HP series, so the Ovation is way down on the pecking order, but it did me fairly well for 30 years!
This was a cool topic to do a video on. I don't know if you changed the way you shot your talking bit in the beginning or edited it differently but it did not feel smooth to the point I thought my internet was cutting out or my phone was skipping around by itself.
I cut out a bit when I called Christie’s infamous instead of famous 😂 I’m a silly sausage!
Thank you for this excellent vid.
Did Knopfler's famous red Strat go to auction and if so, how much did it go for?
Not the red Stat I think you’re inferring ( the one on Sultans?). But 3 other red Strats he owned were there all each reaching near the £100,000 region.
Great video.
Great job!
Thank you !
And that wasn't any old Ovation, it was an Adamas. I have two Ovations and have loved them since I first saw them in the 70's and then fell in love even more when I finally was able to play one. I think people either love them or hate them. Shame on your mentor for putting more hate on Ovations - but that mentor seems to be in the majority which keeps the price of older ones from getting out of control - unless of course, Mark Knopfler, David Gilmour or Nancy Wilson played them. Your attention to detail and passion for your craft is inspiring and you make fun videos as well. Imagine, someday they'll be auctioning off one of your beautiful instruments.
Great stuff, as always, Daisy, and good to see Rosie too. But did you refer to Christie's as "infamous" in the intro?...........err.......... I'd edit and re-upload I were you before they get to hear it! It's hard to put a positive slant on that word.......you surely meant to say "famous"? Seriously, though, it's good to see all that money going to good causes. Nice to see Mary S there too!
HAHA I did of course mean famous, it wouldn’t be a video on my channel without a mistake
Thought the same thing.
I thought they were interchangeable. I just learnt something new today.
@@khalid969 Infamous means famous for bad reasons, famous just means a lot of people know who you are.
That confused me 🤔
You should do an ornamental Les Paul. A high end electric guitar.
Congratulations Daisy! That's so awesome.
Thank you so much!