How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
21:28 on Tuesday, August 4, 2009
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Re: How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
00:43 on Wednesday, August 5, 2009
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Re: How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
02:15 on Wednesday, August 5, 2009
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Re: How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
18:00 on Wednesday, August 19, 2009
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Re: How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
01:45 on Tuesday, August 25, 2009
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Re: How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
16:01 on Tuesday, September 29, 2009
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Re: How can musical instrument industry grow vigorously
05:38 on Thursday, October 1, 2009
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VietViolin (25 points)
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My idea is:
Best instruments get the best prices.
Other instruments get buggest prices rather than cutting neck prices
as before.
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When Chinese Mass Violin Makers come into the business, Violin prices
keep going down. Most Violin in the world, including Cremona violins are
inferior quality, that cost several hundreds of dollars a decade ago.
At that time, I entered the US with no penny in my pocket, and I worked
for 5 dollars an hour, and an acceptable violin costed 400 dollars. Now
this violin costs only one or two hundred dollars. At 2 thousand dollars,
I can buy a violin that costs Ten thousands a decade ago. Students can
buy a violin for just half a hundred. They do not need to rent.
You are free to buy a brand, regardless the violin's quality, regardless
the fact that the brand may be merely a piece of paper.
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The time we buy violins by brand is over. Now, it is the era we buy a violin
by playing it, and feeling it vibrating on our shoulder, vibrating through
our jaws to the brain.
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As a string dealer, you may hate the idea that Chinese violin makers can
sell their mass products into the US, killing American talented makers?
Why don't you improve yourself up to the level the Chinese cannot reach?
Why don't you have a trip to China selecting the best violins there, putting
your name on it, and resell at higher prices? I love that idea, and I will
do it if I have enough investment. In doing that I have my pride servicing
the American Violin lovers better than other makers who cannot compet with
the new trend. Unable to do that, I admire whoever doing that in silent.
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