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Yellow cloud sells for $137,500 If a dupe...apologies... ~Shakalaka!~..... ~Mayday!~ | |
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Fake! it never had a whammy bar. That bloke who bought it is a tit. | |
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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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This guitar was on ebay around 2007, I nearly bought it. It had a Floyd Rose tremolo back then. The story was that the neck had broken and during repair also had the Floyd Rose installed. If it is the same guitar it will have the plate on the back saying PRN Music Corp with a serial number.
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If the guitar is real, I wonder who sold it? Mayte? I don't think the estate did it because they have to go through the court first. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I remember the yellow cloud was on display in the prince shop in Camden, I was told I wasn't allowed to take some photos of it by the store assistant, and foolishly, I put my camera away, still annoys me to this day! All u haters need to recognize, if u cant c right through these lies, good gawd! | |
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Isnt that the cloud whom got broken in France and got into repair and got the whammy on it? eye no | |
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~Shakalaka!~..... ~Mayday!~ | |
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i didn't know jim irsay was a big music memorabilia collector. cool! | |
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http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_607482
Just curious how it got from the National Museum of American National History?? [Edited 6/26/16 7:16am] | |
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I thought all his stuff would be on display at Paisley Park in the future. Instruments, clothes etc. | |
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I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Yes i get what your saying but they sell one then another and another , nothing will be left. But your right, will be plenty to see. | |
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I would love to see a museum collective mount a travelling exhibition as amazing as the one done for David Bowie called David Bowie Is. I would travel and stand in line to see that. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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I posted about this being a fake back when the auction was listed. Earlier today, someone else on Housequake's Facebook page posted this this is a 1-800-New-Funk/NPG Store replica (not an NPGMC Schecter replica). But there is still a big issue with it being listed as a guitar that Prince played. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
PRN MUSIC CORP Serial number sticker and everything else makes it look like it's probably one of the 27 Andy Beech made for sale through NPG Stores (and for Prince's stage work?)... If it IS one of these guitars, I'm puzzled as to why any fan/collector who bought it would then route it for a whammy, ruining its value and similarity to Prince's own yellow cloud? I could definitely imagine Prince wanting a trem on one of the 90s built clouds after using the Floyd Rose on some the symbol guitars Beech constructed, then changing his mind and leaving the thing unplayed - at least in public. The strangest thing about this particular guitar is the lack of an input jack in the usual place central to the routed spiral design. That's pretty unusual, as I can't see how it would interfere with operation of the Floyd Rose, and so there's no reason to change it. If this was a standard cloud that got a later whammy, why no jack hole?? In any case, it's a pretty cool guitar - though if I had that sort of money I doubt it would be my first choice, as its provenance seems sketchy at best, and even if it is genuine it's quite far from a representative example of a Prince played cloud... | |
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SENNISS said: This guitar was on ebay around 2007, I nearly bought it. It had a Floyd Rose tremolo back then. The story was that the neck had broken and during repair also had the Floyd Rose installed. If it is the same guitar it will have the plate on the back saying PRN Music Corp with a serial number.
Can you remember what it sold for then, or what the asking price was? | |
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SENNISS said:
Thanks for the info, that's really interesting to know! Those two strange features (Whammy, lack of jack on front) somehow make me feel it's genuine: if someone was building a fake, why get everything EXACTLY right apart from those two details, which are so glaringly obvious? I guess the main thing is, there's no evidence whatsoever the instrument was ever even in the same room as Prince. If it is an Andy Beech cloud, it could have only as much provinance as the other yellow or blue guitars from the NPG Stores, many of which seem to be in the hands of the Hard Rock Cafe chain, displayed as "Prince's cloud guitar" ie: not much at all beyond being super-cool officially sanctioned replicas... Incidentally, does anyone know what the Andy Beech clouds retailed for at the time? | |
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Just found this...
https://reverb.com/item/2129072-prince-cloud-guitar-1990s-yellow
Seems that buyer got a much better deal! | |
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Zeke Clark confirms it's genuine here..
https://reverb.com/uk/news/colts-owner-jim-irsay-buys-prince-cloud-guitar-for-137500-dollars?_aid=listingrelatedarticle
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SENNISS said: Zeke Clark confirms it's genuine here..
https://reverb.com/uk/news/colts-owner-jim-irsay-buys-prince-cloud-guitar-for-137500-dollars?_aid=listingrelatedarticle
Zeke Clarke's provenance testimonies from both these auctions raise a few more questions... From the auction for 16644: "This Yellow Cloud guitar was Prince’s main guitar and used in most of his early videos, touring performances and album recordings from around 1988 to 1994" Hmmm... The guitar has a rectangular back cover over the neck pickup route though, not an oblong one with rounded corners as seen on the '80s clouds built by David Rusan, so it's not one of those. Then we have this info in the provenance letter from other auction (16222 made by Andy Beech in the '90s): "The two originals were made for Prince in 1984." Clearly these "originals" are the Rusan built guitars, though there were actually 4 all together: 3 for Prince, one for a Warner Brothers give-away competition. (Perhaps the 2 refers only to guitars still around and not smashed/lost by 1995.) The letter also says: "The remaining guitars have been produced between November 1993 - January 1994," and contains the colours and serial numbers of "the cloud guitars in existence" - 15 in all by the given date of January 1995, with a note that another 3 are under construction. None of these is listed as serial number 16644. How could the guitar have been in use 88-94 before the neck break and Floyd Rose addition when it's not one of the original Rusan guitars, and its serial number is not listed in the inventory of clouds built in 94-95? Obviously I don't think Zeke Clarke is lying or that the guitar is 'fake' - but the information available and order of dates seems to be contradictory. Unless what he actually means is that this STYLE of guitar was used '88 to '94, though not explicitly this exact example. If so, the way the auction is worded is a little misleading, placing a degree of historical importance on this instrument that it may not really possess: being a '90s guitar that was broken and repaired not long after it was built, then never seen on stage or in pics. Even then, 16644 seems unlikely to have even been built by 1994 when it was supposedly smashed on French TV. Maybe it's just a slight confusion of dates - it was a while ago I suppose! Still, what's up with that weird input jack thing?? | |
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SENNISS said: Just found this...
https://reverb.com/item/2129072-prince-cloud-guitar-1990s-yellow
Seems that buyer got a much better deal! 16222 listed there has the famous much-wider gap between the bridge and the EMG humbucker. From: http://www.angelfire.com/...d_faq.html "During the Diamonds & Pearls era several Yellow Clouds were built to be sold at the Minneapolis & London NPG shops. These were built by Prince’s guitar tech at the time and each one was numbered. The came with a certificate of authenticity. At the same time several Blue Clouds were given out to various Hard Rock Café’s around the world (as were some Yellow ones). London has a blue one on display. These guitars are easy to recognise as the bridge pickup is further away from the bridge than on Prince’s guitars. The yellow clouds have black symbol fret markers and the blue ones have sterling silver symbol fret markers." The letter says Prince used these guitars, but I dunno. I've never seen any pictorial evidence, and I suspect they were just made for collectors etc... Maybe Prince strummed a quick couple of chords on each one though, just in order to validate the provenance and justify the mark up from the $1500-$2500 that Andy Beech was paid for his beautiful craftsmanship! | |
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I'm guessing the jack input was moved to avoid the tremolo arm hitting the jack.
Is anyone any good with photo shop? It'd be interesting to know the distance between the pickups, that would tell is if it was an early or later guitar.
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SENNISS said: I'm guessing the jack input was moved to avoid the tremolo arm hitting the jack.
Is anyone any good with photo shop? It'd be interesting to know the distance between the pickups, that would tell is if it was an early or later guitar.
Tremolo arm nowhere near jack in operation, no problems there that would necessitate the complex plugging/routing process needed to move it. Prince uses right angled jack lead anyway on these guitars. Bridge humbucker on 16644 is in the 'correct' place: you can see by comparing its position to the knobs etc... | |
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I wonder why Andy Beech built some clouds with the correct bridge pickup placement, others different. My only guess is that it was done on purpose to distinguish them, like the small headstock on the Schecters... | |
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