Author: ohsuzan
Date: 2014-08-09 21:56
Oh, my, my, my, my, my! What Cooper said. Unless someone wants to give it away and you have a fondness for impossible causes.
You would be looking at quite a lot of repair work, to end up with a marginal instrument at best. (Incomplete keywork, open holes, student model, very old.) Even for noodling around, you can do better.
Nothing wrong with Lintons as noodling around oboes. I started on a Linton I got off "the auction site" for something like $275, in playing condition. It was plastic, looked like it had been left for a long time near a heat source (bubbles in the plastic!), but doggone, it played. It really did. Should've kept it!
Susan
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