1925 Emanuelle Egildo High-Grade Italian-made Bowlback Mandolin
It's something, isn't it? I don't often get high-grade bowlback mandolins through the shop, but when I do I always get a little thrill. I'm a fan of mandolin orchestra music and these were made to excel in such use. Something like this -- with clarity, volume, and projection -- does a great job as a lead instrument in a group... though not if that's a bluegrass group, mind you.'
This one is signed, labeled, and dated (1925) on the inside as made by Emanuelle Egildo and boy is it in the "Roman" fashion -- scroll headstock, slotted tuners, fluted flamed maple back with a zillion ribs, hard v-shaped neck, thick ebony fretboard with long extension, thicker bar frets, compensated bone bridge -- the list goes on. It's clearly a pro-level instrument and would have been exhausting to build. It also sounds and handles like a pro-level instrument, too.
It's now playing spot-on and sounds the biz, but when it arrived it was a little out of sorts and needed a glorified setup and some fussing.
Repairs included: fret level dress, tuner lube, much cleaning, cleats and seal job for previously-repaired hairline cracks on the top below the cant (parallel to the string-ends behind the bridge), setup...
Made by: Emanuelle Egildo
Made in: Italy
Serial number: illegible -- 2166? 466?
Top wood: solid spruce
Back & sides wood: solid flamed maple
Bracing type: ladder
Bridge: original compensated bone
Fretboard: ebony
Neck wood: flamed maple
Action height at 12th fret: 1/16" overall (fast)
String gauges: 32w-9 extra lights (GHS A240 set)
Neck shape: medium hard V
Board radius: flat
Neck relief: straight
Fret style: medium bar, squarer profile
Scale length: 13 3/8"
Nut width: 1"
Body length: 12 1/4"
Body width: 8 1/4"
Body depth: 5 1/8"
Weight: 1 lb 2 oz
Condition notes: about 1/5 of the inlay on the top edge is replacement. The scroll's "face" is missing a big pearl block inlay and is just black, instead. There are two (repaired, but obvious) hairline cracks on the "lower bout" to the sides of the string-ends. I added side dots. A couple of the tuner buttons have repaired hairline cracks in them but work just fine. The tuners themselves are a hair stiff/fussy even after a lube -- they're handmade "hollow core" units, though -- and aren't really an issue, but I like to be thorough. The finish is in actually really good shape and cleaned-up nicely. It shows mild wear and tear throughout -- but mostly confined to the top (pick area and pickguard) and where strings rubbed at the headstock.
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