Markito...I just want to tell you that I have looked at FidelsEyeglasses many many times and I have never seen such an elaborate and well done web site in my life. I have learned alot from it, so thank you. By the way, If I had seen these last year I would have bid on them. Sometimes I get too busy to stay on top of things and don't always have the money either. I get most of my drums right after I get my tax return.
The longer shape of the hardware looks alot like a Requena to me although I am in no way an expert. Do you know the history of these bongos? I am glad I could help with the utility bills by the way. Jacqui
Jacqui, glad you enjoy the blog, it's really a labor of love for me.
As to the bongoes... congrats, they are a real example of a style, workmanship and the simplicity of another era.
As far as cost, it's all really relative to what something is worth to the person buying a vintage pair of "Cuban" bongoes or an old vintage car or whatever it may be. If they are "restored", their value increases, they look better, sound better and last
longer. On the other hand, they could even be left as they are and still be appreciated and enjoyed for simply the art of being "hand made" and not something "mass produced".
To me, besides the type of wood they're made from, the country of origin, the use of the Cuban older red and black coloring, the shape/style of hardware... the beauty in them lies in their "asymmetrical" shape/form, meaning they are not "perfectly symmetrical". As opposed to the drums we all drool over ie: Matt's, Jay's etc.
Drums that are practically "perfectly symmetrical" like a perfect piece of fine furniture are what our "Westernized" eye is accustomed to look for.
My late father who was both a Shekere and drum maker taught me that an instrument that is slightly and purposely left "asymmetrical"... actually looks and sounds better.
I don't know their history, so I can't tell you anything.
I do know that the legendary 'Solis' music store in La Habana sold bongoes made by Requena with traditionally red and black banding, both tunable and as tack heads.
I bought a pair on Ebay (as tack heads) 8 years ago that looked exactly like the ones you just bought from Elvis, but they were tack heads, the Macho skin was stamped "Made In Cuba" and the Solis sticker was inside the Hembra.
I sold them on Ebay two years after I bought them.
I do know that Elvis (a very nice guy) had them up for auction about 2 years ago for $199.00, no one bid on them.
I contacted him about a year and a half ago and asked him if he still had them, he offered them to me for $250.00, but this was during the U.S. economic bank collapse period and I decided to hold on to my dinero.
I have a pair of Requenas (in the photo) that I bought on Ebay maybe 6 or 7 years ago, that I had Matt S. refinish and repair,
they are my preferred bongoes to play. They fit me like a glove and for their small size, project just perfectly for me.
I would have had the ones Elvis had up for auction re-finished, re-chromed and spot welded in eight places which would have been an additional monetary investment.
I really have all the instruments I need at this point.
Unless Dario's Son ever sells that pair in the photo by the pool.

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Markito