We are an eBay affiliate and may be compensated for clicks on links that result in purchases.

Everyone is after a piece of Cobain, here are a number of items that have sold on ebay recently all have been Kurt's own personal belongings.

The cassette sold for over 3k us and the vhs tapes around 2k guitar pick 1000.

The vhs tapes are suppose to be in Kurt's handwriting although the date is around the wrong way for an American. The cassette is suppose to have recordings of Cobain on it. The guitar pick is meant to be used at Mtv 93 concert.

How on earth are you suppose to authenticate these items?

Views: 5206

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Its a shame no authenticator has taken up the baton and ran with nirvana because so many people are buying forged items. 1000 k for a good fake nirvana autograph these days. I really hate seeing so many people being conned. If they can authenticate beatles why not nirvana?

Why? Because the Beatles had fairly sophisticated full length signatures with plenty of complexities and nuance to "authenticate."

How do you realistically and reliably authenticate child-like block writing?
Have to rely on the history of the piece. Some members had nirvana sign in person and you know their authentic graphs so I don't know why they can't get a coa. Well I do know why. I wish someone could weed out the wheat from the chaff a little. Also Dave signing for Chad on early albums puts a spanner in the works.
There's a lot of 90s band who sign in block Dinosaur jr, Sonic youth etc J MASCIS signs with a J sometimes.

Yep, exactly. Its two things.

 The plain writing with no complexities, and the fact that he signed differently all the time.

There are just certain people that are just very hard to authenticate, Cobain is one of them. Heath Ledger comes to mind too.

Plus there just aren't that many Nirvana autographs I imagine. The demand is huge, Kurt died young, likely didn't sign all that much. While the demand for Beatles is high, the supply is actually quite high as well. They signed till their hands nearly fell off in 1963.

Your bang on James. My concern is authentic nirvana Sig over the years with guys who had them signed, the story will become thinner and thinner as they pass on their albums to their kids. Kinda gets left by the wayside.
yup. The provenance stories die quickly. So you buy one from a guy you know who is totally reliable and you know he got them in person. Great. Now what about when you want to sell them?

The buyer has to place 100% faith in your second hand story and trust you are not a scam artist.

"Investing" in Nirvana sigs seems like a very risky proposition.

Just an update on the guitar pick above. Had a look at the Ebay listing and it was just a pick found on the floor after a gig. Could have been played by Pat Smear or Krist, or dropped by a tech, or by a warmup band if there was one. Even less convinced :P

There was one guy on Picknet years ago who met Kurt backstage and asked him for a pick. He was only a kid at the time so when Kurt gave him the one in his pocket and he saw it was just a generic pick he was a little disappointed. Seeing this, Kurt took the pick and signed it for him. Don't think that pick is for sale though ;)

The Dunlop pick sold and now it's back on ebay could be from buyer not paying or an endless supply of picks.

Its still a lie. That guitar pick was faked to looked used, I assume it was faked by a person who never played guitar as the use is completely unreal. I have a guitar pick here i have used heavy for 7 years and it looks less worn than that one.  

Authenticity check on this signed promo with letter? Some bloke of American antique roadshow used to own it. But he didn't have it signed.

Piece of Junk. I don't even know much about Nirvana sigs to be honest, but isn't that a modern Grohl signature? He didn't sign like that back then, did he? The Krist just doesn't even look right at all and Kurt's......LOL. Looks like it was signed by someone named KUJ

RSS

© 2024   Created by Steve Cyrkin, Admin.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Service