Canada United States Plans Provinces Blog About

Antique Instruments

Stamp Info

Name Value
Date of Issue January 19, 1981
Year 1981
Quantity 23,500,000
Denomination
17¢
Perforation or Dimension 12.5
Printer Ashton-Potter Limited.
Postal Administration Canada

Buy on ebay

Sorry, our call to ebay returned no results. Click on the button below to search ebay directly.
More Results
PSG earns commission on these links.

Stamp Price Values

Condition Name Avg Value
M-NH-VF
Mint - Never Hinged - Very Fine Only available to paid users
U-VF
Used - Very Fine Only available to paid users
* Notes about these prices:
  • They are not based on catalogue values but on current dealer and auction listings. The reason for this is that catalogues tend to over-value stamps.
  • They are average prices. The actual value of your stamp may be slightly above or below the listed value, depending on the overall condition of your stamp. Use these prices as a guide to determine the approximate value of your stamps.

Stamp Supplies on Amazon

Layouts

Pane of 50 Stamps

Quantity Produced - Unknown
No Images Exist for this Layout.
Add to List

Official First Day Cover

Quantity Produced - Unknown
No Images Exist for this Layout.
Add to List

Official First Day Cover - Plate Block

Quantity Produced - Unknown
No Images Exist for this Layout.
Add to List

About Stamp

From 2 November 1980 to 5 April 1981, the Vancouver Centennial Museum is presenting "The Look of Music", a major exhibition of rare musical instruments dating from l500 to 1900. It is the biggest exhibition of historic musical instruments that has ever taken place. Over 75 percent of the instruments have never before left their home museums. The Vancouver Centennial Museum is displaying more than 300 instruments, including a violin made in Cremona, Italy, by Antonio Stradivari; the world's first clarinet; four saxophones made by Adolphe Sax, the instrument's inventor; and a piano made by Bartolommeo Cristofori who invented the instrument. The exhibition also boasts three shawms, three racketts, a serpent, a heckelphone, two fagottinis, two flageolets, a flugelhorn, two ophicleides, three bastarda and pomposa, a virginal, and many more. Museum visitors can view these treasures, listen to concerts or lectures, or watch Canadian craftsmen building replicas of some of the instruments on display. The history of music and musical instruments stretches thousands - perhaps hundreds of thousands - of years into the past. It has been suggested that chanting was already 500,000 years old when speech began approximately 80,000 years ago. Authorities speculate that primitive people produced rhythmic sounds by stamping the ground or slapping their own bodies. Excavations in Siberia unearthed perhaps the oldest surviving instruments - a primitive bone drum and two small bone flutes played 35,000 years ago. The rattle is also among the most ancient of surviving instruments. Many of these ancient instruments were no doubt associated with dancing. The making of European musical instruments in Canada began as early as the eighteenth century. There is evidence that an organ was built in Canada in 1723. The incentives to build instruments in Canada were strong: The market was growing; imported instruments made of European woods often reacted unfavourably to the Canadian climate; and the high shipping costs did not guarantee that an instrument would survive an ocean voyage. As a result, organ and piano building soon began to flourish in Canada. For example, Joseph Casavant, the first native Canadian organ builder, was born in 1807. His two sons formed a company that still bears his name. The first Canadian piano was built in the second decade of the nineteenth century. By 1900 there was a thriving industry doing a good export business. It is thus fitting that a piano made by Heintzman, the famous Canadian company, will appear at the exhibition. The antique instruments stamp was designed by Clive Webster of Toronto. The typography was prepared by William Tibbles, also of Toronto. The stringed instrument depicted on the stamp is an eighteenth-century mandora, which was a predecessor of the mandolin and is from the collection of The Royal Ontario Museum.

Creators

Based on a photograph by Clive Webster Designed by William H. Tibbles

Original Artwork

Mandora, 18th century Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario

Similar Stamps

Reference

Canada. Post Office Department. [Postage Stamp Press Release], 1981.

Improve Stamp Information

Did you notice an error in this stamp's information?
Do you have any interesting information about this stamp that you would like to share?
Please click here to send us an email with the details.