Iconic Long Island’s Kolstein’s Music appears to close doors for good, clears out dozens of pricey bass violins
A Long Island violin shop that’s been open since the 1940s appears to have closed its doors for good — but the bitter business dispute between the founder’s family and current owner still has no coda in sight.
About three dozen bass violins, including a $250,000 Panormo bass violin, in the storeroom of Kolstein’s Music in Baldwin were loaded onto a truck last week by owner Manny Alvarez, according to court papers.
Alvarez, who has been accused of failing to pay out proceeds from consignment sales to instrument owners, has been locked in a legal battle over the business with Barrie Kolstein, whose father Samuel launched the store in 1943, according to court papers.
Kolstein ran the business himself for decades before handing the reins to Alvarez in 2019 — but alleges in his lawsuit that the instruments Alvarez took belonged to him.
“I worked my whole life in this shop. My father put his whole life into this shop, it’s internationally well-respected and in almost five and a half years the shop is no more,” Kolstein told The Post.
Alvarez worked at the store on an off since he was 15, when he first came in and saw a violin his family couldn’t afford, Kolstein said.
