Musician sues Royal Opera House over ruined hearing
Collapse
X
-
Tags: None
-
-
Here’s The Guardian’s version (much the same, I assume)
Chris Goldscheider is claiming for loss of earnings after sustaining damage from rehearsals as loud as a jet engine
What puzzles me is that this is about one particular incident/rehearsal and not the damage from the prolonged exposure to loud sound. Was this Walküre played differently in some way? All that besides, it must be awful for a musician to lose his hearing.
Moreover, according to Goldscheider’s lawyer, it [the ROH] claims that the social value of the performance means that potential damage to players’ hearing is an acceptable risk.
How common is this policy/attitude in orchestras, if it is true?Last edited by doversoul1; 01-04-16, 19:59.
Comment
-
-
Nevilevelis
Originally posted by doversoul View PostHere’s The Guardian’s version (much the same, I assume)
Chris Goldscheider is claiming for loss of earnings after sustaining damage from rehearsals as loud as a jet engine
What puzzles me is that this is about one particular incident/rehearsal and not the damage from the prolonged exposure to loud sound. Was this Walküre played differently in some way? All that besides, it must be awful for a musician to lose his hearing.
Moreover, according to Goldscheider’s lawyer, it [the ROH] claims that the social value of the performance means that potential damage to players’ hearing is an acceptable risk.
How common is this policy/attitude in orchestras, if it is true?
Comment
-
Nevilevelis
Originally posted by David-G View Post"... said the condition had brought an end to a glittering career. His client had played on stage with Kylie Minogue and live with the Three Tenors in front of 100,000 people in Barcelona."
These are evidently more glittering than playing in the ROH Orchestra.
Comment
-
GrahamH
Originally posted by doversoul View PostHere’s The Guardian’s version (much the same, I assume)
Chris Goldscheider is claiming for loss of earnings after sustaining damage from rehearsals as loud as a jet engine
What puzzles me is that this is about one particular incident/rehearsal and not the damage from the prolonged exposure to loud sound. Was this Walküre played differently in some way? All that besides, it must be awful for a musician to lose his hearing.
Moreover, according to Goldscheider’s lawyer, it [the ROH] claims that the social value of the performance means that potential damage to players’ hearing is an acceptable risk.
How common is this policy/attitude in orchestras, if it is true?
According to Fry, the ROH has employed a barrister to draft a legal defence under section 1 of the 2006 Compensation Act, which allows for some health and safety rules to be relaxed if they might “prevent a desirable activity from being undertaken”.
If true I find it quite shocking that this defence would be used in this way. I have no idea what the Act says but cannot believe it was intended to cover this sort of injury.
Also, are they talking about this particular performance (rehearsal) of this specific piece of music?. If so, who gets to decide whether a specific piece of music or a particular performance of it has any social value? Or possibly where it is played: does a performance at the ROH have more social value than one in a more humble venue?!
A can of worms indeed, and it will be interesting to see how it pans out.
Comment
-
Originally posted by doversoul View Post
What puzzles me is that this is about one particular incident/rehearsal and not the damage from the prolonged exposure to loud sound. Was this Walküre played differently in some way?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mahlerei View PostAhem, look at the date on that story..."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
Comment
-
-
Comment
-
Comment