Music Feature: Saturday 12:15
Dame Evelyn Glennie celebrates the 250th birthday of one of the most unusual of all musical instruments, the Glass Armonica, premiered by Benjamin Franklin in 1762. She tries out the working instrument at the Benjamin Franklin House in London, sees an original example in the Horniman Museum, and discovers the repertoire written for it by Mozart, Hasse and Donizetti. On the way, she encounters madness and mental illness, reveals one of the world's first female virtuosi, Marianne Davies, and meets the man responsible for the present day revival of this remarkable instrument, Thomas Bloch.
This will be worth listening to but I dispute the last sentence. Thomas Bloch was, according to wiki, born in 1962. I bought Bruno Hoffmann’s recital LP in 1970 (or there about). Come to think of it, one of the most disappointing CDs I have ever bought was this:
(or is 1970 no longer the present day...?)
Dame Evelyn Glennie celebrates the 250th birthday of one of the most unusual of all musical instruments, the Glass Armonica, premiered by Benjamin Franklin in 1762. She tries out the working instrument at the Benjamin Franklin House in London, sees an original example in the Horniman Museum, and discovers the repertoire written for it by Mozart, Hasse and Donizetti. On the way, she encounters madness and mental illness, reveals one of the world's first female virtuosi, Marianne Davies, and meets the man responsible for the present day revival of this remarkable instrument, Thomas Bloch.
This will be worth listening to but I dispute the last sentence. Thomas Bloch was, according to wiki, born in 1962. I bought Bruno Hoffmann’s recital LP in 1970 (or there about). Come to think of it, one of the most disappointing CDs I have ever bought was this:
(or is 1970 no longer the present day...?)
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