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Instruments in the Smithsonian

Ebbie 07 Dec 02 - 10:56 PM
catspaw49 07 Dec 02 - 11:10 PM
GUEST,.gargoyle 07 Dec 02 - 11:19 PM
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Subject: Instruments in the Smithsonian
From: Ebbie
Date: 07 Dec 02 - 10:56 PM

The December issue of the Smithsonian magazine has a great foreword by the Institution's Secretary. Almost poetry. Here are some excerpts:

"Quiet can be a blessing, but unnatural silence is something else again. In the storeroom of the National Museum of American History where we keep a portion of the Smithsonian's vast musical instruments collection, the stillness goes against the grain. Though all the objects in the room were made for noise and use, they've been tamed by the discipline of a museum. Trumpets, oboes, flutes and harmonicas lie like specimines in drawers, as bugs and birds do in other great collections of the Institution. Violins, guitars, banjos and fat horns sit in cabinets. Cellos in their cases rest against the wall. Not a sound from the lot, and yet the mind can't help but hear each one.

"Some of the items in the Smithsonian's collection are astonishingly beautiful (stringed instruments by the Italian master Antonio Stradivari), some are barely functional (an impossibly heavy banjo made from a World War II German artillery shell, with bullet casings for tuning pegs) ...

"Of the estimated 1100 instruments Stradivari made, only 11 survivors feature ornamentation, with black lacquer tracings and ivory inlays. Four of those – a quartet of such exquisite physical beauty that they qualify as sculpted art- are in our collection…

"On display, that is, when they're not at work. For the instruments are never shown to greater advantage or kept in better health than when they are played."


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Subject: RE: Instruments in the Smithsonian
From: catspaw49
Date: 07 Dec 02 - 11:10 PM

Much as I also admire and enjoy the beauty, it always seems such a shame for great instruments not to be played. That last line has it right.

The on display stuff is rotated around and last time Karen and I were there I saw the aluminum violin and the glass harpsichord, both of which I would rather were not played!!(:<))

Spaw


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Subject: RE: Instruments in the Smithsonian
From: GUEST,.gargoyle
Date: 07 Dec 02 - 11:19 PM

Thank you Ebbie. It is grand foreward, thanks for sharing.

Cspaw...can't you read? The Smithsonian, in their last line state your redundancy, reduncancy, reduncancy.

Sincerely,
Gargoyle

Haven't heard you blowin' up the possum's hole lately,

Is it broke.....or put on a shelf????????? A momento for future generations?

Thankfully, a couple are still played, and recorded, in the hands of the masters worthy of their history.....no doubt...sometime in the future, this one will be played again.


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