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Mechanical Music in the Movies
By Peter Wellburn

Greetings fellow MMD-ers

Apologies for the lateness in responding to these threads but I have
been on leave. I was intrigued by the references to mechanical music on
the big screen.  The film which has always stuck in my mind was Sleuth
which was mentioned by Pete Woodworth. MM enthusiasts should not miss
it as it is set in a big rambling country house, full of automata. What
has always interested me is where they came from. There were so many
that presumably it was someone's private collection which had been
loaned. My recollection is that at the end a fight develops and the
automata are knocked and set in motion. It always make me shudder to
see such valuable items treated with less than due respect. Apart from
that the film is worth watching with a curious twist at the end.

Somebody asked about videos of mechanical music. By coincidence I have
recently purchased 2 excellent videos from a firm in the UK (Paul
Donoghue, Rallyscene Video Productions, PO Box 171, Rotherham S65 1YP,
England). He specializes in videos of fairground items (steam machinery
and rides) but these were videos devoted to organs only, including
street organ meetings in the Netherlands (Openluchtmuseum Arnhem and at
Haarlem) and a visit to the Fair organ museum in St Albans, England
(this museum includes other mechanical music items - music boxes,
organettes etc. These also appeared in the video). The videos were
excellent quality, about 1 hr long and very reasonably priced at 22.50
for the 2 (inc postage). There is a discount if you order several at
the same time. I don't know whether he has these in NTSC format as well
as PAL.

Speaking of automata reminds me about the York Museum of Automata which
some of you may know has now closed. On retirement my brother decided
he had better look for another job and was put in charge of security at
this museum. Just the sort of job I would have liked! At least I got a
few special tours of the place and bought the video. They are very
informative if you can find copies of these.  The story seems to be
that the collection has been sold possibly to a far east buyer so
presumably we will not see the museum open again. The collection had
originally belonged to Jack Donovan, a well-known mechanical music
dealer in London's Portobello Road.

Finally I had better disclose my very personal details which are 53.2
yrs (and still going strong!), resident in Edinburgh (UK) and my guess
47.7 (maybe it isn't fair to guess now so many of you have already
responded).

Many thanks to Robbie and Jody for all their good work.

Peter Wellburn¶
p.wellburn@nls.uk

(Message sent Thu, 3 Apr 97 13:36:25 BST , from time zone .)

Key Words in Subject:  Mechanical, Movies, Music

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