MMD > Archives > January 2008 > 2008.01.24 > 05Prev  Next


Mechanical Music in Museums
By Larry Mayo

[ Michael Woolf wrote in 080123 MMDigest:

> ... they seem to be saying, "I need to protect these things.  Why,
> if you were allowed to get your hands on this, where would we be?"
> Answer: we'd be able to enjoy the music and the beauty of the
> instrument, instead of allowing it to rot in a museum storage room.

Just a rhetorical question for everyone.  Would you be a party to
stealing a rare and neglected article from a museum if you knew you
would not be caught and it was going into the hands of a collector who
would preserve it?

A friend of mine was going through the storage facility of a small
museum in a tiny town near where he lived.  He found a glass case with
a plaque on the bottom that identified the contents as a Confederate
flag surrendered to a local resident at the end of the American Civil
War.

All that was left of the flag was a pile of dry fragments at the
bottom of the case.

Larry Mayo



(Message sent Thu, 24 Jan 2008 14:08:11 EST , from time zone -0500.)

Key Words in Subject:  Mechanical, Museums, Music

Related by Subject:
2008.01.28.03 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Julian Dyer
2008.01.28.04 - Mechanical Music in Museums & Private Collections
from Peter Craig
2008.01.25.07 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Donald Barton
2008.01.25.05 - Mechanical Music in Museums & Private Collections
from Art Reblitz
2008.01.25.06 - Mechanical Music in Museums & Private Collections
from Dave Bowers
2008.01.25.08 - Children and Mechanical Music in Museums
from Hans-Martin Meyer-Georges
2008.01.24.05 (This article) - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Larry Mayo
2008.01.24.06 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Dan Armstrong
2008.01.23.03 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Michael Woolf
2008.01.23.04 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Sam Harris
2008.01.22.04 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Dan Harrett
2008.01.21.01 - Mechanical Music in Museums
from Eliyahu Shahar