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My Beginning in Mechanical Music
By Rich Sitler

Might get some interesting thoughts on this one...  My father was
maintenance manager at Hersheypark, so I sort of grew up there.
Along about 1975 this guy, a dentist, started running the carrousel
on weekends.  "This guy" was Dr. Bill Black.  He (and Mike Kitner)
proceeded to show me everything there was to know about our organ,
a Wurlitzer 153.  Bill taught me tuning and a little bit of what makes
them work.

About the same time, my mom started buying phono albums from Paul &
Laura Eakins and struck up a correspondence with Laura.  So you might
say there was quite a pile of mechanical music dumped on me at one
time.  Then a few years later, we purchased a beat-up old player
piano which I had playing later that day.  We were also friends with
the Knoebels and once again, through the friendship with Dave Wynn,
I learned a little more about mechanical music.

This love has never left me, and in 2000 I was able to return to
the park as a maintenance electrical tech.  I once again have the
opportunity to work on the 153, and along with Bill's help, keep it
running and (hopefully) tuned.  It's a challenge sometimes, since the
old girl plays 12+ hours a day from June to September, and, actually
weekends to January 1st... outdoors!

I'd love to hear others' stories on this.  Thanks for bringing it up!

Rich Sitler



(Message sent Sat, 05 Dec 2009 08:53:53 -0500 , from time zone -0500.)

Key Words in Subject:  Beginning, Mechanical, Music, My