During my research, I discovered another old magazine article on street
organ grinders. It was so entertaining, I just had to share it. An
excerpt follows:
"The Street-Organ as a Musical Educator" by Henry C. Lahee.
Published in "The Etude" Vol. 17, No. 2, February 1899, page 51.
"Although the street-organ is the object of much scorn on the part
of the educated musician, it is none the less a weapon of great
power, and might be turned to good advantage in cultivating the
taste of the great majority of people. ...
The reason why this is an appropriate time for such contemplation
is that an edict went forth in Boston that all operators of street-
organs should appear with their instruments before the Music
Commission and the Board of Police on December 1st and show that
their instruments were in tune. Those that were satisfactory
should have their licenses renewed. Those that were out of tune
were to be deprived of their licenses if the instruments were not
put into satisfactory condition within a certain time.
It was stated that there were 330 licensed grinders of mechanical
music instruments in the city of Boston; barrel-organs, piano
organs, hurdy-gurdies, orguinettes, and the squeezers of
concertinas and accordions were included. On the day of trial 146
instruments were presented for the test, and this means that 184
organs--no doubt all out of tune--sought refuge elsewhere. Most of
them went to New York, where, we may suppose, people have no rooted
objection to organs out of tune. ..."
Moral of the story: Keep those street organs in tune! Otherwise,
you may be forced to flee from the long arm of the law!
Joyce Brite
brite@ksu.edu http://www-personal.ksu.edu/~brite/
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