Just picked up on the strand. The machine was bought by me from a
London auction house with clear provenance that it had come from Shaw's
home. It was a standard 65-note machine and if I remember right it was
light oak. It was in good order but I never got around to restoring
it. I sold it again at auction quite a few years ago with the letters
and provenance and obviously I have now no idea where it went.
Provenance is a very, very difficult thing to prove. Yes, it came from
where he lived, but was it his or a later owner's? There was no bill
of actual sale to him, just a series of people's letters all attesting
to the fact that he owned and used it!
I have this vague memory that it was sold when his house became owned
by our National Trust. It seems a thing they quite often do, i.e.,
strip contents they don't think quite fits. In Devon in the UK there
is a magnificent 1920/30 house called "Castle Drogo" whose architect
was Sir Edwin Lutyens. The house originally had a Welte Vorsetser and
a Orchestrelle. Both were sold.
Yes, it is interesting to hear about the rich and famous who had these
machines but mechanical music was more than this -- it was the music
for the masses and so far nobody has written a history of the such
instruments taking in the consumers as people. All the books tend to
be technical or histories. In my view they need to be put in context.
I am off to Waldkirch for the Orgelfestival this weekend. I am sure
other MMDers will be attending.
Jonathan Holmes
Penzance, UK
[ Found at
[ http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-castledrogo/
[
[ "Inside modern technology and family keepsakes -- radios and
[ gramophones, toys, dolls' houses, photographs and books --
[ sit alongside 17th-century tapestries and inlaid tables."
[
[ -- Robbie
|