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Last Updated: 7/05/2001
"Joseph Haydn and the Mechanocal Organ," by Arthur W. J. G. Ord-Hume. Published in 1982 by University College Cardiff Press. First Edition. Hard cover with dust jacket, 185 pages with with 55 Plates (black-and-white photographs, with descriptions) and 36 Line Illustrations (drawings). The book measures 9-7/8 inches (25 cm) high by 7½ inches (19 cm) wide.
Text from the dustjacket is as follows:
"Within the extensive corpus of music which Haydn left posterity was a set of thirty-two pieces of music written for mechanical organs. While some of the original manuscript scores for these little works survive, most have been lost. However, three of the tiny clockwork barrel organs for which the music was written are still in existence and these unique mechanisms not only preserve for us Haydn's lost compositions, but they are priceless time capsules of enormous musicological importance. They tell us positively that Haydn wanted to hear in the way of interpretation and they play today exactly the way they did when they were built under the auspices of Haydn's benefactor and employer, Prince Nicolaus Esterházy. The story does not end there, however, for the mechanical instruments were built by an extraordinarily talented priest, Father Primitivus Niemecz, who was also employed by the Prince as librarian to look after his great library which contained a copy of every book published. Father Niemecz as also a musician and composer and played 'cello in Haydn's orchestra. e-mail me now to reserve this book Return to: Bill Wineburgh's Home Page
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