Silenced musical treasures languish in Michigan vault
JANUARY 15, 2012 AT 1:47 PM
Silenced musical treasures languish in Michigan vault
BY JEFF KAROUB ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ann Arbor A massive cache of musical treasures that's grown to include a fragile harp-piano, the pioneering Moog synthesizer and the theremin used for "The Green Hornet" radio show has been shuffled over the years from a theater to an unheated barn and now languish, rarely seen or heard, in a Michigan storage vault.
Spanning centuries and continents, the instruments worth at least $25 million by their chief caretaker's estimate are packed and stacked in an out-of-the-way storage room with water-stained ceilings. It's hardly the environment envisioned for them when Detroit businessman Frederick Stearns gave the University of Michigan the base of the collection a century ago with instructions that the instruments be exhibited not invisible.
"The only way I can characterize it is Tut's Tomb, because it's been so forgotten about for so many years," said Steven Ball, director of the Stearns Collection of Musical Instruments. "The collection has been in a holding pattern for 112 years. This is a national treasure it deserves the dignity of either being properly housed ... or to be dispersed in such a way that it could be."
Such "orphan" collections pose problems for many academic institutions, despite the prestige that comes with owning them. Kris Anderson, director of the University of Washington's Jacob Lawrence Gallery, said he discovered a repository of nearly 1,000 forgotten paintings and other artwork spanning more than a century. He found out about the collection because its main basement storage space was being reused.
more...
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120115/ENT04/201150331/1361/Silenced-musical-treasures-languish-in-Michigan-vault