Could this be why Charles Mingus hit Jimmy Knepper??
-- 
 Geff King * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://www2.ari.net/gking/
"Don't let me catch you laughin' when the jukebox cries" 
                          - K. Friedman, "Sold American"

 August, 1998, Montevideo, Uruguay  Paolo Esperanza, bass-trombonist with
the Simphonica Mayor de Uruguay, in a misplaced moment of inspiration
decided to make his own contribution to the cannon shots fired as part of
the orchestra's performance of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture at an outdoor
children's concert.

In complete seriousness he placed a large, ignited firecracker, which was
equivalent in strength to a quarter stick of dynamite, into his aluminum
straight mute and then stuck the mute into the bell of his quite new Yamaha
in-line double-valve bass trombone. Later, from his hospital bed he
explained to a reporter through bandages on his mouth, "I thought that the
bell of my trombone would shield me from the explosion and instead, would
focus the energy of the blast outward and away from me, propelling the mute
high above the orchestra, like a rocket."

However, Paolo was not up on his propulsion physics nor qualified to use
high-powered artillery and in his haste to get the horn up before the
firecracker went off, he failed to raise the bell of the horn high enough so
as to give the mute enough arc to clear the orchestra.

What actually happened should serve as a lesson to us all during those
delirious moments of divine inspiration.  First, because he failed to
sufficiently elevate the bell of his horn, the blast propelled the mute
between rows of players in the woodwind and viola sections of the orchestra,
missing the players and straight into the stomach of the conductor, driving
him off the podium and directly into the front row of the audience.

Fortunately, the audience were sitting in folding chairs and thus they were
protected from serious injury,  for the chairs collapsed under them passing
the energy of the impact of the flying conductor backwards into row of
people sitting behind them, who in turn were driven back into the people in
the row behind and so on, like a row of dominos. The sound of collapsing
wooden chairs and grunts of people falling on their
Behinds increased logarithmically, adding to the overall sound of brass
cannons and brass playing as constitutes the closing measures of the
Overture.

Meanwhile, all of this unplanned choreography not withstanding, back on
stage Paolo's Waterloo was still unfolding.  According to Paolo, "Just as I
heard the sound of the blast, time seemed to stand still.  Everything moved
in slow motion.  Just before I felt searing pain to my mouth, I could swear
I heard a voice with a Austrian accent say "Fur every akshon zer iz un
eekvul un opposeet reakshon!"

Well, this should come as no surprise, for Paolo had set himself up for a
textbook demonstration of this fundamental law of physics. Having failed to
plug the lead pipe of his trombone, he allowed the energy of
the blast to send a super heated jet of gas backwards through the mouth pipe
of the trombone which exited the mouthpiece burning his lips and face.

The pyrotechnic ballet wasn't over yet.  The force of the blast was so great
it split the bell of his shiny Yamaha right down the middle, turning it
inside out while at the same time propelling Paolo backwards off the riser.

And for the grand finale, as Paolo fell backwards he lost his grip on the
slide of the trombone allowing the pressure of the hot gases coursing
through the horn to propel the trombone's slide like a double golden spear
into the head of the 3rd clarinetist, knocking him unconscious.

The moral of the story? Beware the next time you hear someone in the
trombone section yell out  "Hey, everyone, watch this!"

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