Dear All,

An American musician friend has just sent this story to me from today's New
York Times, which recounts the terrible recent saga of a musician (trumpet)
trying to get his instrument on board a flight from Paris to New York in
this time of heightened airport security...........

Lutenists be careful!  We can't afford to have broken arms.......

Best,

B


Clash Over Airline's Policy Leaves a Musician Injured
Doreen Carvajal. New York Times. (Late Edition (East Coast)). New
York, N.Y.: Oct 10, 2006. pg. B.3
Author(s):  Doreen Carvajal



Full Text (685   words)
Copyright New York Times Company Oct 10, 2006
As international authorities strive to harmonize myriad rules for
carry-on flight luggage, a Russian-American jazz musician is nursing
a broken arm he said he suffered in a struggle with French airport
police over his right to board with a prized trumpet.
The musician, Valery Ponomarev, 63, a former member of Art Blakey's
Jazz Messengers, was preparing to board an Air India flight on Sept.
9 from Paris to New York City, where he lives, when a routine airport
ritual erupted into a fierce dispute over his 1961 Connstellation
trumpet.
''If you've ever played a musical instrument, then you should know
how strong the bond is between the musician and the instrument,'' Mr.
Ponomarev said. ''You wouldn't give your baby away to anybody, and so
you wouldn't give away your horn.''
In his case, the ties were so powerful that he simply would not let
go of his trumpet case, which also contained a fluegelhorn.
But the authorities were not sympathetic and maintain that the
trumpeter was uncooperative in a time of heightened security.
According to Mr. Ponomarev, when he arrived late to board an evening
flight, a flustered Air India employee retrieved his trumpet from a
luggage belt at a security checkpoint without explanation to place it
in the plane's hold.
Mr. Ponomarev protested vigorously, he said, because he had hand-
carried the instrument on an earlier connecting flight and also had
noticed that another passenger was carrying aboard a sitar. His angry
complaints attracted the notice of an Air India supervisor, who
summoned the police.
Four officers came running to take his trumpet case, but Mr.
Ponomarev refused to give it to them, and one of them subdued him by
wrenching his arm behind his back and, according to the musician,
breaking it.
The airport authorities and the police confirm that the episode took
place as Mr. Ponomarev was boarding the flight at Charles de Gaulle
airport. But in the view of the police, the musician bears
responsibility for his injury.
''The officers tried to subdue him, and you can say that he hurt
himself by rebelling,'' said a spokesman for the airport police.
H. Rana, the regional manager for Air India's Paris office, said
airline employees called the police because Mr. Ponomarev insisted on
carrying his music case on board. She said that Air India requires
the check-in of large instruments.
In Europe, carry-on luggage rules vary among airlines. Last week, the
European Commission moved to standardize the rules with new
regulations taking effect next spring that restrict the amount of
liquids carried aboard for personal use and limit carry-on luggage
size. But there may be exemptions for some cameras and musical
instruments.
The rule change comes too late for Mr. Ponomarev, who said that after
his arm was broken he was held in detention without treatment for six
hours and was not allowed to make any calls. Ultimately, he was taken
to a hospital where one of the doctors loaned him a cellphone to
contact the United States Embassy.
After surgery, Mr. Ponomarev returned on September 13 to the United
States on another Air India flight. With a metal plate holding the
bones of his left arm together, Mr. Ponomarev said the break had an
immediate effect on his career: He was forced to cancel a musical
engagement and limit his daily practice because it is too painful to
hold the trumpet with a weakened arm.
By late September, though, he decided to participate in a long-
scheduled jazz concert in Russia, where he was born, although he has
lived in the United States since 1973. The announcer, he said,
explained to the audience that Mr. Ponomarev was playing despite a
struggle with the French police.
''I think the audience thought that he was joking,'' Mr. Ponomarev
said, but he still took the microphone to correct the announcer:
''They didn't win the battle. They broke my arm. But the horn is
still with me.''
[Photograph]
Valery Ponomarev performing at a Lincoln Center concert in 2003. Mr.
Ponomarev's arm was broken in September at a French airport. (Photo
by Jack Vartoogian/Front RowPhotos)


Credit: International Herald Tribune



-- 
Benjamin Narvey Luthiste:

http://www.luthiste.com

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