Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
Jefferson and Music:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_06_28-2009_07_04.shtml#1246735059


   If you are a music lover and particularly, like me, a lover of the
   music of the 18th century, then you will be fascinated by Barrymore
   Laurence Scherer's (July 2, 2009) [1]essay in the Wall Street Journal
   on Thomas Jefferson's musical tastes.

   I was not aware that Jefferson was an avid violinist, for example - so
   much so that he had 'a "kit" -- a slender dance-master's pocket fiddle
   -- and had a case for it fashioned for his saddle so he could play and
   practice while traveling'. Although by political inclination I am more
   of a 'Franklin man' as among the Founders, I am also a (horrendously
   bad) amateur cellist with a strong preference for the music of
   Jefferson's century, and this endears me to Jefferson more than almost
   any other fact about him. Jefferson's 'kit', for example, reminds me
   of my Yamaha electric practice cello, which packs down into a compact
   carrying case that, until 9/11, I often used to carry onto airplanes,
   until a security person pointed out that the packed cello looked for
   all the world like a shotgun case.

   I was intrigued with what Scherer says were Jefferson's tastes -
   Corelli, to start with. Well! I am a huge fan of the Corelli violin
   sonatas, and have spent years practicing cello transcriptions of
   several of them. I own four versions of them on CD; of those, my
   favorite violinist is Andrew Manze, but the John Holloway version
   features, on half of them, the rapturous basso continuo of Baroque
   cellist David Watkin, improvising whole chordal structures. I also
   have a great fondness for the gamba version of them by Balestracci,
   using a transcription for gamba that dates back to just a few years
   after they were composed. Although in the end, Bach is Supreme, alpha
   and omega, etc., the Corelli sonatas are a form of sweetness that
   makes one understand why they have never been out of print in hundreds
   of years.

   If you don't follow Baroque music, this post will have to seem pretty
   opaque - baroque, even - but I came away from reading Scherer's
   article ready to give Mr. Jefferson a call to suggest we run through a
   few sonatas together.

References

   1. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124648983211082927.html

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