Mozart |
They say
we’re only six degrees of separation away from anyone in the world. This is a
scary prospect indeed when you think who’s in the White House.
We’re about to go on just such a journey (possibly with a few more characters in the chain than six), which will take us from Mozart to the AH-64 Apache, the most advanced multi-role combat helicopter in the world. Impossible for Mozart to be linked with a state-of-the-art helicopter?
Fasten your safety belts, we’re about to take off.
Mozart’s ‘The Marriage of Figaro’ was premiered in
Vienna but based on a play by Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, coincidentally called Le Mariage de
Figaro. Perhaps plagiarism hadn't been invented.
Beaumarchais |
During the American War of
Independence, Beaumarchais persuaded the
French to cough up beaucoup de francs with which to buy arms which
would deal to the Brits. Beaumarchais,
the tart, also later bought rifles to aid the French Revolutionaries.
Thomas Jefferson had reason to be
grateful to the French for their support which helped free his country. His
countrymen had reason to be grateful to him when he repealed the Whisky
Tax.
He was a liberal and much influenced by a book called ‘On Crimes and Punishments’ by Italian, Cesare di Beccaria, which contained shocking truths about the treatment of criminals. This was a universal but unaddressed problem, after all, who cared about criminals?
Thomas Jefferson |
Two other
reformers, Austrians, Franz Gall and Johann Spurzheim also felt they had the
answer to the rehabilitation of wrong-doers - their invention Phrenology. Their
theory ,that the bumps on a person’s skull could indicate their tendencies, was
widely accepted. If you could catch potential criminals early enoug you could turn
them to the straight and narrow.
Spurzheim
took this very popular idea to American but in 1832, he died. The eulogy at his funeral was read by Harvard
academic and devoted followe Karl Follen.
Follen,
whom every university student can thank for varsity gyms, had been a political
activist in Germany, was hauled into court and tried by Judge E.T.A Hoffman who
was also a writer of macabre fantasay stories featuring ghosts and the
undead. Bedtime reading for the nervous
it was not.
Edgar Allen Poe |
Edgar Allen Poe |
He also wrote ‘The Bells’ which became the basis for Rachmaninov’s symphony of the same name.
Rachmaninov
fled Russia after the revolution and at a party in Long Island, heard about a
fellow Rusian emigre who was looking for a backer for his inventions.
Rachmaninov
visits him, is very impressed by the machine and agrees to loan him the modern
equivaletn of $200,000.
He is well
rewarded because by 1937, this invention,
a 4-engine flying boat, is being used by PanAm to transport people to Europe.
The next
invention, the dream machine he’d been working on since he was a boy back in
Russia, is destined to become even more of a hit and Igor Sikorky goes down in
history as the inventor of the helicopter.
Over the years, helicopters are improved and today, the AH-64D Apache is the direct descendant of Sikorksy's original.
So there we are, from Mozart to helicopters and I am indebted to James Burke, whose Knowledge Web inspired me to sit up until 2am researching all this fascinating information.
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