At a recent concert given by the world famous tenor Andrea Bocelli in Glasgow, the local Herald newspaper’s music critic Marianne Gunn heaped praised on the tenor for not missing a note when a butterfly flew into his face.
Humanitarian act
By all accounts this amazing piece of humanitarian action brought swoons of unprecedented admiration from members of the Edinburgh Royal Choral Union who were accompanying Andrea on the night.
Darker tone
However, those opinions soon turned a darker tone when it was revealed that one choir member made the revelation that the poor creature had eventually come to rest next to a member of the horn section of the British Philharmonic Orchestra, who promptly, '...stood on it' – much to the distress of the hardy singers its appears.
The report on the concert then indicated that this action said a lot about the type of people who play in the brass sections of orchestras4BR
Types
The report on the concert then indicated that this action said a lot about the type of people who play in the brass sections of orchestras.
Ouch!
Trumpet reply
However, the following day the paper received a reply from the great trumpet player John Wallace stating that; "…horns are not strictly brass instruments and should be classified as woodwind because of their many embarrassing behavioural traits of which the above is just a symptom."
Double ouch!
For more
For more about the story, go to:
http://www.heraldscotland.com/
Thanks to Angus Cochrane