Main content

Gershwin's Horns

Gershwin used car horns in An American in Paris. Rainer Hersch explores other unusual instruments used by composers. From 2008.

Rainer Hersch argues the musical significance of canons, car horns and tuned anvils.

Gershwin's An American In Paris was part of a growing trend in using unusual musical instruments, such as car horns in Gershwin's case.

Rainer Hersch explores the musical significance of these "black sheep" of the orchestral family - anvils, canons, typewriters, tuned-salad bowls etc. They've all appeared in concert performances over the last two hundred years but who plays them? Who keeps them? And are they really worth a place amongst the back desks of the orchestra?

With the help of two leading British percussionists, Mick Doran and Neil Percy, Rainer demonstrates the soundscape that can be conjured up by bowing a cymbal, rubbing a plastic cup on a gong or bashing a car suspension spring with a hammer. And he debates the legitimacy of using Academy-trained musicians in the business of hitting tuned anvils.
Of course, if it was good enough for Wagner, why shouldn't modern composers push the boat out a bit? In the process, Rainer discovers what can go wrong on the back desks when you lose your tubular bells or inadvertantly wound a conductor with the shrapnel from an anvil.

He also discovers a warehouse containing almost everything that composers have ever asked to be played in an orchestra pit, and even a couple, including the Scaffophone (made entirely from tuned scaffolding pipes!) that haven't.

Producer: Tom Alban

First broadcast on 成人论坛 Radio 4 in May 2008.

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Mon 28 Nov 2022 03:30

Broadcasts

  • Tue 20 May 2008 13:30
  • Sun 26 Apr 2009 13:30
  • Fri 23 Jan 2015 06:30
  • Fri 23 Jan 2015 13:30
  • Fri 23 Jan 2015 20:30
  • Sat 24 Jan 2015 02:30
  • Tue 23 Oct 2018 06:30
  • Tue 23 Oct 2018 13:30
  • Tue 23 Oct 2018 20:30
  • Wed 24 Oct 2018 01:30
  • Mon 21 Nov 2022 14:30
  • Tue 22 Nov 2022 02:30
  • Sun 27 Nov 2022 15:30
  • Mon 28 Nov 2022 03:30