Darwin and Quarrington

February 12, 2009 by Marty  
Filed under Pig Pen, Stuart

trumpets3 Darwin and Quarrington[By Stuart] Today, February 12th, is Charles Darwin’s bicentennial birthday, so I can plug my favourite Quarrington book, the boy on the back of the turtle. It’s a tough volume to find, but Paul’s story about cruising the Galápagos Islands with father and daughter in search of Darwinian insights is funny, wonderfully informative and deeply touching. (It’s also the only Quarrington book with a bibliography; five pages closely typed!)

I have my own Darwin story. In 1991 I was in England studying the ‘natural’ or valveless baroque trumpet. England is a hotbed of ‘authentic’ instrumentalists, who play gut-string violins, wooden flutes and such, and near the end of my stay I heard Handel’s Messiah played by such an orchestra. This was in a nave of Westminster Abbey with the audience sitting on folding chairs. At intermission I noticed an inscription on the large stone slab under my chair. It was Darwin’s tomb. I had been engaged in a sort of ‘rear-view mirror’ approach to music-making on primitive historical instruments while five feet below me lay the author of The Origin of the Species.

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Comments

One Comment on "Darwin and Quarrington"

  1. Russell Musgrove on Mon, 6th Apr 2009 9:56 am 

    Believe it or not I read Origin of Species in my late teens. Big influence! Read it again after reading Paul’s book about the Galapagos. Understood it even more this time round. Read Darwin’s Voyage of the Beagle first to fully appreciate what he was hypothesizing. Darwin reluctantly but, irrevocably changed the world. Good to see the Pork Belly’s evolve from the first to second record. Makes the third even more anticipated.

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