by Daniel Hathaway
HAPPENING TODAY:

This evening at 6 pm the Cleveland Museum of Art presents Chamber Music in the Atrium featuring Oberlin Danenberg Honors Recitals by some of Oberlin Conservatory’s most outstanding students.
And tonight at 7:30 in Mixon Hall, CIM Opera Theater will present a pocket version of Judith Wier’s (pictured) Blond Eckbert directed by JJ Hudson, with Anthony Parnther, guest conductor.
TODAY’S ALMANAC:
by Mike Telin
On February 11, 1847 the inventor of the phonograph, Thomas Alva Edison, was born in Milan, Ohio. Of course, Edison is responsible for inventing many things that make our lives more pleasant, including the incandescent light bulb, the motion picture camera, and the fluoroscope, as well as improving the telegraph and telephone. Click here for a list of his 1,093 patents.
Of all his inventions, Edison’s favorite was the phonograph, which came about from his work on the telegraph and the telephone when, in 1877, he discovered a way to record sound on tinfoil-coated cylinders. He set the invention aside for ten years, and when he returned to work on his phonograph, he began using wax cylinders.

Edison believed the phonograph would eventually be used for letter writing and dictation, phonographic books for blind people, a family record — recording family members in their own voices — music boxes and toys, clocks that announce the time, and a connection with the telephone so communications could be recorded. Click here to visit the informative entries about Edison on the Library of Congress website.
Always striving to improve on things, Edison was once asked to give his opinion on the role that physics and mechanical instruments will play in the future. “A great deal — an enormous part,” the inventor responded. “The present instruments of the orchestra are very crude. Take the violin for instance. Don’t tell me that even the best violin cannot be improved. One of the worst things in all music is the E string on the violin.” Click here to read the interview titled New Aspects on the Art of Music.
So happy 179th Mr. Edison! Without you, nothing I’ve written about in this article would be possible.
I leave you with an inspiring quote by Thomas Edison. “Our greatest weakness lies in giving up. The most certain way to succeed is always to try just one more time.”


