Henry Dagg

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Henry Dagg is a sound sculptor and builder of experimental musical instruments who formerly worked as a sound engineer for the BBC. His works include a pin barrel harp or sharpsichord which was commissioned for the English Folk Dance and Song Society, a pair of steel sculptural musical gates for Rochester Independent College and a cat organ which he played to the amusement of an audience of celebrities at a garden party hosted by Prince Charles. [1] [2] [3]

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The Sharpsichord is a musical instrument created by Henry Dagg in Faversham, Kent. It is a pin-barrel harp that plays music using a system of pegs, like a music box. The pegs slot into a grid of 11,520 holes to program songs onto a 46-string harp using a chromatic scale. The harp is then amplified by a pair of large horns. The instrument can also be played more traditionally using a keyboard. The Sharpsichord is solar-powered and can play 90 seconds of music at a time. It is made of stainless steel and weighs 2,500 kilograms (5,500 lb) altogether. Dagg has stated that the Sharpsichord is intended as a tribute to Cecil Sharp, a collector of folk music.

References

  1. Victoria Coren (31 January 2010), "All hail Henry Dagg – he's a true artist", The Observer
  2. Kent 'sound sculptor' unveils 'sharpsichord', BBC, 26 January 2010
  3. Prince Charles' laughter over 'cat organ', BBC, 11 September 2010