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Musicians - Blind Tom Wiggins |
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| Thomas "Blind Tom" Wiggins (May 25, 1849–June 13, 1908) was an African American autistic savant and musical prodigy on the piano. Born blind, the first historical record of Thomas Wiggins is from 1850 when his slave mother, Charity Wiggins, was sold to general (or colonel) and lawyer James N. Bethune alongside with her blind child. The new owner gave the boy the name Thomas Greene Bethune or Thomas Wiggins Bethune (according to different sources). Because he could not work, Blind Tom wandered around the Bethune plantation and became interested in the music played by Bethune's daughters. He is reported to have played tunes he had heard at the age of four, before he had learned to speak. At the age of five, he composed a tune, The Rain Storm. Bethune hired professional musicians to play for the boy, and Tom could perfectly reproduce the music he had heard. Although Tom's vocabulary was only about 100 words, eventually he learned perhaps 7,000 pieces of music, mainly from classical composers. In 1857, Blind Tom made his first concert in Columbus, Georgia. Newspaper reviews were favorable, so General Bethune took Tom with him on tour. Tom referred to himself in the third person (e.g., "Tom is pleased to meet you"). In 1860, Blind Tom played in the White House before President James Buchanan. Local musicians wanted to check if his act was mere trickery and made him repeat two brand-new compositions. He did so perfectly. The "challenge" later became a regular part of his performance. Tom also played his own compositions on occasion. One of the regulars at his concerts was Mark Twain. In 1866, at the age of 16, Tom went on a world tour. After the death of General Bethune, the care of Tom was transferred to Bethune's son John. After John died in 1883, Tom retired but had a series of concerts in New York City in 1904 before going back into retirement. Blind Tom died in 1908 in Hoboken, New Jersey and was buried in the Cemetery of the Evergreens in Brooklyn, New York. The people of Columbus, Georgia, raised a commemorative headstone for him in 1976. Later he was the subject of a play titled HUSH: Composing Blind Tom Wiggins, which was performed on the Atlanta stage with Del Hamilton as director. In 1999 John Davis tried to revive his music with the CD John Davis Plays Blind Tom. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Blind Tom Wiggins ] Some related entries: Erich Kleiber | Everything but the Girl | Linda Shider | Neha Kakkar | Franz Wüllner | Midge | Benjamin Grosvenor | Helmuth Abel | Florent Pagny | Ock Ju-Hyun | Lea Salonga This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Blind Tom Wiggins; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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