Lore - Legends 10: Haunted Melodies
Episode Date: September 18, 2023Legends 10: Haunted Melodies Judging by music’s ability to connect with us on multiple levels, it’s no wonder that history is filled with legends about how that connection could go very wrong. Let...’s explore some of those dark melodies together. Narrated and produced by Aaron Mahnke, with writing by Harry Marks and research by GennaRose Nethercott.  Lore Resources Episode Music: lorepodcast.com/music Episode Sources: lorepodcast.com/sources All the shows from Grim & Mild: www.grimandmild.com  Sponsors Squarespace: Build your own powerful, professional website, with free hosting and 24/7 award-winning customer support. Start your free trial website today at Squarespace.com/lore, and when you make your first purchase, use offer code LORE to save 10%. SimpliSafe: Secure your home with 24/7 professional monitoring for just $15 a month. No contracts, no salespeople, just simple and easy security. Sign up today at SimpliSafe.com/Lore to get 20% off your order with Interactive Monitoring. BetterHelp: Lore is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at BetterHelp.com/LORE, and get on your way to being your best self.  ©2023 Aaron Mahnke. All rights reserved.
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Welcome to Lore Legends, a subset of lore episodes that explore the strange tales we whisper in the dark,
even if they can't always be proven by the history books.
So if you're ready, let's begin.
French novelist Victor Hugo once wrote, music expresses that which cannot be put into words,
and that which cannot remain silent.
Music is emotion-laid raw,
set on the plate of the listener to be devoured and digested.
Its artistic nourishment meant to satisfy and sustain us
when nothing else will.
When we're happy, we dance.
When we've suffered loss, we flood our ears with the songs of those who have suffered
as well.
Music is all at once a solitary experience and a communal one.
We may grieve alone, but we're not the only people to find ourselves there, and we have
the songs to prove it.
But music has other qualities as well.
It can be a time machine transporting us back to our senior prom, or our first kiss with our spouse,
or something as simple as listening to the radio in the kitchen while our mom makes a soup on
a rainy afternoon. Music can help us relive our best, and even our worst memories.
It can even distract us from mundane jobs, allowing
us to get lost in its melodies until it's time to clock out. Music can be a self, but
it can also be an irritant. It can amplify negative emotions, making us angrier or more
depressed. A certain song can remind us of the pain of losing someone close to us or remind us of how short our lives really are.
Or it can, if some legends are to be believed, even kill us.
I'm Aaron Mankey, and this is Lore Legends.
People often come to music when they're young, taking up an instrument when they're still in great school.
They join the band, play for a number of years, and then they go off to college and often
abandon it for other pursuits.
But it wasn't going to be like that for Annie.
Annie would keep up with the violin throughout her life.
It's just a shame that life did not last longer.
Annie made quite the impact during her short time on Earth.
Born Harriet Annie Marshall on September 7th of 1879, she was the daughter of Dr. Windfield
Scott Marshall and H. H. E. Align Marshall.
The family lived in Centrelia, Illinois, where Annie developed a love of the violin.
She took to the instrument in a way that most people could only dream of.
She was a prodigy, and by the time she turned 11, she'd become one of the most gifted
players in the area.
But sadly, her fate was not to play the grandest auditoriums and arenas in the country for crowds
of thousands.
Just after her 11th birthday, Annie passed away from diphtheria, although more
dramatic versions of this tale say that her father beat her to death, with her own violin.
Luckily the truth is less violent, her parents loved her with their whole hearts and mourned
her lost the way any parent would.
Following her death, her body was buried in Centrelius Cemetery, known today as Elmwood
Cemetery, known today as Elmwood Cemetery.
It's located west of the Raccoon Creek Reservoir, off of Greg and Sikamore Streets.
Today the Graveyard, which dates back to the 1860s, holds 17,000 buried residents, but
at the time of Annie's death, that number was far fewer.
She was buried in a unique grave for the time, too, one befitting of her gifts.
Her headstone was built to look like a temple, with four pillars seated upon a gray stone
base emblazoned with the name Marshall in arched letters.
There's a plaque there that reads, each year of your life was a new song more delightful
than all before.
And on the top, stands the most haunting piece of all, a life-size statue of
Annie herself, holding her treasured violin.
It's an elaborate and ornate grave for a young girl taken from the world far too
soon, and it shows just how much she was missed by both her family and the community. She
was mourned by everyone, and the town lavished her resting place with flowers. And over the years, the statue itself earned a simple but touching nickname.
It's called Violin Annie.
But there's something about a child's grave that's out of place.
The very notion of it seems wrong.
Children are meant to live long fulfilling lives and die happily in old age.
And it's no wonder that Annie's burial site has garnered something of a reputation
among those who live in Centralia.
They say that it's haunted.
But not in a scary way.
Her ghost doesn't torment the living
the way that other spirits might.
Instead hers is kind and warm,
tied forever to the one thing she loved most in life.
Music.
Those who pass by the cemetery
have been said to hear beautiful ghostly violin music
emanating from Annie's grave after dark.
Visitors have also witnessed green tears flowing
from the statue's eyes, sometimes in tandem
with the song being played, as though she has been
pained by her own performance.
Skeptics say that those tears are nothing more than
green moss or lyichen growing along the
statues' cheeks.
But for those who visit Annie's grave on Halloween night, they might even see it glow.
Multiple people have described a sense of gentle warmth that comes over them as they move toward
Annie's grave.
It's a testament to the kind of girl she must have been while she was still alive, one
who was both loving and beloved, who deserved to grow
up with the family and friends who adored her, who knows how she might have turned out,
perhaps we lost one of the world's greatest violinists without ever knowing it.
But what happened to the violin that she loved to play so much?
Was she buried with it, or did the family hold on to it as a memento to remind them of
the joy and the music with which she filled the house.
Unfortunately, the cherished instrument went missing just after her death.
A relative had purchased an antique violin case from the family, but when they opened it
up, they found it to be empty.
And yet the sound of her bow gliding across the strings can still be heard today.
All you have to do is visit Annie's grave in Elmwood
Cemetery. You can't miss it. She remains standing there, waiting for her audience.
Music's very foundation is built on emotion.
Whether we've just broken up with the former partner or we're sitting on top of the world
and looking down on creation, music is there to carry us along.
Songs have the power to let us dig into our feelings, or they can change them for us.
Perhaps hearing a certain tune might make you remember a difficult time in your life, or an upbeat pop song can put a smile back on your face.
But there is one song that can do more than that. In fact, legend has it, this diddy doesn't
just make the listener feel sad. It makes them question their very existence.
Written in late 1932 by Hungarian pianist Rešo Sáres, Vyge A Vylognak was very much a song of its time.
Its title translates to The World is Ending, and was composed during the Depression, when
fascism was rearing its ugly head in Hungary.
It was also written in the key of C minor.
Now a minor key doesn't automatically make a song sad.
Survivors 1982 hit Eye of the Tiger, as well as Queens, We Are The Champions, were also
written in C Minor.
But there was something about Sharesha's song that hit the ears of listeners differently.
The lyrics probably didn't help.
According to the English translation, the first few lines of Veege-A-Vilagnok read, Avilognak Reed. Sunday is gloom, my hours are slumberless. Dearest the shadows I live
with are numberless. Little white flowers will never awaken you. Not where the black
coach of sorrow has taken you. Dark, I know, but the original Hungarian lyrics are allegedly
even more depressing. The confluence of circumstances surrounding its creation, along with its soul-crushing lyrics,
led to its nickname, the Hungarian Suicide Song.
Pretty soon, legends began to cling to the song like ticks.
The ones that bleed it of its benign sadness and infect it with a cursed reputation.
People whispered in gossip that its nickname, the Hungarian Suicide Song, was more than
just a funny moniker. whispered in gossip that its nickname, the Hungarian suicide song, was more than just
a funny moniker.
They believed the tune was tied to a rash of real-world suicides.
Over the coming years, reports of individuals taking their own lives started to rise, and
rumors of the song weren't far behind.
One teenage girl allegedly drowned herself while clutching the sheet music to the song.
Another woman was said to have overdosed while it was playing on repeats in the background,
and one man had scribbled its lyrics into his suicide note before taking his life.
In total, at least 17 separate suicides at Hungary were linked to the song.
Some believe the country banned the song eventually, but there's no proof of that ever
happening.
Instead, its contagious effects did what every disease
eventually does.
It spread.
And when it was translated into English in 1935,
that meant that the melancholy experienced by Hungarian
listeners could now be felt by people across the pond.
1941 brought American audiences a bonafide hit, courtesy
of Billy Holiday.
But even though the lyrics had been translated into a new language, its effects seemed to transcend all borders and barriers.
Whisper spread, claiming that American suicide numbers tied to the song were climbing as
World War II progressed, with the number rumored to be as high as 200 at one time.
America, like Hungary, never banned the song outright, but British radio sure did.
Stations felt that it was just too depressing, that it would harm the morale of their troops.
Now, it's tragic, but Hungary has long held the record for the highest suicide rates in the world.
So, it's possible that the song had little to nothing to do with the number of deaths reported during the 1930s and 40s.
A very well could have just been bad timing.
But there is one essential true suicide linked very closely with the song.
Years after the war ended, in 1968, a man jumped from a building in Budapest.
He survived the leap and was taken to a hospital to have his injuries treated, but he never
left.
He wound up taking his own life while he was there.
What made this man special
was that he had perhaps the most intimate relationship with the song of anyone else
on Earth. After all, he was the one who had written it. He was… We've all done it before.
Probably while sitting in a restaurant as we wait for our food to arrive, we dip our
finger into our water glass and rub it along the edge, creating a high-pitched other
world-a-tone.
Since as far back as the, and perhaps even before then,
the idea of rubbing glass to generate sound
has inspired musicians to find new ways to make music.
This led to the creation of the glass harp,
in which a dozen or more glasses were filled
with varying amounts of water,
each one capable of producing a different note
when rubbed with a moistened finger.
But musicians weren't the only ones tickled by the idea of a musical glass.
Inventors also got in on the action, and one of those people was none other than founding
father Benjamin Franklin.
It was sometime around 1761, while Franklin was watching his friend Edward Deleval play
a glass harp that he was inspired to create a new glass instrument
of his own.
It would be more versatile and easier for the average person to sit down and play, while
simultaneously having more nuanced musical capabilities.
He collaborated with a glass blower named Charles James to construct it.
This new instrument was comprised of 37 glass bowls, each one, a different color that corresponded to the notes
they would generate.
The bowls were then placed on a long rod,
which was suspended horizontally over a wooden stand.
A wheel at the end would spin when the operator
pressed a foot pedal on the floor,
rotating the bowls under the player's finger.
Franklin called it a glassy cord,
which for obvious reasons didn't stick.
Instead, he renamed it the glass armanica, like harmonica, but without the H,
although it did go by harmonica as well. And we mustn't forget its catchiest
name of all, the Hydro-Dactilo Psychic Harmonica, which is Greek for
harmonica to produce music for the soul by fingers dipped in water.
The glass armonica made its public debut in London at Spring Gardens, with instrumentalist
Marianne Davies at the Bulls.
Davies became a hit with a contraption, and took it on tour with her, performing alongside
her sister Cecilia, who sang soprano.
Audiences loved the armonica, who sound closely resembled the Kaliapy music that plays on a carousel.
It grew so much in popularity that great composers, such as Mozart and Beethoven,
wrote music for it, and it even found its way to the home's and fingers of non-musicians as well.
Marie Antoinette was ahead of the curve when she started taking glass Armonica lessons,
and George Washington even had to go
at it himself after attending several performances. France, Anton Mesmer, the father of Mesmerism and
the concept of animal magnetism, incorporated the Glass-Armonica into his seances, believing it had
the power to cure depression and heal all manner of illness. But Mesmer's insistence on giving the instrument a supernatural bent eventually led to a backlash
against Franklin's masterpiece.
Rumors began to spread about its use in erotic occultism, and that angelic sound that had
been beloved by audiences all over the world now resembled something haunting, not wholesome.
Doctors at the time insisted that the sound produced by the glass Armonica resulted in dangerous side effects that honestly sounds like they're
pulled straight from a modern pharmaceutical commercial on TV. Melancholia,
epileptic fits and seizures, premature births, anxiety, dizziness, hallucinations,
and cramps. Some even claim that listening to its ghostly tones would drive
listeners insane.
They also came up with different diagnoses for Armonica-based mood disorders, and some
people claimed that the high-pitched frequencies reached by the instrument had the power
to summon the spirits of the dead.
After a young German boy died during an Armonica concert, the musical bowls were banned
all over the country.
An audience members weren't the only people affected by it, either.
Cecilia and Mary and Davies continue to tour with the instrument,
but Cecilia soon began to spiral into depression.
But could glass-created music really do these things to people?
It's possible, but there are other explanations
that might offer some more insight.
One suggested reason for the Armonica's negative effects was lead poisoning.
Lead had been an ingredient in both glass making and in the paint used to color the instrument.
Had the players running their fingers along the bowls suffered memory loss and behavioral
changes due to lead poisoning?
Well, it's doubtful.
Experts claim that the glass would have only contained trace amounts of lead, not enough
to cause illness from touching it.
So what about its frequency?
While the Armonica produced a sound within the 1-4 KHz zone, a range that our brains have
a difficult time locating spatially, in other words when people heard the Armonica, they
couldn't tell where the sound was coming from.
This only helped its reputation as an eerie, otherworldly
instrument. But as with all new musical trends and fads, the glass armanica became the
victim of a prudish culture unable to cope with its effects on the youth. Between its
more clear novelty and its association with mesmer's erotic sayances, it was only a
manner of time before Franklin's glass bowls caused a moral panic across Europe.
A musical instrument killed by the power of folklore.
There was another Marianne. She was also a well-known Armonica player. Born in Germany in 1769, she suffered about with smallpox when she was just four years old, which left her
blind, but that didn't stop her from having a passion for music. At age 6, she started
with lessons on the harpsichord, a kind of piano
where the strings were plucked when the keys were pressed, rather than being struck with
a hammer. And she was apparently quite talented for her age, something that only seemed to
grow as she got older. Five years later she was introduced to the instrument that would
alter the course of her life, the glass armanaca. She started by taking lessons from the
local choir master, who trained her for
a decade before Mary Ann's struck out on her own. In 1791, she joined journalist Heinrich Bozzler and
his wife, who followed Mary Ann on tour as she played the Glass Armonica for crowds all over Europe.
She spent the next 10 years traveling from Berlin to Prague, to Dresden, to Lipsig, and more,
entertaining audiences with
adult sit-tones of Franklin's invention. While in Berlin, she played four separate times for
King Frederick Wilhelm II. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was even in attendance for at least one of
her performances, and was so taken with both the instruments and the woman playing it that he
went on to write two pieces for the glass Armonica. And then, around 1794, Marianne moved to London, where she had a new Armanaica built for her
there, one that would last her for all of her tours going forward.
Sadly, while traveling through Germany, Marianne fell ill and passed away.
She was only 39 years old.
And her death was attributed to pneumonia, which had also caused inflammation in her lungs,
but there was something more. A nagging feeling that her demise was the result of something her
doctors might have missed. You see, those who had followed the rumors of the glass Armonicus
powers couldn't help wonder if Franklin's cursed instruments had a part in Mary Ann's passing.
After all, a child had already died, and many other people had fallen ill as a result of listening to the instrument's ethereal tones.
Also Cecilia Davies had been stricken with melancholia after being exposed to the instrument for so long.
And so the question was, had Mary Ann Kiersch gesner died from a fever, as her doctor said, or had she succumbed to the effects of prolonged use of the glass armana-ka?
No one is quite sure, but her death didn't help extend the device's longevity, either.
Its use eventually fell out of fashion, and musicians moved on to other, less erotically
occult instruments, while everyone except one person, Benjamin Franklin, who enjoyed
playing his glass armana-ka all the way up until his death,
at the ripe old age, of 84.
Music and mystery seem to have a long history together.
From devilish instruments to the tragic deaths of those who play them, folklore is filled
with tales of deadly music, and that idea has been around much longer than you'd think.
In fact I've saved an old one for last.
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In 1922, a teen led by British archaeologist Howard Carter discovered the long-lost tomb of Egyptian king Tutten Common, buried within the valley of the kings, and as
Egyptologists are want to do, Carter opened it. Tutan Common, or King Tut for short, was known as the Boy King, who reigned from the time
when he was 8 years old in 1332 BC, until his death at the age of 17 in 1323.
According to the legend, King Tut's tomb was sealed with a curse, one that would be released
upon its opening.
George Herbert, the fifth Earl of Konarvin, was a friend of Carter's and had financed
the excavation.
He'd also tagged along to watch its opening first hand.
Shortly after Carter breached the seal of the tomb, Herbert was bitten by a mosquito.
The bite grew infected, which led to blood poisoning, a disease that took Lord Kinarven's life
four months and seven days later.
But he was only the first.
Four other members of the excavation team, or visitors to the tomb while it was being explored,
also died prematurely in the years after it opened.
According to the legend, those involved with opening Tutankhamins' final resting place
were being punished for their transgression.
But while the curse of King Tut's tomb is quite famous, Les So is the story of a specific set of artifacts
that he was buried with, and they had a curse, all their own.
Among the artifacts interred with King Tut's sarcophagus
was a pair of trumpets.
One was made of sterling silver with a wooden core.
The other had been crafted from bronze or copper,
and both had been engraved with ornate patterns
and images of the gods.
The bronze-colored trumpet was found among various military objects.
Pictures of the instrument were also found in wall paintings depicting different battles.
It's likely that they had been used during times of war to summon soldiers to battle.
And neither one had been played in over 3,000 years.
Seventeen years after the tomb's discovery,
radio presenter Rex Keating had an idea.
He wanted to play the trumpet's live on the air
for listeners all over the world.
He managed to convince the Egyptian antiquity service
to lend him the silver trumpet,
but the honor of playing it,
falling on a member of the British Army
who also happened to be an expert musician.
The soldier first tried playing multiple notes, which the trumpet was not designed to do.
He then attempted to slide a modern mouthpiece over the opening, which caused the ancient
horn to shatter.
The trumpet was eventually repaired and a short time later, a second attempt was made to
play it.
This performance would be carried out by James Tappern, another musician from the British
Army. Live from the Cairo Museum, Tappern, another musician from the British Army.
Live from the Cairo Museum, Tappern lifted the instrument to his mouth.
In the audience was Alfred Lucas, one of the last surviving members of Carter's original expedition.
And honestly, he looked worried.
Did he fear that another crack at playing it would damage it further?
Or did he know something else?
Something that no one else was aware of.
Just five minutes before Taperne was set to play, the lights in the museum suddenly went
dark.
Candles were lit, and the broadcast continued as planned.
According to one report, Lucas' hands trembled.
Finally, the trumpeter placed his lips on the mouthpiece, another modern one like the one
that had been tried before, except this time it fit.
Tavern blew into the instrument and played several notes at varying intervals.
The sound was strong, but it wavered as though either the horn or the player were unsure
it would hold together, but it did much to the amazement of everyone present.
Yet with those notes came another curse.
You see, these horns would have been blown during times of war, and now they were sounding again. It was inevitable that war
would follow once again.
Four and a half months after Taperna's performance, War War 2 broke out. This fell in line with
Lord Konarbin's death roughly four months after being bitten by a mosquito. Then in 1967, the trumpet was played again for
the first time since that 1939 broadcast, soon after the six-day war between Egypt and
Israel began. In 1990, a student researching King Tut's collection played the trumpet,
which hadn't been touched since 1967. The Gulf War broke out shortly after, and in
2011 it was blown into by a museum staff member
who had been documenting it for the facility's collection. One week later, the Egyptian revolution began.
Now it's important to point out that all but the original 1939 performances were done in private
within the museum. There was no audience present to verify that they happened at all, and each instance
was reported by the same person, but the lack of a secondary source wasn't necessarily
a problem, because the man who had disclosed all of them happened to have intimate knowledge
of the exhibit. It was Hala Hassan, the curator of the 210 Common Collection at the Egyptian
Museum, and he asserted that the instruments do indeed hold magical powers
to create war.
This episode of lore was produced by me, Aaron Manke, with writing by Harry Marks and research
by Jenna Rose Nethercuts.
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