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    Ooops!

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/6541457.stm

    Grand piano damaged in lorry fall

    A concert grand piano valued at £45,000 is thought to have been wrecked after falling off a removal lorry in Devon.

    The piano was being brought to the home of John and Penny Adie, the organisers of the Two Moors Festival, an annual music event on Dartmoor and Exmoor.

    But disaster struck when it toppled over and fell 2.5m (8.2ft) before landing on a bank, causing extensive damage to the instrument.

    Removals firm G&R declined to comment on the incident.

    The moments before and after the fall were captured on camera by Mrs Adie, 54, who was hoping to record a highpoint for the festival.

    But joy turned to horror as she recorded how the piano toppled onto a bank.

    It is unlikely ever to come back to us

    Her husband John, 61, said: "It is unlikely ever to come back to us.

    "The piano weighs half a tonne, has 10,000 moving parts and has fallen 2.5m onto the ground.

    "How the hell do you guarantee that it will work again?"

    The festival had been raising funds for two years to buy the piano at auction in London earlier this year.

    It was to go into a concert hall at the Adies' home at Barkham, near South Molton, as a centrepiece for the upcoming spring festival.

    'Simply irreplaceable'

    The piano is now back in London where it is waiting for an independent assessment of the damage.

    The piano was insured, but only for the £26,000 they paid for it at auction in London rather than its likely replacement value of £45,000.

    Mr Adie said: "Bosendorfers are like the Stradivarius of the piano world.

    "It's more than money that is the issue here. They are simply irreplaceable."

    Bosendorfers are made in Austria and are the piano of choice for many of the world's leading pianists.

    Mr and Mrs Adie set up the Two Moors Festival in 2001 to help the area recover from the foot-and-mouth crisis. The two-year long campaign to raise the cash for the piano was spearheaded by Sophie, Countess of Wessex, who is the event's patron. A spokesman for removals firm G&R said: "The matter is in the hands of the insurers. We have no further comment to make."

    Do you think people who pack the confectionary into boxes at fudge making factories tell people what they do for a living?

    #2
    Mr and Mrs Adie set up the Two Moors Festival in 2001 to help the area recover from the foot-and-mouth crisis. The two-year long campaign to raise the cash for the piano was spearheaded by Sophie, Countess of Wessex, who is the event's patron. A spokesman for removals firm G&R said: "The matter is in the hands of the insurers. We have no further comment to make."
    Excuse me, but doesn't it say that the money was for the foot and mouth and not for buying expensive pianos! I'm sure any old joanna would have done!
    Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by sparklelard
      A concert grand piano valued at £45,000 is thought to have been wrecked after falling off a removal lorry in Devon.

      ...

      But disaster struck when it toppled over and fell 2.5m (8.2ft) before landing on a bank, causing extensive damage to the instrument.
      I hope there weren't any customers in the bank at the time.

      It was to go into a concert hall at the Adies' home at Barkham, near South Molton, as a centrepiece for the upcoming spring festival.
      Not exactly short of a bob or two are you, if you've got a concert hall in your home.

      'Simply irreplaceable'
      The piano was insured, but only for the £26,000 they paid for it at auction in London rather than its likely replacement value of £45,000.
      So had they insured it for its replacement value, all would be OK.

      Their fault for cheapskating on the insurance.
      Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

      Comment

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