Several months ago, there was a Wikipedia article that praised the Canadian government for something that the author of the article thought was laudable. Members of the opposition, delving into exactly who the author of the article was, found that the entry had been written and posted by the government itself!!
The article was promptly deleted and all official responsibility denied by Ottawa. Any appearance of misconduct was attributed to an overly zealous, rogue civil servant.
Last year, the Wikipedia "theremin" entry was graced with a large color photo of German thereminist Carolina Eyck. I felt at the time that this was highly inappropriate and said so on the Levnet. Perhaps I should point out that had the picture been of me, I would have found it equally objectionable.
The current article shows color jpegs of both Carolina Eyck and Lydia Kavina. I find it curious that neither Leon Theremin himself nor the greatest theremin virtuoso who ever lived, Clara Rockmore, are anywhere to be seen!
Samuel Hoffman, the only thereminist ever to have a theremin "million seller" recording, and who is without doubt the most "heard" thereminist who ever lived, is given a single, brief (and highly dismissive) mention in a paragraph about the use of the theremin in fright films: "...the thereminist most commonly enlisted to perform anything from haunting melodies to eerie sound effects was Dr. Samuel Hoffman.....". So much for Dr. Hoffman.
Louis and Bebe Barron are given as much coverage in the article for not ever having used a theremin at all!
We are informed that, "The Homestar Runner universe character Homsar plays a theremin in the 2008 point-and-click adventure game Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People - Episode 3: Baddest of the Bands.....", but nowhere in the article is there even a mention of Lucie Bigelow Rosen who toured tirelessly in the early years, who commissioned a number of important works for the theremin, and who backed Leon Theremin financially, making it possible for him to continue his work in America. She has a chapter in Glinsky's book, but not so much as a nod in this ridiculous Wikipedia article.
Am I the only one here to find this absurd?
I should point out that the article itself is very nicely written and spellchecked but, in my opinion, it is skewed, unbalanced and misguided. I do not doubt the sincerity of its author(s), whoever he, she or they may be, but I do find them highly partisan.
It is my impression that in an effort not to offend (or God forbid OMIT) any living thereminist, the thereminists of yesteryear, to whom the thereminists of today owe everything, have been short changed.
Dead thereminists make no objections to the way they are treated in such articles. Living ones, on the other hand, have objected loudly to the Wikipedia theremin article. I noticed that the late Bob Sexton, whose Etherwave theremin instruction book is available from Moog Music, is nowhere to be found.
I think that to suggest all this is a tempest in a teapot is an exaggeration. Other than those who are actually mentioned in the article, I doubt that there is anyone in the world who cares one bit about what is written, or what is omitted, in this laughable exercise in political correctness.