PodParley PodParley

Eulogy for Freddy Hill

An episode of the Cities and Memory - remixing the world podcast, hosted by Cities and Memory, titled "Eulogy for Freddy Hill" was published on February 22, 2026 and runs 4 minutes.

February 22, 2026 ·4m · Cities and Memory - remixing the world

0:00 / 0:00

As a starting point for this project, I did some research into the person who played the barrel organs on the recording.

It transpired that Freddy Hill (born 1932 in Sussex, UK) was a very gifted man. The son of a headmaster and a clockmaker by profession, he also taught carpentry and music and was an expert restorer of antique musical instruments including the chamber barrel organs in this recording. Freddy was a founder member of the Musical Box Society of Great Britain which was established in 1962. 

The three barrel organs being played here were built between 1764 and 1850, and the recordings were made in April 1967 after Freddy’s repairs and restoration. Most of the sounds on this 42-minute recording are of Freddy speeding through the barrel organ cylinders to check functionality, however the "Morning Hymn’"and "Evening Hymn" sections are played through at a nice pace and stood out to me, so I extracted these as the base for my work. After a number of abandoned approaches, rather than “reinterpret” the sounds, I have built a world around them, orchestrating with strings and brass, and blending sounds both natural and unnatural into the mix aiming to give the finished track a widescreen feel.

I considered contacting Freddy to tell him what I was doing, but he died in 2005. It was at that point I realised that this piece could be my small tribute to his life, hence the title I have chosen. 

Via Facebook I managed to locate someone who knew Freddy, and they have agreed to inform his only known relative; his nephew Michael Richards - of this project and submission. Freddy’s collection of clocks, musical instruments and barrel organs were bequeathed to the Royal College of Music.

Barrel organs reimagined by Adam Leonard.

———
Part of the project A Century of Sounds, reimagining 100 sounds covering 100 years from the collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum at the University of Oxford. Explore the full project at citiesandmemory.com/century-sounds

Dear Canada FIXT POINT Arts and Media Dear Canada is an audio postcard series that follows the journey of The Tale of a Town’s storymobile as it crosses the country to capture the collective community memory of our main streets, one story at a time, leading up to Canada’s 150th anniversary in 2017.Featuring uniquely local voices from towns and big cities across each province and territory, each postcard will reveal a telling tale about Canada’s disappearing downtown culture. Hosts Charles Ketchabaw and Lisa Marie DiLiberto mix the most compelling interviews gathered as part of their national oral history project with inquisitive commentary addressed to listeners across the country. The Tale of a Town - Canada FIXT POINT Arts and Media DC:Dear Canada is an audio postcard series that follows the journey of The Tale of a Town’s storymobile as it crosses the country to capture the collective community memory of our main streets, one story at a time, leading up to Canada’s 150th anniversary in 2017.Featuring uniquely local voices from towns and big cities across each province and territory, each postcard will reveal a telling tale about Canada’s disappearing downtown culture. Hosts Charles Ketchabaw and Lisa Marie DiLiberto mix the most compelling interviews gathered as part of their national oral history project with inquisitive commentary addressed to listeners across the country.AWDMS:A Walk Down Main Street is a long form podcast series that takes a deeper look at the characters and tales at the heart of Ontario’s downtown neighbourhoods. Travel Man Podcast Network Kieran Taylor Kieran chats travel, culture and people with special guests, coming at you live from some of the greatest cities, towns and islands earth has to offer. Sit down and relax, get inspired and get some culture in you as we go down memory lane and look to the future of travel, what's hot and what's not, and get insights from some isnpirational modern travelers. I Wonder... I Wonder... Co-hosted by Daniel Tkacik and Ellis Robinson, two Ph.D. engineering students from Carnegie Mellon University, I Wonder… begins each episode with a question. When do we get our first memory? Why are whales so big? Are cities good or bad for the environment? Each question is the seed for a half-hour exploration on a topic that hopes to inspire curiosity, learning, and (you guessed it!) wonder.
URL copied to clipboard!