Dear Florence

[…]

I have had an interesting few months with quite some variety and having an incredible amount of fun with the Alpflyinghorn. It continues to be absolute magic and adapts itself in an amazing way to so many different performance contexts and geographical environments 🙂 I am so so happy to have this instrument.

I thought you might enjoy seeing some photos with the alphorn so I have attached some photos […]:
The Orobie mountains are the mountains above Bergamo; here with Mario Curnis, one of Italy’s most important mountaineers. We were part of a 4-day project in July walking across the northern part of these mountains with a group which included other mountaineers, photographers, actors, journalists, artists, writers and a cook.
B-Classic was a festival in Belgium in April where I played a sun-up concert for with 2 musicians from Belgium and a quartet of singers from Galicia in Spain.
Clockstop was a festival of improvisations in May in a ex-convent in the south of Italy.
And in Pesaro it was a sun-down concert on the last day of June in the harbour at Pesaro with a percussionist playing bells and a quartet of trombones.

[…]
Martin