Family History in a Horn

Sitting on a shelf in my closet, overlooked and forgotten, was a weathered black instrument case. The sides were scuffed, and the handle had been replaced by shoelaces tied together and fastened at the ends.
I hadn’t opened it in years—hadn’t looked at it or even thought about it. Then recently in New York, my friend Tony Plog and I visited J. Landress Brass and saw a display of trumpets and cornets, many of them beautifully restored antiques. (To read about that visit, click here.)
It sparked a memory.
When I got home, I went to the shelf, and there it was—my own modest version of those beautiful instruments. I pulled down the case, dusted it off, and opened it. Inside was a tarnished silver cornet, with a few dents and dings but otherwise in pretty good shape. It had inlayed pearl valves and an elaborately engraved bell:
Victor
C.G. Conn
Elkhart
Ind.
The cornet had belonged to my father, Paul Kidd. He probably had received it, along with lessons, from his grandfather Ellis O. Kidd, a bandmaster in Lexington, Kentucky, who in the family was known as Daddy Key. You can see Daddy Key in this early photo of the Odd Fellows Home Girls Band, one of the groups he conducted. Years later, my father taught my brother Russ and me on that same cornet.
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