Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-r7xzm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-28T23:52:49.209Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Professor Sir Ernst Gombrich, OM: a ‘hands-on’ advocate of music therapy in mental hospitals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

H. R. Rollin*
Affiliation:
101 College Road, Epsom, Surrey KT17 4HY
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

The outpouring of praise for the life and work of this remarkable man, who died this year, has been so fulsome that one might reasonably believe that the catalogue of his virtues had been exhausted. I would venture to suggest that two seemingly disparate virtues have been omitted or underplayed. I refer to his musicianship and his compassion. May I describe one occasion when these two virtues co-existed?

Type
Special Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2003

The outpouring of praise for the life and work of this remarkable man, who died this year, has been so fulsome that one might reasonably believe that the catalogue of his virtues had been exhausted. I would venture to suggest that two seemingly disparate virtues have been omitted or underplayed. I refer to his musicianship and his compassion. May I describe one occasion when these two virtues co-existed?

For many years before I retired in 1975, I was a consultant at Horton Hospital, Epsom, (now defunct) designed then for the treatment of most of the range of psychiatric disorders. The patients were of both genders, of all adult ages, of a variety of ethnic and religious groups and, because of the geographical distribution of our catchment area in London, there was an overrepresentation of refugees from Nazi Germany. It was, in effect, a strange microcosm characterised by one common factor — the unpredictability of its individual and collective behaviour.

Of the several forms of auxiliary treatments we had on offer at the hospital, the one which was a particular source of pride was music therapy. At the core of this most successful project, as it happens, was Sir Ernst's sister, Dea (Lady Forsdyke), a distinguished violinist and an inspired teacher-cum-therapist. It further happens that Sir Ernst's wife, Ilse (Lady Gombrich) was an eminent professional pianist and piano coach. The third limb of an outstanding family trio was no other than Sir Ernst, himself a talented cellist. This unique ensemble played for their own delectation when time and occasion arose and, on very few occasions, for the delectation of others.

One of the major attractions of the music therapy project was to hold monthly concerts featuring members of the group for the entertainment of other patients at the hospital, any interested members of staff, and a surprisingly large number of patients' relatives, who came mainly from London. All were welcome, and considering the limited number of available performers and the nature and degree of their mental ailments, our visitors seemed well pleased with the musical fare on offer. Even so, from time to time, as a bonus, the group and its attendant audience shared the pleasure of being entertained by professional musicians. I should explain that, at that time, I had the good fortune to enjoy the friendship of a number of professional musicians who, at my invitation, would play for us as a gesture of goodwill. The majority would waive their fee or agree a substantial reduction, or ask only for their expenses.

Working closely as I did with the group, I got to know Dea Forsdyke very well and, in the course of time, came to know her family and inevitably became aware of the ‘Gombrich Trio’. Equally inevitably, wearing my impresario's cap, I could see what a boost it would be to the music therapy project if I could persuade the Trio to play at one of our concerts. For quite literally months my pluck, or perhaps, chutzpah, faltered, until one day I screwed my courage to the sticking place and blurted out my invitation via Dea. Her response was immediate and unequivocal, ‘Yes, of course. But when?’ And there's the rub. When? Because of the heavy commitments of all three members of the trio, particularly Sir Ernst, there would be problems.

There were, but eventually it was sorted out. The date was to be a night in November 1965 (any suggestion of a fee, or even expenses, had been pooh poohed). That night, as I will never forget, proved to be murky, as murky indeed as a November in England can be. The possibility, even probability, of an eleventh-hour cancellation loomed large. And as the seconds ticked away, my anxiety grew. However, I had not reckoned with the integrity and the professional pride of our guests. Bang on time they arrived in their hired car, having braved the elements from far-flung Hampstead.

Despite the foul weather, the auditorium — the specially adapted rear third of the hospital chapel — was packed. The exact programme that the Trio had chosen to play has escaped my memory, but what I do remember is that no concessions were made. I underwent all the agonies of these occasions: would the recital be interrupted or ruined by the unseemly and unacceptable behaviour of one or more members of the audience? For the second time that night, my fingernails were spared from mutilation. The recital went off without a hitch: the vociferous applause at the end was loud and entirely appropriate.

Our artists stayed for a light supper, after which they were surrounded by patients anxious to shake their hands and express their gratitude in English or German for the musical treat they had enjoyed. Dea beamed with pride for her patients; Lady Gombrich met all of them with her customary graciousness, and Sir Ernst, well accustomed to the adulation of his audience, greeted them with warmth and civility, and without the slightest suggestion of condescension.

The following morning, a manic depressive, who was a man of education and cultivation and, when elated, a wit, bounded into my office with the sole intention of discussing the concert and expressing his gratitude to the artists. On leaving, he added, ‘What a delightful surprise to find that Sir Ernst, a world-class art historian, had at least one other string to his bow!’

Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.