Those of use who are well-trained in Autism and have worked for years with this population can spot the attributes in a second, and in all likelihood, Tom was.
I so wish Blind Tom would have lived long enough to make some actual recordings so we could have had his amazing abilities on record forever. If I could choose to go back in time to see some of the great musicians of the past, he would be one of my top choices, along with Art Tatum and Charlie Parker.
@ChiTown7721 I'm afraid he wouldn't have benefited either way. He was held in "legal" slavery before and well after the Civil War. The Bethunes, his owners (managers in "legal" terms), controlled virtually 100% of his profits aside from expenses in court battles, while he and his biological family lived and died penniless...
Shortly after his gift was discovered, he was eventually separated from his family indefinitely.
There are tons of great Composers that were forgotten who's music was just as great.....Only because they didn't grow up in the right circumstance........Only after there death will they be discovered.......
@didjryan Hi. Thanks for your polite answer. My comment wasn't all that polite I realise now. Sorry. Autism didn't exist until the 1930's. I believe that it actually didn't exist although some will argue that it wasn't 'discovered' or given a name until then. That must mean that he wasn't diagnosed until after his death. diagnosing a dead person with autism is speculation to say the least. Why does anyone say that he has autism? On what grounds?
@SassorMcJames Ok, it's an historical anachronism to call him "autistic" and yes historical diagnosis are a imperfect science. I hesitate to use the words his 19th century contemporaries used to describe him because they were so cruel and brutal. As for evidence of his 'autism', get "The Ballad of Blind Tom" out from the library and decide for yourself.
This is just amazing and powerful, full stop. Thank you.
HerAeolianHarp 2 weeks ago
Those of use who are well-trained in Autism and have worked for years with this population can spot the attributes in a second, and in all likelihood, Tom was.
depplelk 3 months ago
I so wish Blind Tom would have lived long enough to make some actual recordings so we could have had his amazing abilities on record forever. If I could choose to go back in time to see some of the great musicians of the past, he would be one of my top choices, along with Art Tatum and Charlie Parker.
ChiTown7721 1 year ago
@ChiTown7721 I'm afraid he wouldn't have benefited either way. He was held in "legal" slavery before and well after the Civil War. The Bethunes, his owners (managers in "legal" terms), controlled virtually 100% of his profits aside from expenses in court battles, while he and his biological family lived and died penniless...
Shortly after his gift was discovered, he was eventually separated from his family indefinitely.
MicroWonders 2 weeks ago
There are tons of great Composers that were forgotten who's music was just as great.....Only because they didn't grow up in the right circumstance........Only after there death will they be discovered.......
SteinwayMan13 1 year ago
How ridiiculous to say he has autism!
SassorMcJames 1 year ago
@SassorMcJames Why ridiculous? You think he wasn't?
didjryan 1 year ago
@didjryan Hi. Thanks for your polite answer. My comment wasn't all that polite I realise now. Sorry. Autism didn't exist until the 1930's. I believe that it actually didn't exist although some will argue that it wasn't 'discovered' or given a name until then. That must mean that he wasn't diagnosed until after his death. diagnosing a dead person with autism is speculation to say the least. Why does anyone say that he has autism? On what grounds?
SassorMcJames 1 year ago
@SassorMcJames Ok, it's an historical anachronism to call him "autistic" and yes historical diagnosis are a imperfect science. I hesitate to use the words his 19th century contemporaries used to describe him because they were so cruel and brutal. As for evidence of his 'autism', get "The Ballad of Blind Tom" out from the library and decide for yourself.
didjryan 1 year ago
@SassorMcJames Blind Tom was a savant. Look it up.
ZebrasRuleTheWorld01 5 months ago
@SassorMcJames whats wrong with autism?
DritonGusia 4 months ago
Blind Tom, you are one of my biggest inspirations.
redeyedol 1 year ago 7
I enjoyed this very much and his music was beautiful. Thank you.
genia106 2 years ago 4
Thank you! Have just ordered both book & CD. Cheers, etc. Doug --
CurzonRoad 2 years ago
Douglasio,
Thank you so much for sharing. I enjoyed his music very much and his story was so impressive. Merci.
genia106 2 years ago 3
This was very interesting. Thank you for posting this.
-------Ellen
Shabannie 2 years ago 3
this is awesome; thanks so much for posting. all your post\s are wonderful.
candyekane 2 years ago 2
Absolutely amazing .This is the first time I'm hearing about him.
malfini1 2 years ago 2
I saw a piece about him on A.P.T., I didn't realize that he was that gifted.
savida34e 2 years ago