(b Ashbridge, 2 Feb 1944). English conductor. He was an organ scholar at King's College, Cambridge, and studied with Franco Ferrara in Rome. He first conducted the BBC SO in 1970 and was associate conductor of the NPO from 1973; he gave Strauss's Capriccio at Glyndebourne the same year. In 1975 he was appointed musical director of the Toronto SO. He became chief conductor of the BBCSO and music director at Glyndebourne in 1989.
Andrew Jackson Davis (11 August 1826 – January 13, 1910), American Spiritualist, was born at Blooming Grove, New York.
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He had little education, though probably much more than he and his friends pretended. In 1843 he heard lectures in Poughkeepsie on animal magnetism, as the phenomena of hypnotism was then termed, and found that he had remarkable clairvoyant powers. In the following year he had, he said, spiritual messages telling him of his life work.
For the next three years (1844–1847) he practised magnetic healing with much success; and in 1847 he published The Principles of Nature, Her Divine Revelations, and a Voice to Mankind, which in 1845 he had dictated while in a trance to his scribe, William Fishbough. He lectured with little success and returned to writing (or dictating ) books, publishing about 30 in all including:
Davis was much influenced by Swedenborg and by the Shakers, who reprinted his panegyric praising Ann Lee in the official work, Sketch of Shakers and Shakerism (1884).
Edgar Allan Poe was inspired by Davis, whose lectures on mesmerism he had attended, in the writing of "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" (1845).
Davis in turn directly influenced self-proclaimed psychic Edgar Cayce (1877–1945) who adopted "trance diagnosis" and similar activities with few modifications from Davis's example.[citation needed] In fact, Davis's complete library is now housed within the Edgar Cayce Library.[1]
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