In China Court musician was a traditional profession for the blind in China in antiquity. The first musician mentioned in Chinese sources,
Shi Kuang, was a blind performer in the 6th century BC. The Guilds of Blind Musicians and Fortune-Tellers, which were still around in China during the middle of the 20th century, claimed to have existed as far back as 200 BC. More recently, groups of blind buskers have continued to perform in Zuoquan County, and presumably in other areas as well. One of the most popular musical works in China, "
Erquan Yingyue (Moon Reflected in the Second Spring)", was composed in the first half of the 20th century by
Hua Yanjun, better known as "Blind Ah Bing".
In Japan In Japan,
Heike Biwa, a form of narrative music, was invented and spread during the
Kamakura period (1185–1333) by traveling musicians known as
biwa hoshi, who were often blind. These musicians played the
biwa, a kind of lute, and recited stories, of which the most famous was
The Tale of the Heike. The musicians were sometimes known as "blind priests" because they wore robes and shaved their heads, though they were not in fact
Buddhist priests.
Goze were similar communities of visually impaired female
shamisen and
kokyū players who travelled around the country singing songs and begging alms.
Kobzars of Ukraine There is a long tradition of performance by blind minstrels in
Ukraine known as
Kobzarstvo. At least from 1800 to 1930 — and probably well before that as well — the majority of
itinerant musicians in Ukraine were blind. Music was an important part of the culture. Those who could not work at other occupations could be apprenticed to become professional bards, often referred to as
kobzars (both
bandura and
lira players could be referred to by this title). These wandering blind minstrels were divided into two groups—
bandurists, or
kobzars who played
bandura, and
lirnyks, who played the lira, which was a crank-driven
hurdy-gurdy. The
kobzars were an important part of oral tradition in Ukraine. According to the ethnographer P. Zhytetsky,
kobzars were thought to have been initially sighted
Cossacks, who were especially associated with
epic songs, or
dumas. Kononenko states that
lirnyks, on the other hand, were blind church singers organized into guilds who sang religious songs and were often associated with
beggars. By the middle of the 19th century, the two groups had merged; both sang many different types of songs, all were organized into the guilds, and all were blind. , the most famous
kobzar of the 19th century, with his wife. Like the other
kobzars of his day, Veresai was blind. The
kobzars have a central place in the national identity of Ukraine. Folklorist
Izmail Sreznevskyi argued that the initial
Cossack bandurists were actual witnesses of the great battles about which they sang. The image of warrior-bards singing
epics was quite popular, and there became a tradition that the great ancient singers were veterans valorously blinded in combat. This in turn led to the belief that the kobzar tradition had greatly weakened in the 19th century, since the traditional songs were now sung by people who were more like beggars than like warriors. Kononenko points out that there is no factual basis for this image, and her research showed that the minstrel tradition was still very strong and creative up until the 1930s. Others included
Eoghain Ó Cianáin (fl. 1540),
Nicholas Dáll Pierce (fl. 1601),
William fitz Robert Barry (fl. 1615),
Ruaidri Dáll Ó Catháin (died 1653),
Higgins of Tyrawley (fl. 18th century), and
Martin O'Reilly (1829–1904).
Blind organists in Europe There is a long tradition of blind organists, including Louis Braille himself. In the 20th century some of the greatest organists were blind, including the great German Bach scholar and teacher
Helmut Walcha (1907–1991), and a number of prominent French organists and composers for the organ including
Louis Vierne (1870–1937),
Andre Marchal (1894–1980),
Gaston Litaize (1909–1991), and
Jean Langlais (1907–1991), as well as one of the current organists at
Notre Dame de Paris,
Jean-Pierre Leguay (b. 1939). England has also produced brilliant blind organists in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, including
John Stanley (1712-1786),
John Purkis (1781-1849),
George Warne (1792-1868),
William Wolstenholme (1865-1931),
Alfred Hollins (1865-1942) and David A. Liddle (b. 1960), the latter a student of Marchal and who currently enjoys an international performing career. Yet it is a tradition which goes back even further: to 14th-century Italian
Francesco Landini (?–1397) and Spanish baroque master
Antonio de Cabezon (1510–1566). One could argue that even
Johann Sebastian Bach and
George Frederic Handel, who lost their sight late in life but presumably continued to play and compose, should be included in this discussion, along with the great American popular organist
George Wright (1920–1998), who likewise lost his sight late in life but continued to present concerts and make sound recordings until his death. Blind composer
Frances McCollin (1892–1960) won the Clemson Prize from the
American Guild of Organists in 1918. She studied organ with another blind musician,
David Duffield Wood (1838–1910), the organist at Philadelphia's St. Stephen's Episcopal Church for many years.
Blind piano tuners In 19th century France and England, piano tuners were frequently blind. The first blind
piano tuner is thought to be
Claude Montal, who taught himself how to tune a piano while studying at
L'Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles in 1830. At first Montal's teachers were skeptical, doubting that a blind man could actually perform the necessary mechanical tasks. Montal's skill was undeniable, however, and he was soon asked to teach classes in tuning to his fellow students. Eventually, he also overcame public
prejudice, and landed several prestigious jobs as a tuner for professors and professional musicians. Montal's success paved the way for other blind tuners, both in France and in England, where Montal's example and teaching methods were adopted by
Thomas Rhodes Armitage. Today the image of the blind piano tuner is so ingrained that people in England sometimes express surprise when they encounter a piano tuner who can see. An organization of blind piano tuners remains active in Britain.
American country blues Blind musicians have made a significant contribution to American popular music. This is particularly true in
blues,
gospel,
jazz, and other predominantly African American forms – perhaps because discrimination at the time made it more difficult for black blind people to find other employment. In any case, the achievement of blind African-Americans in music is extensive. The first recorded gospel
sanctified barrelhouse piano player,
Arizona Dranes, was blind, as were
Al Hibbler, and
Ray Charles, one of the most important figures in the creation of
soul music.
Art Tatum, commonly cited as the greatest jazz pianist of all time, was also almost blind.
Stevie Wonder, who is blind from birth, has recorded more than thirty U.S. top ten hits and won twenty-two Grammy Awards (the most ever won by a solo artist in history). However, blind black musicians are still most strongly associated with the
country blues. The first successful male country blues performer,
Blind Lemon Jefferson, was blind, as were many other country bluesmen, including
Blind Willie McTell,
Blind Willie Johnson,
Sonny Terry,
Blind Boy Fuller,
Blind Blake and
Reverend Gary Davis. The figure of the blind country bluesman became so iconic that when
Eddie Lang, a sighted jazz guitarist, wanted to choose a black pseudonym for purposes of recording blues records with
Lonnie Johnson, he naturally settled on
Blind Willie Dunn.
Bogus Ben Covington was known for pretending to be blind.
John William Boone, known as "Blind Boone", was an important American pianist and composer of ragtime. == Blind individual musicians in history ==