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"We Have to Be Ambitious" Portrait - Lewis Surdam
Visions of Veritas Aftermath of a Drug Bust
Entente Ahead? Six-Million-Dollar Man
People in the News The Undergraduate -Tying the Knot
Brevia Famous Friends
Sports

Lewis Surdam. Photograph by Stu Rosner.
Harvard Portrait

Thanks to a modest inheritance, head piano technician Lewis Surdam spent 10 years climbing mountains before becoming a piano tuner. In fact, he made the first ascent, in one 30-hour push, of the highest peak in Canada's Northwest Territories. Having dubbed it Mount Nirvana, Surdam might seem to have standards too lofty to remain happy in his now primarily administrative career. But he also enjoys life's humbler pleasures. "There is a satisfaction in taking an instrument and getting it back into shape," he says. "And then to hear it played...." Surdam began as a harpsichord tuner: as a baroque flute player, he often performed with harpsichords, which, he says, "go out of tune hourly." After studying at Boston's North Bennet Street School, he joined Harvard's piano technical shop in 1980. Five years later, as head of the department, he inventoried the Faculty of Arts and Science's collection-more than 200 pianos, half of them Steinways. Surdam feels very lucky: he and his staff have a large shop and can perform major repairs in-house at a fraction of the usual cost. And he still has his fair share of adventures. Some years ago, after the music department had purchased a German Steinway, the local game warden refused to allow the piano off the dock until he received confirmation that the keyboard's ivory came from a donor elephant who had died of natural causes. With documentation provided, the piano arrived two weeks late, filled with the warehouse's frosty air, but perfectly in tune. Says Surdam: "We were impressed."


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