In Tuesday’s (7/28) Boston Globe, Jeremy Eichler reports, “Everett ‘Vic’ Firth, the celebrated principal timpanist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1956 to 2002 who also started a successful percussion equipment company, died on Sunday in his Boston home at the age of 85. The cause was pancreatic cancer…. Firth, who first joined the BSO in 1952 … enjoyed wide renown among the city’s musical public. At the time of his retirement in 2002, Boston Pops conductor Keith Lockhart called him ‘the greatest timpanist in the world’ and then-music director Seiji Ozawa told the Globe ‘Vic puts his timpani into the very core of the musical pulse, and that affects everything else that happens in the orchestra.’ ” Born in Winchester, Mass., and raised in Maine, Firth “early on became dissatisfied with the quality of the available drumsticks and began manufacturing his own.… In 2002, the Globe described Vic Firth Inc. as ‘the leading percussion-equipment company in the world.’ At that time, it was producing 100,000 pairs of drumsticks each week out of a factory based in Maine. In 2010, Vic Firth Inc. partnered with Zildjian, the Norwell-based percussion equipment company.” Firth is survived by his wife, Olga, and two daughters.

Posted July 29, 2015