“When I was 10, I heard Genesis’ Wind And Wuthering and I thought it was fantastic.” When Amanda Lehmann was a little girl, she’d hear her father playing violin, just for fun. Living in the seaside resort of Seaford in Sussex, classical music was the soundtrack in the family house and she, her older sister Jo and their mother were all appreciators. Although Victor Lehmann would perform small shows, he’d not pursued music vocationally; he was a teacher, of maths, English and, later, liberal studies.
“He wanted to go to music college,” Lehmann explains, one overcast August morning over Zoom, “but he didn’t in the end. For him, there was always a regret that he didn’t take it to a professional level, because his heart was in it.”
Victor is…
