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Notes of Deception: How a Quartet American Musicians Outwitted the KGB
Coles
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Notes of Deception: How a Quartet American Musicians Outwitted the KGB in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $43.99

Coles
Notes of Deception: How a Quartet American Musicians Outwitted the KGB in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $43.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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How a Quartet of American Musicians Outwitted the KGB – The Untold History of a Daring Cold War Spy Mission
In 1985, while the United States engaged in a battle of nuclear brinkmanship, four Americans landed in Moscow on a mission to smuggle secret information in and out using music as their cipher. Under the watchful eye of the KGB, the group faced countless challenges and risks—because they weren’t trained in espionage. In fact, they were musicians with the New England-based Yiddish-music focused Klezmer Conservatory Band (KCB).
Now, the quartet’s saxophonist, Merryl Goldberg, together with Vince Houghton, the Director of the National Security Agency’s National Cryptologic Museum, tell the harrowing story of how Goldberg devised an ingenious plan to encode the intelligence within the group’s sheet music.
FEATURED ON:
People.com The Mark Thompson Show Now I’ve Heard Everything A Way with Words
Includes 16 pages of archival photos
How a Quartet of American Musicians Outwitted the KGB – The Untold History of a Daring Cold War Spy Mission
In 1985, while the United States engaged in a battle of nuclear brinkmanship, four Americans landed in Moscow on a mission to smuggle secret information in and out using music as their cipher. Under the watchful eye of the KGB, the group faced countless challenges and risks—because they weren’t trained in espionage. In fact, they were musicians with the New England-based Yiddish-music focused Klezmer Conservatory Band (KCB).
Now, the quartet’s saxophonist, Merryl Goldberg, together with Vince Houghton, the Director of the National Security Agency’s National Cryptologic Museum, tell the harrowing story of how Goldberg devised an ingenious plan to encode the intelligence within the group’s sheet music.
FEATURED ON:
People.com The Mark Thompson Show Now I’ve Heard Everything A Way with Words
Includes 16 pages of archival photos



















