Music Trade Review

Issue: 1895 Vol. 21 N. 2

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
Autoharp Progress.
Color Music the Latest,
HOW ALFRED DOLCE & SON HAVE ADVANCED
AND IMPROVED THE AUTOHARP, UNTIL
ZIMMERMAN, ITS INVENTOR, SCARCELY
KNEW IT.
ORGAN WHOSE MELODY IS FLASHED IN COLOR
HEN the Autoharp with all"its inter-
ests, passed into the hands of Alfred
Dolge & Son, some two years ago, it was a
successful musical novelty. No one at that
time looked upon the Autoharp as an in-
strument which had a great future as a
musical instrument. Immediately upon
the transfer of the manufacturing plant to
Dolgeville, experiments were made to per-
fect the Autoharp. A complete chromatic
scale correctly drawn, a body on the lines
of the most approved piano construction, a
new and ingenious action, resulted in the
Concert Autoharp. This instrument has
awakened the interest of our leading musi-
cians, and the great artist and composer,
Xavier Scharwenka, has composed several
selections for it.
Recently Mr. Aldis J. Gery, when on his
tour with Gilmore's Band, called upon Mr.
Zimmerman, in Philadelphia, and played
the Concert Autoharp. The inventor
scarcely recognized this perfect instru-
ment, as the "Autoharp idea" had been
developed so far beyond his original in-
vention.
While the Concert Autoharp was being
perfected, however, they have as persist-
ently worked for the improvement of all
their then existing styles, and the introduc-
tion of new ones. They have just com-
pleted, and have now ready for the market,
a new style (which we illustrate herewith)
W
called the 2^3. This instrument is sure to
create a healthy rivalry between the popu-
lar style 2^4 and itself. It is a little longer
and wider than the 2 ^ , giving it more
tone. It has twenty-eight strings (five
more than the 2^), and seven bars, pro-
ducing the following seven chords: C, F
and B flat major, C and F seventh, and A
and D minor. This allows complete modu-
lation with a minor key, and will certainly
meet with favor. The retail price of this
style, too, is just right—$7.50—half way
between the 2% and the desirable $3.
They are going to push this good style, be-
cause they know it will suit the public.
They have in preparation five or six other
styles which will be noticed when they are
produced.
TONES ON A SCREEN.
AN sounds be translated into color,
and can the musical tones that now
exist solely for the ear be transformed un-
til they appeal definitely to the eye as well?
That is the modern and also an old ques-
tion,which is being answered in the affirma-
tive by the devotees of what is known as
"color music."
The art has suddenly become a serious
one, and a wealthy artist named Rivington,
who lives in London, has recently invented
and put into operation, at a cost of nearly
$10,000, a "color organ," by means of
which, as certain notes are struck, the
melody is reproduced in a bewildering suc-
cession of color tones and combinations on
a screen, at the same instant they are
heard by the ear.
At a preliminary "recital" in St. James'
Hall the other day, the exquisite delicacy
of the mechanism of this new instrument
was tested, and its responsiveness was
found to be wholly adequate. Chopin's
preludes were played, and the screen
showed a bewildering succession of
rhythmical waves of color, passing so rap-
idly that it was hard for the eye to take
them all in, ranging from beginning to end
of the spectrum, and flashing not only the
intermediate tones, half tones and quarter
tones of color, but also innumerable lovely
combinations which hitherto had never
suggested themselves to the imagination,
but were the inevitable lesults of a har-
mony that worked the same for the eye as
for the ear.
Hardly possible, and more within the
domain of fairyland than the regions of
actual science, seems this art of "color
music," but it is certain that this much
was actually accomplished; that unending
combinations of. color were produced by
the mechanical principles that govern the
diatonic scale and musical octaves.
What the exact details of this instrument
may be, and just how each color is pro-
duced, Mr. Rivington will not divulge. All
that is known is that the new "color or-
gan" is played upon a keyboard which is
almost the exact counterpart of that used
for a piano, and that whenever a note is
struck its color appears upon the screen.
Chords show combinations of tints that are
only comparable to harmonic combinations
of musical notes, middle C corresponding,
for example, to the low red of the spec-
trum. The other C's of the keyboard,when
struck, show yet other reds, toning per-
fectly.
Without carrying the description further,
it may thus readily be seen how the colors
grade, shade and tone, and how the sharp-
ening of a piano note or its flattering
makes the suggestion of a change in color
hardly to be expressed with a painter's
brush, yet quite perceptible to the visual
senses.
This instrument has an especial fascina-
tion, for the reason that it is the first in the
world to show a definite connection be-
C
tween sound and color. It was the belief
of one of the ancient schools of philosophy,
at least, that these two perceptions came
closely together, and that the borderland
between them was narrow and readily to be
bridged. There has existed, at all events,
among some few people a mysterious fac-
ulty of "color hearing.' This was first
brought to notice comparatively recently
in the experience of Dr. Nussbaumer.
For Nussbaumer, each sound had its
peculiar color—this word corresponding to
red, this note to blue, this to yellow and
this to green. While a child he was strik-
ing in his play a fork against a glass. As
he heard the sound an impression of a color
flashed quickly into his mind, varying in
tint with the energy with which he struck
the glass, and after stopping his ears tight-
ly he could divine merely by his eyes just
how loudly the glass had sounded.
Other men may be instanced to whose
organs of sight the waves of sound were in
some way perceptible. There was a youth
of Zurich recently to whom musical notes
presented themselves in shades and tints,
high-pitched sounds showing clear and
brilliantly to the sight and low ones dully
and somberly. M. Pedrono, an opthal-
mologist of Nantes, had a friend, whose
name has not been recorded but whose
peculiarity along these lines was very
marked. Several young fellows were talk-
ing in his presence one day, and a joking
expression, "That's as fine as a yellow
dog," being popular in their set, they ap-
plied it to a man who was heard shouting
across the street. The gentleman, who
heard in color, immediately lifted himself
up in response.
"No," he said, "his voice is not yellow;
it is pure red."
When pressed for an explanation, he
answered quite simply that he could see
the color of the voices. Medical men ex-
amined him, and found that his hearing,
his sight and his general health were all
perfect. In explaining the phenomenon
they agreed that it was that his chromatic
sensitiveness was so sharp that the lumin-
ous impression was made before the sonor-
ous one, for they found that before he
could judge of the quality and intensity of
a sound he had seen it and knew its color.
Most interesting of all, there was no sen-
sation of the eye at times. When his eyes
were shut and bandaged sounds conveyed
direct color impressions to his mind.
When his eyes were opened and looking
directly at the sonorous body the sound ap-
peared in its color, according to his state-
ment, as near as possible to the body itself.
Should a piano be played, the color was
over the keys. In the case of a guitar it
hung on the vibrating strings, and as re-
gards singing, points of color came and
went in rapid succession directly over the
vocalists' heads.
In the light of history Rivington's in-
vention has not that newness and novelty
it would seem to have. So far back as
1734 Father Castel, a French Jesuit, con-
structed a model of a "color harpsichord."
That this ingenious priest died before his
device was quite perfected does not destroy
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
i6
the originality of his idea nor the priority
of his claim. No details of the construc-
tion of his instrument have come down to
the present day, but so far as can be
learned, it very much resembles Riving-
ton's "color organ."
In brief, his theories were these: First,
That the light of the sun contains seven
different colors; second, that these colors
are formed by the rays experiencing differ-
ent refractions, and the red is that which is
the least broken or refracted, the next
orange, then yellow, green, blue, indigo
and violet; third, that these different col-
ored rays are afteiward unalterable; fourth,
that the spaces occupied by the several col-
ored rays correspond to the length of the
chords that sound the seven notes of the
diatonic scale of music.
Summed up, the principles of Father
Castel's harpsichord were: That there were
seven primary colors, and that there are
seven intervals in a musical octave in the
spectrum, the space occupied correspond-
ing to the divisions of the monochord.
The Breitkopf & Hartel Protest.
'THE General Appraisers of the Treasury
1
Department, Washington, D. C , have
recently rendered the following decisions,
that will be of interest to the music trades:
In the matter of the protest of Breitkopf
& Hartel against the decision of the Col-
lector of Customs at New York, as to the
rate and amount of duties chargeable on
ruled music paper, General Appraiser Wil-
kinson has decided as follows:
The merchandise is ruled music paper.
It was assessed for duty at 25 per cent.,
under paragraph 311, Act of 1894, and is
claimed to be dutiable as writing paper at
20 per cent., under paragraph 310. We
find that the merchandise is not commer-
cially known as writing paper, and overrule
the protest.
General Appraiser Wilkinson has also
overruled the protest of Howard W. Foote
& Co., against the decision of the Col-
lector of Customs at Chicago, as to the rate
and amount of duties chargeable on certain
musical merchandise imported by that firm
in April last. The decision is as follows:
The merchandise consists of violin resins
and flute swabs, assessed for duty under
Act of August, 1894, at 20 per cent., under
section 3, and 35 percent, under paragraph
314, respectively, and claimed to be duti-
able at 10 per cent, under paragraph 16^,
and 25 per cent, under paragraph 326*4, re-
spectively.
Paragraph 16 Y?, provides only
for drugs. We find that violin resins are
not drugs. The flute swabs are swabs or
brushes used for cleansing flutes. We find
that they are not musical instruments or
parts thereof. The protest is overruled.
THE
'Washburn.
A Car Load of McCammon's.
N
ICHOLS BROS., of Denver, Col.,
know a good tiling when they see it.
They have placed with Mr. Geo. C. Adams
an order for a carload of McCammon pianos
for immediate shipment. Business in Colo-
rado seems to be on the increase, with pros-
pects of good fall trade.
Bought a Kranich & Bach.
X TOTWITHSTANDING the extreme
| \ j hot weather, the force of clerks at Col.
Guest's have had all the wholesale orders
they could possibly fill; besides, their retail
trade has been the very best with the
Checkering, Gabler, Kranich & Bach pianos.
A very prominent farmer in Illinois re-
cently had an experience in purchasing a
piano worthy of note on account of the
lesson it teaches. At least fifteen repre-
sentatives of piano houses, Chicago in-
cluded, called on the farmer. He enter-
tained twelve of them at dinner at one
time, and seven remained all night at
another date.
The farmer didn't com-
plain, neither did he saw wood. He simply
took notes as to the relative merits of the
different pianos. A representative of Col.
Guest called on our rural friend and in-
vited him to visit the house in Burlington,
which he did.
After a month of delibera-
tion and consideration he came and pur-
chased a handsome Kranich &.Bach piano.
—Haivkeye, Burlington, la.
Ann Arbor Organs in Australia.
"THE Ann Arbor Organ Co. received by
1
last night's mail a letter from a large
importing firm at Ipswich, Queensland,
Australia, says a Michigan exchange, order-
ing four Ann Arbor organs and enclosing
draft for same. They state in their letter,
"We had a trial shipment of your organs
through a commission house, but prefer to
deal direct with you. We liked the pre-
vious lot we had very well, and should the
present lot turn out as satisfactory, and
times improve here, we hope to do a large
business with you."
This comes as quite
a surprise to the Ann Arbor Organ Co., as
the firm is entirely unknown to them.
They must have been well pleased with
the sample organs bought to send cash in
advance for so long a distance and order
additional instruments. It is pretty good
evidence that the Ann Arbor organ gives
satisfaction. On the same mail another
firm at Sandhurst, Australia, with whom
the organ company has been in correspond-
ence for some time, ordered fourteen or-
gans. Eighteen organs from parties whom
the organ company has never seen is a very
satisfactory order for one mail.
CELEBRATED
STEGER
W
ASH BURN is the name on the cover
of a comprehensive little booklet just
issued by Lyon & Healy. It contains a
few of the many endorsements given by
great artists to the Washburn guitar, of
which Lyon & Healy are sole manufactur-
ers.
Among those who have praised the
excellence of the Washburn guitar are
Emma Eames Story, Jean De Reszke,
Tamagno, Plancon, Nahan Franko and
others.
Story & Clark.
TORY & CLARK are going to have a
remarkable exhibit as well as a novel
advertisement at the Iowa State Fair, to be
held at Des Moines, September 1st to 15th.
They have a large tent which they call the
Story & Clark organ tent, where they will
give a variety of musical entertainments,
having engaged Miss Gertrude Ha)mes and
a number of other well-known artists.
The affair will be conducted under the
management of F.O. Evans, State agent for
Iowa for Story & Clark.
S
The Sound of a Sunbeam.
NE of the most wonderful discoveries
in science that has been made within
the last year or two is the fact that a beam
of light produces sound. A beam of sun-
light is thrown through a lens on a glass
vessel that contains lamp-black, colored silk
or worsted, or other substances. A disk,
having slits or openings cut in it, is made
to revolve swiftly in this beam of light so
as to cut it up, thus making alternate
flashes of Hght and shadow. On putting
the ear to the glass vessel strange sounds
are heard so long as the flashing beam is
falling on the vessel. Recently a more
wonderful discovery has been made. A
beam of sunlight is caused to pass through
a prism so as to produce what is called the
solar spectrum, or rainbow. The disk is
turned and the colored light of the rainbow
is made to break through it. Now place
the ear to the vessel containing the silk,
wool, or other material. As the colored
lights of the spectrum fall upon it sounds
will be given by different parts of the
spectrum, and there will be silence in other
parts. For instance, if the vessel contains
red worsted, and the green light flashes
upon it, loud sounds will be given. Only
feeble sounds will be heard if the red and
blue parts of the rainbow fall upon the ves-
sel, and the other colors make no sound at
all.
Green silk gives sound best in a red
light. Every kind of material gives more
or less sound in different colors, and utters
no sounds in others.
O
PIANOS
M
PATENTED 1892.
are noted for their fine singing quality of
tone and great durability.
The most
profitable Piano fot dealers to handle,
STEGER Factory, Colnmbia Heights.
235 WABASH AVENUE. CHICAGO.

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