Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 25 N. 24

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
28
REVIEW
Dealers—Have you seen the.
Art in . .
Piano Construction
IflPROVED APOLLO HARP ?
Now admitted to be
It now produces
" THE KING OF HARPS."
Seventy-two Chords.
THE. . .
is clearly evidenced in
Story & Clark
PIANOS. They are in advance in poiat «|
tonal effect and case architecture
STORY &. CLARK ;
Factories. Chicago
Stock for Christmas is not complete without it-
F. B. BURNS
: : : MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF : : :
nanufactured by FLAGG MANUFACTURING COHPANY,
110 Lincoln Street, Boston, flass.
New York Office and Salesrooms, 419 Broadway, FRANK SCRIBNER, Manager.
"T HE
PIANO SCARFS
and COVERS . .
95 Fifth Avenue, New York
Will be pleased to send goods on selection at any time.
PAINTER & EWING
CRITERION"
PRONOUNCED BY MUSICAL AND MECHANICAL EXPERTS
"The World's Best Husic Box,"
1105-1107 Spring Garden
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
With an unlimited supply of fluslc at trifling cost.
Combines all the desirable improvements of instruments of
this kind, and besides, possesses many original and valuable
features. Suits the solemnity of the hour of prayer and the
mirth of the ballroom.
THE ARMSTRONG CO.
Music Typographers A Printers
Hechanically, it is faultless.
Musically, the highest achievement of its kind.
In appearance, an ornament anywhere.
71O SANSOM ST.
FRANK L. ARMSTIJONG
MANAGER
An unselfish companion that caters to your every mood untir-
ingly. It is never out of tune, and being simple and strong in
construction, is not apt to be troublesome. The music is ob-
tained from highly tempered steel combs, and each melody is
stamped on metal tune discs, which are practically indestructi-
ble. Our arrangements of music are as near perfection as the
greatest skill and unlimitedj experience can make them in
mechanical instruments.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS
Bishop & Imirie
M. J. PAILLARD & CO.,
680 Broadway,
-
.
.
.
N E W
Philadelphia, Penna.
Httorne^s anb Solicitors
YORK.
6O5 and 607 Seventh St.,
WASHINGTON, D. O.
Easjj to Play
WILLIAM TCNK & BBO.,
Easy to Bug
Manufacturers, Importers and Jobbers of
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE,
26 WARREN
STREET,
8 * . Broadway and Church St.,
110 & 112
East 13th
Street
ALFRED
DOLGE
& SON
NEW YORK
NEW YORK
WHITE, SON COMPANY.
Manufacturers and Dealers in
Piano and Organ Leathers,
14» & 151 Summer Street,
BOSTON, MASS.
HOGGSON & PETTIS MANUFACTURING CO.
(MAN STOP KNOBS AND STEMS,
. « ~ VVWVVVVVW
150*Uverpool Street,
E. Boston, Mass., U. 5. A.
New York Office
317 Broadway.
A
LL ORDERS FILLED
THROUGH DEALERS
SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
COLUMBIA ZITHER. MADE IN FIVE 5TYLE3.
Phonoharp,
Manufacturers American Harp
of the
and Toy Zithers.
i
1*4 AND 6 6 COURT STREET,
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
JOHN PIKE,
Dealer in
Pianos, Organs and Furniture,
301 A 303 Susquehanna Avenue,
PHILADELPHIA.
RETTBERQ & LANQE,
MANUFACTURERS OK
Banjos, Drums, TamDourines. etc
FACTORY:
115-21 East 13th St., New York.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Organs flade to Sing.
cost but little, yet render the most attrac-
tive music for opera or church.
THE REMARKABLE DISCOVERY MADE BY A FA-
Mr. Berliner's first conception of the
MOUS INVENTOR CHOIRS CAN NOW
idea
of making an instrument produce
BE DISPENSED WITH.
speech of itself, instead of reproducing
Now that machines have been made to that of persons, was due to the fact, so he
repeat articulate speech, as the phonograph avers, that the mode of vocalization in the
and gramophone, the next wonder which human body can be almost entirely coun-
has been announced as a scientific dis- terfeited by mechanism, and that it oc-
covery by an eminent inventor is that, by curred to him that it would be a useful
means of a simple machine, the dumb can thing to apply the principles of human
be made to speak, and the organs of our vocalization so that the expensive choirs
churches and concert halls deliver orations, of churches could be obviated by machin-
songs and operas as if they were intelligent ery. That he has produced by machinery
human beings. It is not a reproduction of such speech, in other words, that he has
something which has come from the mouth "made an organ talk," he asserts is true,
of a human being—it is applying to a per- and that the experiments, while yet in
son a part of an organ and combining the their infancy, show conclusively that the
properties of the two in such a way that completion of his apparatus is but a matter
the organ is governed entirely by the in- of time and study of the human voice.
telligence of a man, yet, though he says
The method employed by Mr. Berliner
nothing, from the instrument will come the in his experiment was extremely simple.
sound as if he were speaking, only in vol- Regarding the organ and body, it will be
ume and tone, the sound being that given remembered that the lungs of a person act
by the instrument.
as a pair of bellows, that the windpipe is
In other words, the miracle of the Bible the organ through which the air is pumped
will be performed in a simple way by sci- and that the vocal chords give the sound
ence, and just as the eyes of the blind have pitch, the words being formed by the
been opened by the oculist's knife in cut- movement of the tongue, teeth and lips
ting cataract, or the deaf made to hear combined. Now, the sound of a tone as
by means of the dentaphone, so now it comes out of an organ pipe is similar
there comes into the use of man an inven- to that given up by the human windpipe
tion which will supply the wanting sounds before the words have been articulated by
and enable him to converse with articulated the mouth. Hence, Mr. Berliner reasoned,
speech. And the huge power of the organ if this pipe sound of the organ could be
or the siren on the shore can be converted conveyed to the mouth, just back in the
into songs that will fill a city or choirs that throat, and articulated properly by the
right motions of the lips, tongue and
teeth, the organ could be made to talk.
With a bit of rubber tubing, which was
placed with one end in a pair of bellows
and the other at the back of the mouth, he
found that by simply giving to the mouth
the motions it would use in uttering cer-
tain words the correct sound was produced
on the volume of air coming out of the
tube in the mouth, just as it would have
been made by the mouth, in speaking
with air from the windpipe. Though not
a sound was uttered by his own mouth,
which dumbly went through the panto-
mime motions used in articulation, there
were words spoken by the vibrations just
as if they were done in the ordinary way
—only, of course, as there was no use of
the vocal chords which give the varying
pitch, the sound was all in the same key.
The use in church choirs would be a
great feature of the service. Mr. Berliner
suggests that for a choir there ought to be
four men, each one articulating from a dif-
ferent tube representing different pitches
or different voices, such as bass, tenor, so-
prano and contralto. Thus all the varying
shades of music could be cheaply produced
at a third of the present expense.
But the chief benefit to humanity will
be the use to which the dumb can put
this new invention. The dumb are able
to move the lips in the motions used in
speaking, though they cannot utter a
sound. Now, if the sound be brought
into the back of the mouth, forced out
and properly articulated by the teeth,
Gain Knowledge
Of the innards" of a piano by a little reading. You may have
been a dealer for many years, yon may have been a tnner for a
like period, you may have played a little—maybe more; bnt is
it not well to get a little more practical knowledge?
Some-
thing to bank on—an authority on all matters relating to tun-
ing, repairing, toning and regulating, scientific instructions—
everything? "Written by that eminent authority, Daniel Spillane.
The cost is only a trifle—a dollar.
The book is illustrated,
cloth bound, over a hundred pages- It is called " The Piano."
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Publisher, 3 East 14th Street, New York.

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