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The era of the self-playing or automatic piano embraced the first
three decades of the 20th century. Piano-playing cabinets were
followed by the pneumatic player-piano, soon to be known the world
over by the name of the leading American make - Pianola. There were
many other makes, of course, with names like Kastonome, Triumph,
Pistonola, Claviola, Autoplayer and Apollo. Invented almost
simultaneously in Germany and America, player pianos became the
most sought-after addition to the family home and the huge industry
that built them and made their perforated paper music rolls became
both important and wealthy. This book, written by a world-renowned
authority on mechanical music and its instruments, relates the
development of the automatic piano from the spring-powered
dulcimer-playing musical clocks of the 16th century through the
once-popular barrel-playing pianos and street pianos to the great
era of the Reproducing Piano that could bring a famous artist's
interpretation of a musical classic into your own drawing-room. The
inventors, their perpetual quest for perfection, and their
successes and failures are related in this new and
fully-illustrated history. Just how the automatic piano works is
described in both words and the author's own clear line-drawings,
together with 603 b/w and 43 full colour photos. Also, a guide to
servicing, maintaining, and playing player pianos and the
magnificent Aeolian Orchestrelle roll-playing reed organ is
included. Illustrated appendices include a list of makers,
brand-names, and a modern-day valuation guide.
The worldwide interest in automatic organs is larger now than ever
before. From delicate and musically sublime little organs contained
in musical clocks of the type Mozart and Haydn composed music for,
through to enormous and loud dancehall and street organs, the genre
exists to please everybody and to suit all tastes. This
comprehensive, yet delightful and easy-to-read, reference unlocks
the mysteries of mechanical versions of the King of Instruments and
its smaller counterparts. 79 color and 538 black and white photos
display examples from 18 chapters and six Appendices that specify
how automatic pipe organs work, Italian water garden organs, barrel
organs, orchestrions, and street and showground organs, as well as
automatic organs of the 21st century and more. The list of makers,
distributors, and inventors the world over has never been available
before. Now musicians, instrument collectors, owners, museums, and
grateful audiences can explore the how, where, and why of these
charming entertainers. The valuation and price guide includes a
thoughtful discussion of the market and its variables.
Musical boxes have been made by master artisans since the 1700s,
playing classical music, hymns, operatic arias and popular tunes by
means of discs or cylinders. The industry started in Europe,
flourishing in Switzerland, Germany, and Great Britain, finally
crossing the Atlantic to America, before ending in the early 20th
century. this book is the definitive reference for anyone
interested in the history of music, mechanical music, and musical
technology, with complete diagrams of the various types of
mechanical movements used over the centuries, indexes of
manufacturers, box styles, and tune sheets, complete American and
British patent lists, tips on maintaining, repairing, and
purchasing boxes, and a price guide. Many of the loveliest musical
boxes ever crafted are illustrated in full color in this book, with
hundreds more black and white photographs showing their mechanical
workings. Eighty detailed diagrams explaining their functions help
collectors use, maintain and repair the boxes in their collections.
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