Hi everybody -- Frank Metzger here. I really could use some help from
one (or more) of you who is a musician.
We have to restore a tiny, very valuable barrilet musical movement
(part of a tiny automaton). It has (had) only five teeth. There
are only two teeth left -- the highest note and the next lower note.
On my Strobotuner they are
1. Highest: G
2. Next lower: C
The question is: What is the possible tuning of the other three teeth?
Here are the clues:
1. They are all heavier than the C therefore probably lower.
2. Usually, music on movements like this was in a major key.
3. Usually, movements like this played a simple country type dance
tune or song. The automation is a woman playing a Vielle (Hurdy Gurdy)
and a man dancing to the tune.
4. We have the intact broken off vibrating part of the lowest tooth.
We clamped it into a pin vice (thereby raising the note somewhat) and
got a F. So its possible that the lowest note was perhaps F# or G.
I can make the teeth but am unsure about the tuning. I sure would
appreciate it if some of you who understand music much better than
I do would give this problem some thought and recommend one or more
scales I could try. Thanks a lot !
Frank Metzger
[ Frank, could you make a replica template from the barrel, from which
[ we could determine the melody pattern? Wrap a strip of adding
[ machine paper around the barrel and gently press it into the pins.
[ Be sure to indicate the beginning and end. (Piano rolls sound
[ pretty odd when played backwards and/or swapped bass-to-treble!)
[
[ My guess is (descending) G, C, B, A, G, wherein the high G serves
[ for ornamentation, like the shorter 5th string on a 5-string banjo.
[ This scale would sound okay (but not very accurate) for a song like
[ "The Bear Went Over the Mountain". :-) -- Robbie
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