Hello to all the piano experts around the world! Some weeks ago
I was happy to buy a unique self-playing piano from an auction in
a small German town. Meanwhile, I found out that this instrument
seems to be quite unique. None of the experts which I could ask ever
saw an instrument like this one. I will give you a short description:
It's a piece of furniture in the so-called "historicism" style
(between 1870 and 1890). It's a very well-manufactured table,
94 x 51 x 78 cm (breadth x depth x height). Inside this table there
is hidden a hand-cranked cylinder-driven piano with chromatic scale,
2-1/2 octaves, 18 notes from g to c, each note double stringed.
It plays 12 different melodies.
The table has a shellac finish. There is no signature on or inside
the instrument. The only information, inside the table, says "Patent
No. 2239".
I did some research with the German patent authorities concerning this
patent number and it turned out that this patent was filed definitely
before 1877 (when the first all-German patent law took effect).
Before 1877 the patents were not centralized, and were filed in the
different German states and districts. To get original information
about these patents one has to know in which state (or better, the
district or town) the patent was filed.
From the overall impression and concerning the automatic music patent
information, I guess that the instrument was built around 1880, maybe
in Germany -- Thuringia (Thueringen) or Saxonia (Sachsen) -- or close
to the German border in Bohemia.
I sent some pictures to the editor, showing the instrument and some
details of it. I would be happy to get any piece of information which
could help me to identify the instrument more precisely. If necessary
I could provide more pictures.
Thank you for your help!
Christian Greinacher
[ I'll place the pictures and this article at the MMD Pictures site,
[ http://mmd.foxtail.com/Pictures/ -- Robbie
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