> From: avery@hyperlinx.net.geentroep (Avery Kravitz)
> To: rolls@foxtail.com
> Date: Wed, 25 Dec 2002 02:38:56 -0500
> Subject: interested in trumpet and clarinet
>
> Hello, I am a professional musician and would like to rig up
> a trumpet or clarinet to play using artificial lips. Could you
> help me on this?
Avery, see the MMDigest articles about the self-playing tuba,
indexed at http://mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/KWIC/T/tuba.html
At http://mmd.foxtail.com/Pictures/ are descriptive articles with
photos about the "World's First Self-Playing Tuba" and "Self-Playing
Tuba in Cologne".
The robot is now playing at "Papa Joe's Klimperkasten" in Cologne;
visit the web site at http://www.papajoes.de/welcome.html
A CD is offered for sale somewhere at the web site.
Here's a short description in English from the web site:
Papa Joe's 'Klimperkasten' Biersalon, a well-known pub in Cologne for
the past 22 years, is a Roaring Twenties style bar which includes
Joseph "Papa Joe" Buschmann's unique collection of film projectors,
illusion- and game-machines and automatic musical instruments from the
'twenties which play hourly. Papa Joe's sons, restaurateur Marcus
Buschmann and engineer Michael Buschmann, have developed the first
self-playing tuba in the world which now performs at 'Klimperkasten'.
('Klimperkasten' is slang for a jangling out-of-tune piano.)
Two complete 'orchestras' are now playing and available for rent. The
first instrument built (das Sousaphonorchester) features accordion and
a three-valve Sousaphone, with the puppets dressed as women. The second
instrument built (das Tubaorchester) features a four-valve upright tuba,
and the two puppets are dressed as men.
I heard both instruments play last summer and I talked with the inventor.
The tube player doesn't use lips on the mouthpiece; rather, the exciter
device (a high-speed pneumatic valve) is located elsewhere within the
life-size puppet figure. A hard plastic pipe of about 1/2" diameter
connects the exciter to the tuba mouthpiece. The range of notes I heard
was about 1-1/2 octaves, playing from soft to loud. The tone makes me
think of a tuba fitted with a mouthpiece from a bass saxophone.
I don't know of a technical description published anywhere. Marcus
Buschmann told me that they have invested over 10,000 man-hours in its
development and they hope to build several tuba-accordion puppets for
leasing before any competition develops, so they haven't filed a patent
application and description; the technical details remain a secret.
Best regards and Happy Holidays!
Robbie Rhodes
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