What is this? Please look!
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- Victor Monarch Special
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What is this? Please look!
I received a call and was asked to repair their phonograph. This is what I found. What is it? Can someone provide a name of someone that might be willing to share some expertise with me? Thanks, Jerry Blais
- penman
- Victor II
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Re: What is this? Please look!
Have you checked with AMICA (Automated Musical Instrument Collectors Assn). This seems right up their alley.
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- Victor Monarch
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Re: What is this? Please look!
European, I'd say 20th C. This technology hung on even into the era of pneumatic instruments with rolls and books. You'd find them in places with little or no electricity. There were still people who'd pin the latest tunes onto barrels into the 50's.
- Wolfe
- Victor V
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Re: What is this? Please look!
I knew a place (restaurant) that had one of these machines in it's waiting area / lobby, 20 odd years ago. You dropped some coins in it and it'd play you a song.
It was neat, drums and woodblocks and everything going. IIRC, it also had a guitar-ish thing in it that plucked or strummed the strings.
It was neat, drums and woodblocks and everything going. IIRC, it also had a guitar-ish thing in it that plucked or strummed the strings.
- Lucius1958
- Victor Monarch
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Re: What is this? Please look!
Definitely a piano-orchestrion: these were very popular in European cafés up into the 20th century....
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- Victor Jr
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Re: What is this? Please look!
It definetely is not a phonograph! It's an orchestrion
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- Victor Monarch
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- FloridaClay
- Victor VI
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Re: What is this? Please look!
A neat machine. These go back to at least the 18th century, although this one I'm guessing is most likely 19th century. The ones with the pinned barrels are usually fairly early. Later Victorian era machines mostly used a train of punched cards or punched paper rolls. (Hugely easier to change the tunes it plays that way.) There are some folks around the country who specialize in restoring them. The biggest US groups that collect these are AMICA, as mentioned earlier in this thread, and MBSI (Musical Box Society International). If you can find the name of the maker somewhere on the machine, you might be able to find info about them in Q. David Bowers "Encyclopedia of Automatic Musical Instruments," something of the "Bible" of mechanical music.
Clay
Clay
Arthur W. J. G. Ord-Hume's Laws of Collecting
1. Space will expand to accommodate an infinite number of possessions, regardless of their size.
2. Shortage of finance, however dire, will never prevent the acquisition of a desired object, however improbable its cost.
1. Space will expand to accommodate an infinite number of possessions, regardless of their size.
2. Shortage of finance, however dire, will never prevent the acquisition of a desired object, however improbable its cost.
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- Victor III
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Re: What is this? Please look!
The company name was "AUTOMATIC PIANO PARIS", they were in business in Paris until 1913, and as the company name indicates, they made automatic piano's and piano-orchestrions.
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- Victor Monarch Special
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Re: What is this? Please look!
Thanks, I have a name and phone number so I have a starting place. Jerry Blais