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Glasschord

French crystallophone instrument


Summary

French crystallophone instrument

FieldValue
nameGlasschord
image1786 Beyer Glasschord with key hammers striking glass bars.jpg
caption1786 Glasschord from the Hans Adler Collection
namesGlasscord, Glassichord, Glace-chord
classificationIdiophone
inventorsM. Beyer
developed1785
relatedGlass harmonica
buildersChappell & Co.

The glasschord (French: fortepiano à cordes de verre) is a struck crystallophone resembling the celesta.

History

The glasschord was invented circa 1785 by physicist M. Beyer of Paris. It creates sound by using cloth covered wooden hammers to strike glass tubes laid on a cloth strip, with no dampeners. The instrument has a range of three octaves, in various models from c' to c*, f' to f*, and g' to g*. The instrument was largely inspired by the glass harmonica created by Benjamin Franklin, and was given the name *glasschord'' by him. On 6 July 1785, Thomas Jefferson that Franklin carried a version of the instrument with him, describing it as a sticcado.

Beyer originally presented the instrument on 19 January 1785, in a presentation at the French Academy of Sciences, while the instrument still was nameless, with the instrument being publicised in the Journal de Paris multiple times through the same year.

Many glasschords were built by Chappell & Co., until around 1815.

The instrument was used in some scores, most notable by Hector Berlioz, who wrote the first version of La Tempête, and Camille Saint-Saëns who used the instrument in L'aquarium.

References

References

  1. Gétreau, Florence. (1996). "Aux origines du musée de la musique : les collections instrumentales du Conservatoire de Paris : 1793-1993". Editions Klincksiek.
  2. Pernot, Laurent. (1985). "Repas électriques". Bulletin d'histoire de l'électricité.
  3. Traversier, Mélanie. (2021). "L'harmonica de verre et miss Davies : essai sur la mécanique du succès au siècle des lumières".
  4. Beyer, M.. (1806). "Notice sur le glace-chord de mon invention, et sur quelques autre instruments en verre, ainsi que sur divers objets de mécanique, que j'ai imaginé ou perfectionnés.".
  5. (2001). "Glasschord".
  6. "Heart Blood of the World: The Hydrocrystalophone {{!}} Pennsylvania Center for the Book".
  7. "2016 Florida International Toy Piano Festival Booklet".
  8. "Glasschord".
  9. Cohen, Albert. (2014-07-14). "Music in the French Royal Academy of Sciences: A Study in the Evolution of Musical Thought". Princeton University Press.
  10. "Glacechord".
  11. "Chapell & Co. {{!}} Glassichord {{!}} British {{!}} The Metropolitan Museum of Art".
  12. "Edinburgh collection checklist".
  13. Chapuis, Jean-Claude. "Ces si délicats instruments de verre".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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