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So there have been similar situations many times before in history when novel processes allowed the invention of instruments that hadn't been possible before. Most instruments we play today are more or less modern inventions. How did the artisans and the artists find and relate to each other in those earlier periods of invention?-- rec --
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So there have been similar situations many times before in history when novel processes allowed the invention of instruments that hadn't been possible before. Most instruments we play today are more or less modern inventions. How did the artisans and the artists find and relate to each other in those earlier periods of invention?-- rec --
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Usually at the behest of royalty.
The sousaphone was developed in the 1890s at the request of John Philip Sousa, who was unhappy with the hélicons used at that time by the United States Marine Band. The first sousaphone was either developed by J.W. Pepper,[1] in 1893, or by C.G. Conn, in 1898.The invention of the modern piano is credited to Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655–1731) of Padua, Italy, who was employed by Ferdinando de' Medici, Grand Prince of Tuscany, as the Keeper of the Instruments.Johann Christoph Denner was a famous woodwind instrument maker of the Baroque era, to whom the invention of the clarinet is attributed. Denner was born in Leipzig to a family of horn-turners. With his father, Heinrich Denner, a maker of game whistles and hunting horns, he moved to Nuremberg in 1666. J. C. Denner went into business as an instrument maker in 1678. Two of his sons, Jacob and Johann David, also became instrument builders.The attempt to give the trumpet more chromatic freedom in its range saw the development of the keyed trumpet, but this was a largely unsuccessful venture due to the poor quality of its sound. Although the impetus for a tubular valve began as early as 1793, it was not until 1818 that Friedrich Bluhmel and Heinrich Stölzel made a joint patent application for the box valve as manufactured by W. Schuster.
It occurs to me that art is (almost) always very technical. From paints to musical instrument design a lot of thought and tinkering has to go into making and then manipulating the media in which art finds its expression. Artists often spend countless hours learning and experimenting with their materials until they are able to express themselves. You can't just walk up to a big rock and turn it into a sculpture. It takes time, skill and tools to do that.
So there have been similar situations many times before in history when novel processes allowed the invention of instruments that hadn't been possible before. Most instruments we play today are more or less modern inventions. How did the artisans and the artists find and relate to each other in those earlier periods of invention?-- rec --
It’s worth noting that this has applied to non-electronic instruments from at least the point where keys, frets, and adjustable tuning enter the picture. Neither Bach nor Sibelius could have built a piano, a violin, or a bassoon.
The difference with some of these is that their design was evolutionary; medieval ‘woodwinds’ like the recorder had no keys, and evolved into keyed flutes both wooden and metal, as well as hybridizing with very old reed instruments and becoming the clarinet and oboe lineage. But keyboard instruments in particular were more along the punctuated equilibrium model: technologists had to invent and build them, in response I suspect to beery discussions with musician friends who complained about limitations of existing instruments until the anachronistic lightbulb went on for the inventor.
In some ways, what has changed in this model is the Modernist attitude’s dismissal of evolutionary development, and privileging of the unheard-of great leap ‘forwards’ – technological change as well as ‘new’ tones and methods of producing tones, have become goals in their own right, regardless whether they fit any existing pattern of musicality – and in many cases, despite the fact that such noises have been generated accidentally, decades ago, and rejected. The circus-barker touts Never Before Seen (or heard); the critic and maybe cynic says Yeah, and for Good Reason!
Anyway – just a bit of archaic perspective from an acoustic musician!
Kim