Dulcitone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A dulcitone is a keyboard instrument in which sound is produced by a range of tuning forks, which vibrate when struck by felt-covered hammers activated by the keyboard. The instrument was designed by Thomas Machell of Glasgow and manufactured by the firm of Thomas Machell & Sons during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
A significant feature of the dulcitone was its portability, a product of its lightweight and compact construction and the fact that the tuning forks (unlike, for instance, the strings of a piano) were not prone to going out of tune. However, the volume produced is extremely limited, and the dulcitone's part is frequently substituted by a glockenspiel.[1]
One piece scored for the dulcitone is Vincent d'Indy's Song of the Bells (1888)
Surviving examples exist as far afield as New Zealand, where one is preserved in the Whittaker's Musical Museum.
[edit] References
- ^ The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Musical Instruments, ISBN 1-85868-185-5
[edit] External links
[edit] See also
- Rhodes piano, technically an electrically amplified dulcitone.