Photoplayer

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The photoplayer is an automatic mechanical orchestra used by movie theatres to produce photoplay music to accompany silent films.

Operation

The central instruments in a photoplayer were a piano and percussion; some machines also added pipe organs and methods for manually creating sound effects. Like a player piano, the photoplayer played music automatically by reading piano rolls (rolls of paper with perforations), but the photoplayer could hold two rolls: one that would play while the other was prepared. Common sound effects included gun-shots, bells and drums, which were generated by pulling chains called "cow-tails". Some photoplayers feature electric sound effects, such as sirens, automobile horns, and other oddities. A photoplayer operator had to load the paper rolls, start the machine and add the manual sound effects and percussion using the cow-tails.[1]

History

Approximately 8,000 to 10,000 photoplayers were produced during the boom era of silent films, between 1910 and 1928.[2] Around a dozen manufacturers produced the instruments, including the American Photo Player Company, which made the Fotoplayer; the Operators Piano Company of Chicago, which made the Reproduco; The Bartola Musical Instrument Company of Oshkosh, Wisconsin, maker of the Bartola, Seeburg; and Wurlitzer.[1] The popularity of the photoplayer sharply declined in the mid-1920s as silent films were replaced by sound films, and few machines still exist today.[1]

See also

  • Theatre organs: played by an organist, they could produce a wider range of sound and were popular in larger theatres

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Ord-Hume, Arthur W.J.G. (2003). Robert Palmieri, ed. Piano: An Encyclopedia (2nd ed.). Routledge. p. 411. ISBN 0-415-93796-5. 
  2. "What is a photoplayer?". Encyclopaedia of Australian Theatre Organs. Retrieved 26 December 2008. 

External links

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