Mechanical organ
A mechanical organ is an organ that is self-playing, rather than played by a musician. For example, the barrel organ is activated either by a person turning a crank, or by clockwork driven by weights or springs.[1]
Usually, mechanical organs are pipe organs although some instruments were built using reeds similar to those found in a harmonium. Since the 1950s, some instruments have been built using electronics to generate the sound, though still operated by mechanical or pneumatic means. From the 1990s pipe organs have been built that are operated by MIDI rather than the earlier mechanical means.
Originally, the music for mechanical organs was stored by pins on a large barrel. Such instruments were called barrel organs. Such organs only have a very limited repertoire, both in the number of musical selections that could be stored, and the length of tune that could be accommodated.
In the 1890s, book music was invented. This meant that the length of music was no longer constrained. Being physically much smaller than a barrel for a similar instrument, it is much easier to manipulate the music, and so a greater variety of music could be played.
Rather than the book music, some instruments are operated by a music roll.
In popular culture
In the movie The Great Race (1965) Professor Fate, with bandaged thumbs, is shown pretending to play a mechanical organ.
References
- Ord-Hume, Arthur W. J. G. Claire (1978). Barrel organ: the story of the mechanical organ and its repair. A. S. Barnes. p. 25. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
See also
- Barrel piano
- Barrel organ
- Componium
- Dance organ
- Fairground organ
- Musical clock
- Musical box
- Orchestrion
- Organ grinder
- Piano roll
- Player piano
- Reproducing piano
- Serinette
- Street organ