Glasschord

French crystallophone instrument From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The glasschord (French: fortepiano à cordes de verre) is a struck crystallophone resembling the celesta.[1]

Other namesGlasscord, Glassichord, Glace-chord
Classification Idiophone
InventorM. Beyer
Developed1785
Quick facts Other names, Classification ...
Glasschord
1786 Glasschord from the Hans Adler Collection
Other namesGlasscord, Glassichord, Glace-chord
Classification Idiophone
InventorM. Beyer
Developed1785
Related instruments
Glass harmonica
Builders
Chappell & Co.
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History

The glasschord was invented circa 1785[2] by physicist[3] M. Beyer of Paris.[4][5] 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''.[1] The instrument was largely inspired by the glass harmonica created by Benjamin Franklin,[6] and was given the name glasschord by him.[7] On 6 July 1785, Thomas Jefferson that Franklin carried a version of the instrument with him, describing it as a sticcado.[8]

Beyer originally presented the instrument on 19 January 1785, in a presentation at the French Academy of Sciences, while the instrument still was nameless,[9] with the instrument being publicised in the Journal de Paris multiple times through the same year.[10]

Many glasschords were built by Chappell & Co., until around 1815.[11][12]

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.[13]

References

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