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Posted

Noel,

A friend of mine is an enthusiastic organ grinder. He takes his barrel organ (or it takes him?) to festivals all over Germany and into the neighbouring countries. He also collects interesting "organalia", and one piece that caught my eye in his living-room was very much like the ones in your links. He played it for me, and I was amazed at its dulcet tones. It had free reeds instead of pipes!

 

He informed me that it was an American "preacher's organ," formerly used by itinerant preachers to accompany hymns in out-of the-way places. My friend had a few rolls for it, and they were predominantly old Gospel songs and popular hymns.

 

The timbre of this organ resembles the harmonium - which is also a free-reeder - and has none of the "worldly" brashness of the normal piped barrel-organ.

 

Cheers,

John

Posted

I remember being at the Frankfurt Toy Fair about 16 years ago and seeing a very skilled Melodeon player, there was something not quite right about his style. I returned and realised that he was not actually playing. He explained the machine to me "Micro process control " . It was at that point when I saw the ultimate nightmare of being in a Session and someone calling out "Number 69 on the pink stick " and then a host of pumping Melodeons belting out the same cacophony AAGH

  • 8 years later...
Posted
On 10/26/2016 at 6:28 PM, Takayuki YAGI said:

I once saw a tanzbaer 'mini' model in the ebay listing and that was hexagonal. It looks more like a concertina.

post-68-0-38688300-1477473983_thumb.jpg

Andrew Norman demonstrates Baby Tanzbär in this clip.

 

  • Like 2
Posted

It's early on the Sunday morning and the use of tanzbar, Tanzbär and Tanzbar is frying my brain. Am I wrong thinking tanzbar is like the Dutch dansbaar, danceable, Tanzbär is the bear and Tanzbar is a bar where people go to both drink and dance?

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