Earlier than the New Yr, we introduced you footage of Russian polymathic inventor Léon Theremin demonstrating the unusual instrument that bears his suridentify, and we noted that the Theremin was the primary electronic instrument. This isn’t strictly true, although it’s the first electronic instrument to be mass professionalduced and broadly utilized in original composition and performance. However like biological evolution, the history of musical instrument development is littered with lifeless ends, anomalies, and forreceivedten ancestors (such because the octobass). One such obscure oddity, the Telharmonium, appeared virtually 20 years earlier than the Theremin, and it was patented by its American inventor, Thaddeus Cahill, even earlier, in 1897. (See a few of the many diagrams from the original patent under.)

Cahill, a lawyer who had previously invented gadgets for pianos and sortwriters, created the Telharmonium—additionally known as the Dynamaphone—to broadforged music over the teletelephone, making it a precursor to not the Theremin however to the later scourge of teletelephone maintain music. “In a big method,” writes Jay Williston at Synthmuseum.com, “Cahill invented what we all know of right this moment as ‘Muzak.’”
He constructed the primary professionaltosort Telharmonium, the Mark I, in 1901. It weighed seven tons. The ultimate incarnation of the instrument, the Mark III, took 50 people to construct at the price of $200,000 and was “60 toes lengthy, weighed virtually 200 tons and incorporated over 2000 electric changees…. Music was usually performed by two people (4 palms) and consisted of mostly classical works by Bach, Chopin, Greig, Rossini and others.” The workings of the gargantuan machine resemble the boiler room of an industrial facility. (See several photographs right here.)


Wantmuch less to say, this was a excessively impractical instrument. Neverthemuch less, Cahill not solely discovered willing traders for the enormous conenticetion, however he additionally staged successful demonstrations in Baltiextra, then—after disassembling and moving the factor by prepare—in New York. By 1905, his New England Electric Music Company “made a cope with the New York Teletelephone Company to put special traces in order that he may transmit the signals from the Telharmonium viaout the town.” Cahill used the time period “synthesizing” in his patent, which some say makes the Telharmonium the primary synthesizer, although its operation was as a lot mechanical as electronic, utilizing a complicated collection of gears and cylinders to replicate the musical vary of a piano. (See the operation defined within the video on the high.) “Raised bumps on cylinders helped create musical contour notes,” writes Popular Mechanics, “not in contrast to a music field, with the dimensions of the cylinder determining the pitch.”


The massive, very loud Telharmonium Mark III finished up within the basement of the Metropolitan Opera Home for a time as Cahill labored on his scheme for pumping music via the teletelephone traces. However this plan didn’t come off cleanly. “The problem was,” Popular Mechanics factors out,” all cables leak off radio waves. Shiping a gigantic, amplified signal on turn-of-the-Twentieth-century telephone traces was sure to trigger trouble.” The Telharmonium created interference on other telephone traces and even interrupted Naval radio transmissions. “Rumor has it,” the Douglas Anderson Faculty of the Arts writes, “{that a} New York businessman, infuriated by the constant webwork interference, broke into the constructing the place the Telharmonium was housed and destroyed it, throwing items of the machinery into the Hudson river under.”
The story appears in contrast toly, nevertheless it serves as a symbol for the instrumalest’s collapse. Cahill’s company folded in 1908, although the ultimate Telharmonium supposedly remained operational till 1916. No reportings of the instrument have survived, and Thaddeus Cahill’s brother Arthur eventually bought the final professionaltosort off for scrap in 1950 after failing to discover a purchaseer. All the rationale for the instrument had been supplanted by radio broadforgeding. The Telharmonium could have didn’t catch on, nevertheless it nonetheless had a significant influence. Its distinctive design impressed another important electronic instrument, the Hammond organ. And its very existence gave musical futurists a imaginative and prescient. The Douglas Anderson Faculty writes:
Regardless of its ultimate demise, the Telharmonium triggered the beginning of electronic music—The Italian Composer and intellectual Ferruccio Busoni impressed by the machine on the peak of its popularity was moved to write down his “Sketch of a New Aesthetic of Music” (1907) which in flip grew to become the clarion name and inspiration for the brand new generation of electronic composers equivalent to Edgard Varèse and Luigi Russolo.
The instrument additionally made fairly an impression on another American inventor, Mark Twain, who enthusiastically demonstrated it via the teletelephone during a New Yr’s gathering at his house, after giving a speech about his personal not inconsiderin a position status as an innovator and early adopter of recent technologies. “Unfortunately for Thaddeus Cahill,” writes William Weir at The Hartford Courant, “Twain’s support wasn’t sufficient to make a success of the Telharmonium.” Study extra concerning the instrumalest’s history from this guide.
Word: An earlier version of this publish appeared on our web site in 2016.
Related Content:
Soviet Inventor Léon Theremin Exhibits Off the Theremin, the Early Electronic Instrument That May Be Performed Without Being Touched (1954)
The History of Electronic Music, 1800–2015: Free Internet Venture Catalogues the Theremin, Fairlight & Other Instruments That Revolutionized Music
The Fascinating Story of How the Electric Music Pioneer Delia Derbyshire Created the Original Doctor Who Theme (1963)
Hear Seven Hours of Girls Making Electronic Music (1938–2014)
Thomas Dolby Explains How a Synthesizer Works on a Jim Henson Youngsters Present (1989)
Josh Jones is a author and musician based mostly in Durham, NC.

