
Dulcitone - Wikipedia
A dulcitone is a keyboard instrument in which sound is produced by a range of tuning forks, which vibrate when struck by felt-covered hammers activated by the keyboard.
The Pioneering Dulcitone - World Piano News
Feb 13, 2024 · The Dulcitone (invented by Thomas Machell in the late 1860s) plays an interesting part in the history of the piano. Its contribution is twofold. Firstly it was a relatively inexpensive, …
DULCITONE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of DULCITONE is a keyboard instrument similar to the celesta in which hammers strike a set of tuning forks for sound production.
Dulcitone Tuning Fork Piano, by Thomas Machell & Sons
This 5-octave, 61-note Dulcitone is in very good cosmetic and functional shape. Invented and built by Thomas Machell and Sons of Glasgow from the 1880s until circa 1930, this historic …
Dulcitone 1900 | Blessed are the music makers - YouTube
Apr 19, 2017 · Huge thanks to Pendle Poucher for the loan of this beautiful instrument. You can actually purchase a deep sampled virtual version of her from Pendle:...
Dulcitone | musical instrument | Britannica
It was invented by Mustel’s father, Victor, in 1865 and patented, with improvements, in 1868. , the dulcitone, or typophone, a set of graduated tuning forks struck by felt hammers by means of a …
Dulcitone - Antique Piano Shop
The “Dulcitone” brand was the premier line of player pianos built by the Cable-Nelson Piano Company. Cable-Nelson was a very successful manufacturer known for building higher-grade, …
What does dulcitone mean? - Definitions.net
A dulcitone is a keyboard instrument in which sound is produced by a range of tuning forks, which vibrate when struck by felt-covered hammers activated by the keyboard.
Dulcitone - AudioLexic
Apr 4, 2007 · A dulcitone is a keyboard instrument in which sound is produced by a range of tuning forks, which vibrate when struck by felt-covered hammers activated by the keyboard. …
Spectrasonics - Keyscape - Dulcitone
The Dulcitone was invented in Scotland in 1860 and only a few survive in playable condition today. Named for its sweet sound, its felt-covered, wooden hammers strike an array of tuning …