Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau, November 1, 1899. p.98 The firm of Ed. Kruspe was established in Erfurt, Germany in 1864 by Johann Eduard Kruspe (1831-1919), elder son of Carl Kruspe (1808 - 1885). Carl Kruspe had established his workshop originally in Mühlhausen in Thüringen (1829 - 1836) then Erfurt (1836 - after 1930) for the manufacture of brass and woodwind instruments. Rather than going into business with his father, Eduard established his own workshop as successor to Carl Zielsdorf. In 1893 the firm was turned over to Eduard's son Fritz Kruspe (ca. 1862 - 1909) who continued the business under his father's name. |
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Announcement of D.G.R.M. 84240 in Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau, December 1, 1897, p. 181 The innovations described and protected in D.R.G.M 84 240 pertain to the newly-devised set of two-story F/B-flat rotory valves and the tandem change valves. |
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Figures 1 and 2 from D.R.G.M. 84240 courtesy of Tatehiko and Katsushi Sakaino |
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Analysis: |
Legend: D.R.G.M. 84240 as full double |
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In 1898 Prof. Josef Lindner of Wurzbburg submitted an article to Deutsche Musikerzeitung in which he advocated the B-flat horn in place of the F-horn especially in high register. In reply, Richard Tournauer, self-described as "only the simple third hornist" of the municipal orchestra in Cologne, admitted that the B-flat horn is more secure in the high register, but pointed out that the classic master composers preferred the tone color of the F-horn. Herr Tournaur concluded that there could be no perfect solution so long as B-flat and F-horn players are dogmatic about their choice of instruments. In response to this discussion there appeared the following description of the Gumpert-Kruspe double horn compromise, presumably by the editor of Deutsche Musikerzeitung, identified only as "r.": |
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Acknowledgments
Very special thanks to Tatehiko and Katsushi Sakaino, proprietors of Curia Metallblasinstrumentenerzeugung and Ed. Kruspe Metallblasinstrumente for providing copies of the extant original Kruspe documents and photos of their lovely horn. Thanks also to Gerard Westerhof for providing the links to Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau. For further information and background see John Ericson's excellent article on The Double Horn and Its Invention.
Notes
1. Edmund Gumpert was the third horn in the Hofkapelle in Meiningen, and was also a nephew of Leipzig horn virtuoso and teacher, Friedrich Gumpert. Another name has also been associated with the development of the first double horn. On April 27, 2004 a contributor identified as "Sabina" updated the German Wikipedia article on the topic of Waldhorn by adding the name Bartholomäus Geisig with Edouard [sic] Kruspe:
1897 konstruierten Eduard Kruspe und Bartholomäus Geisig aus Erfurt dann das erste Doppelhorn, hier waren die Stimmungen F und B in einem Instrument vereint und konnten mit einem Umschaltventil gewählt werden.No citation has been given for this update nor has the name Bartholomäus Geisig been found in any other source, although it has been repeated on numerous web pages.
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2. D.R.G.M. stands for Deutsches Reichsgebrauchsmuster, a registration created in 1891 for the purpose of protecting for three years the design or function of an item throughout all of the German states (Act Nr. 1957, June 1 1891). D.R.G.M. registered products were protected either for their way of intended use or design, but this did not include patent protection. Patent rights were secured by applying for a Deutsches Reichspatent (D.R.P.). No D.R.P. has been found for this Kruspe horn. A possible reason that only a Gebrauchsmuster (utility patent) was sought by Firma Kruspe is that an altogether similar (if not equivalent) patent had already been granted to A. Lecomte et Cie. in France (Brevet no. 173024, 1885) and Germany (DRP 38809, 1886) and were apparently still in effect. The Lecomte patents were for a double brass instrument utilizing dual tandem change valves connected by a rod. As an example they describe in detail a full double cornet à piston with the change valves operated by the index finger of the left hand. These patents state clearly that the same principle can be applied to rotary valves. According to the Gebrauchsmuster Act "Models are so far not as new, as they have already been described at the time of registration made under this Act in public documents or used manifestly within the country" and permission from the previous patent holder (Lecomte) would have been required if the Kruspe design was considered similar enough. A Gegbrauchsmuster was more easily granted and cheaper than a full DRP, but was only valid for three years with an optional three-year extention.
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3. Both Anthony Baines (1976, p. 224) and Herbert Heyde (1987, p.182) incorrectly state that the first double horn by Kruspe was a compensating horn but neither gives a citation for this statement. Baines describes the difference between compensating and full double horns and adds that a Waldhorn in B mit F-maschine was exhibited by Kruspe at a trade show in Markneukirchen in 1897. In fact Firma Kruspe did not exhibit in the 25-year jubilee of the Markneukirchen Gewerbverein in August, 1897 since it was still occupied at the summer-long Sächsiche-Thüringen Industrie- und Gewerbe-Ausstellung held in Leipzig at the same time. For that event Kruspe exhibited a large number of instruments, but only showed three single horns. Since D.R.G.M. 82420 wasn't filed until October 1897, Kruspe probably didn't want to show it before until it was protected. Dr. Heyde compounds the error even further by contradicting the article by Hermann Eichborn (ZfI, 1899, p. 981) by stating that it and the unsigned example in the Deutsches Museum in Munich (Nr. 15265) actually pertain to the patent for a combination B/high-B Cornet (DRP 117592) by Friedrich Butti from August 13, 1899. Unfortunately this error has since been spread throughout subsequent publications, including the official catalog of the exhibition of Kruspe intruments at Erfurt in 2012, and, of course, throughout the Internet. No evidence has been found that there was ever a compensating double horn in the modern sense prior to 1906 when the instruments by Gebr. Alexander (Model 102) and Ed. Kruspe (Gumpert-Kruspe, D.R.G.M. 295 125) were introduced.
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4. In this article, prior to this quoted passage on the Gumpert-Kruspe, double horn, Eichborn describes the possibility of adding an F extension to a B-flat horn as on a trombone (Quartventil). He then remarks that the resulting F-horn would only be fully chromatic if the valve slides were sufficiently long to allow them to be pulled out to the length of F slides. He does not go so far, however, as to say this has ever been actually implemented, nor implied that the Gumpert-Kruspe was originally compensating. Of course later, B-flat horns would become available with F-extensions for the purpose of providing some of the missing harmonics in the lower register without compensating valves to make them fully chromatic.
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5.The Tonwechsel-Maschine patented by V.F. Cerveny on April 26, 1846, was a multi-position tap used by several German manufacturers and also adopted by Gautrot for his improved omnitonic horn. Eichborn argues here that the time it takes to interrupt playing to turn the dial on the Tonwechsel is actually useful to the player to prepare for the difference in playing characteristics between the F and B horn. [See also John Ericson's article on "What Was The Omnitonic Horn?"]
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6. Henri Chaussier (1854 - ?) was a virtuoso natural horn player but when he was engaged for a season in Berlin he was expected to play everything on a German valved horn with which he had no experience. Instead, he had an omnitonic natural horn with four-valves capable of all the keys from B-flat atlto to B-flat Basso, but with his own arcane cascading fingering patterns making it impractical to play as a valved horn. (See Morley-Pegge, 1973, p.63.)
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References
Baines, Anthony. Brass Instruments, Their History and Development. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1976. ISBN 0684152290
Dullat, Günter. Metallblasinstrumentenbau, Verlag Erwin Bochinsky, Frankfurt am Main, 1989
Eichborn, Hermann. "Ein neues Doppelhorn", Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau, Paul de Wit, Leipzig, v. 20, n.3, October 21, 1899 and v.20, n.4, November 1, 1899.
Heyde, Herbert. Das Ventilblasinstrument, Seine Entwicklun im deutschsprachigen Raum von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart. Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1987. ISBN 3765102253
Langer, Arne; Wenke, Wolfgang; Musikinstrumente von Weltrang - Die Firma Kruspe in Erfurt, Stadtmuseum und Theater Erfurt, 2012
Morley-Pegge, Reginald. The French Horn. A Benn Study, Music, Instruments of the Orchestra. Second Edition. London: Ernest Benn Limited/New York: W.W. Norton & Company Inc., 1973. ISBN 0510366015 051036607 Pbk. 0393021718 (USA)
Pizka, Hans. Hornisten-Lexikon / Dictionary for Hornists. Kirchheim b. München: Hans Pizka Edition, 1986. ISBN 3922409040
Waterhouse, William. The New Langwill Index of Wind Instrument Makers and Inventors, pub.Tony Bingham, London 1993
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