Label:
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Gautrot Bréveté a PARIS |
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Model:
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Cor-Transpositeur | |
Serial Number:
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none | |
Date of
Manufacture:
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ca. 1847 | |
Key(s):
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(see table below) | |
Valves:
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3 Rotary taps | |
Mouthpipe:
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7.35mm | |
Bore(s):
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10.4mm, 11.5mm, 12.35mm | |
Bell Flare:
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Very wide gussett | |
Bell Throat:
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Bell Diameter:
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28.5 cm. | |
Base Metal:
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brass | |
Finish:
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raw brass | |
Acquired from:
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U.S.A. | |
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At first specializing in brass instruments, Pierre Louis Gautrot established his firm as "Gautrot aîné" ("elder") in 1845 as successor to Guichard. The oval cartouche with the letters "GA" shown below right is a very early trade mark. He later adopted one that incorporated an achor as his mark. (See another Gautrot horn in this collection.) By 1846 Gautrot claimed to be the most important factory of its kind in Europe, with a workforce of over 200, with 3,000 cornets, 1,000 trombones, and 1,000 ophicleides. On August 6, 1847 Gautrot along with Raoux, Halary, Buffet, and Gambaro, all of whom were normally competitors, filed suit against both of Sax's patents: that of 1843 ("Chromatic instrument system"), and that of 1845 ("A musical instrument, called the saxotromba"). (The complaint of the instrument manufacturers was based on the claim that Sax's improvements had long been known at home and abroad. The suit went through many appeals and ended in 1859 with a victory for Sax.[1]) The loss of the potential military band market was perhaps one of the reasons for Gautrot's antagonism toward Sax. By 1847 he had a workforce of 208, comprising 42 percent of the entire brass instrument workforce of Paris. This was the period of the manufacture of the horn described here. |
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Describing developments on the manufacture of musical instruments for the year 1847, Adolphe Le Doulcet Pontécoulant wrote:Gautrot, apporta quelques perfectionnements dans la construction des instruments de musique en cuivre. Le but des recherches de Gautrot paraît avoir été de réformer les tons de rechange des instruments en cuivre qui sont susceptibles de changer de ton, et il croit y être parvenu par l'application de trois cylindres transpositeurs faisant exactement l'office de robinets employés dans diverses industries. Le facteur a adapté une disposition particulière des cylindres et des robinets mis en rapport de tons avec les coulisses et il n'emploie qu'une seule coulisse mobile. Le facteur peut changer dix fois de tons sans être obligé d'accorder les tons sur les cylindres. (B. F., 5,874.) |
The oval bell brace foot mirrors the cartouche on the bell label. |
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On voit par cette figure qu'il suffit d'appliquer 3 robinets ou cylindres transpositeurs R, R' & R2, et une seule coulisse mobile A, qui n'est autre que la coulisse d'accord. |
We see from this figure that it suffices to apply three valves or cylinders transposing R, R ' & R2, and one mobile slide A, which is none other than the tuning slide. |
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Drawing of Omnitonic Horn from Brevet 5874, Addition 3, May 6, 1851 (annotations in red have been added, see text) (Click for larger view) |
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Brevet 5874, July 1, 1847 (Click for larger view) |
Brevet 5874, Addition 2, February 11, 1848 (Click for larger view) |
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Arms of France, 1831-48, as they appear at the top of a frame surrounding a portrait of Louis-Philippe, workshop of Winterhalter. The portrait and frame were sent in 1848 to King Kamehameha III of Hawaii and have stayed there since. (Source: Collection of the State of Hawaii, The Friends of Iolani Palace http://www.heraldica.org/topics/france/frarms.htm) |
The Ordonnance of Feb. 26, 1831 reads: À l'avenir, le sceau de l'État représentera un livre ouvert portant à l'intérieur ces mots "Charte de 1830", surmonté d'une couronne fermée, avec le sceptre et la main de justice en sautoir, et des drapeaux tricolores derrière l'écusson, et pour exergue "Louis-Philippe Ier, Roi des Français". That is, an open book with the words "Charter of 1830", (the shield) surmounted by a closed crown; behind the shield, in saltire, were the scepter and hand of justice, as well as tricolor flags. King Louis-Philippe abdicated the throne but the strong current of public opinion rejected the nomination of his son, Phiippe, as the new monarch. On February 26, the Second Republic was proclaimed and Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was elected President in December. A few years later he declared himself president for life and then Emperor Napoleon III. This image is a file from the Wikipedia Commons. |
On April 22, 1845 a public comparison of bands was held on the Champs-de-Mars: one assembled by Adolphe Sax versus one assembled by Michele Enrico Carafa, director of the Gymnase de Musique Militaire where most musicians of the army were trained. Reportedly, over 20,000 spectators were present to witness the contest between Sax, who wanted to reorganize the military bands to incorporate his line of saxhorns, and Carafa, who advocated retaining the traditional instrumention including natural horns. Sax was the clear victor and the new order that came on August 19th, 1845 specified four cors à pistons and no natural horns, as well as a full complement of saxhorns. Although the omnitonic horn patent was issued in 1847, it was probably in development much earlier while natural horns were still in the military band complement. It would seem likely that this was Gautrot's target market. The order of 1845 eliminating natural horns along with the apparent disinterest on the part of the faculty of the Conservatiore and orchestral musicians, the market for the omnitonic horn all but disappeared, although it would appear from the patent that M. Gautrot persisted in their development. |
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One other Gautrot instrument is found from Mexico. It is item number B178 in the former Kenneth Fiske Museum collection and is described as: Flugelhorn in C, Pierre L. Gautrot, Paris, ca. 1880. Stamped: H. Nagel sucres Calle de la Palma No. 5, Mexico. http://www.cuc.claremont.edu/fiske/alto.htm |
Britannica.Com Mexico
Acknowledgements
Very special thanks to M. Claude Maury for providing the documents from Brevet 5874 and Brevet 20292, numerous corrections to the text, and wonderful correspondence clarifying many of the points regarding this horn.
Notes
1. The New Langwill Index (p.129) states "from 1846 Gautrot was chief organizer of opposition on the part of Paris manufacturers to (2) A. Sax; 1846 as one of five plaintiffs commenced litigation against Sax demanding nullification of the latter's patents, in 1854 finally decided in Sax's favour..." The litigation dragged on to at least December 24, 1858. La Revue et gazette musicale, (1859, p. 14): "Voici quelques extraits de l'arrêt de la Cour d'Amiens du 24 décembre 1858 confirmatif du jugement du tribunal de la Seine du 12 juin 1856."
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2. The New Langwill Index (p.130) cites the patent as "1847 (F) #3170: improvements to horn ('cor omnitonic')". That patent number has not been confirmed. This is believed to be Gautrot's first patent award.
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3. The hand-written text of the third Addition to this patent contains several cross-outs and changes, although the primary patents and previous two Additions do not. Most notable there is a renumbering of the references to the various figures in the drawing, however the drawing itself retains its original numbers. This suggests that the drawing was perhaps originally drafted much earlier than the third Addition submission, even though it is dated 1851. As noted above the Addition text and drawing include references to engraving on the taps that are not found on the subject horn. Among the cross-outs is reference to the primary patent and previous Additions suggesting that M. Gautrot himself realized that it is an obvious throwback to an earlier design, despite his claims that this is an improvement to its predecessors. Patent Additions were less expensive to file than original patents.
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4. If M. Gautrot had shown or publicized this horn extensively prior to his application for the Addition in 1851 he would have been at risk for having it denied. Article 31 of the French patent law of July 5, 1844 states "Ne sera pas réputée nouvelle toute découverte, invention ou application qui, en France ou à l'étranger, et antérieurement à la date du dépôt de la demande, aura reçu une publicité suffisante pour pouvoir être exécutée" [It will not be deemed a new discovery any invention or application that has in France or abroad received sufficient publicity before the date of filing of the application to be executed.] If, however, he had only demonstrated it to Carafa in 1845 for consideration in the competition or before the ban on natural horns in the military, then he would probably be within the limit of Article 31. Nevertheless with the abdication of Louis-Phillipe the horn stamped with the arms of the former monarchy became worthless in France and was banished to Mexico (see the section that follows).
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References
L'Association des Collectionneurs d'Instruments de Musique à Vent, 1988 - present
Londré, Felicia Hardison; Watermeier, Daniel J. The History of North American Theater: The United States, Canada, and Mexico. London: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000. ISBN 0826412335
Mayer, Brantz. Mexico as it was and as it is, Third Edition. Philadelphia: G. B. ZIEBER & COMPANY, 1847.
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
Rodrguez-Luis, Julio. "Book Exports From Spain and France to Latin America in the Nineteenth Century", Occasional Paper 92. Milwaukee, WI: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, 2002.
Waterhouse, William. The New Langwill Index, A Dictionary of Musical Wind-Instrument Makers and Inventors. London: Tony Bingham, 1993. ISBN0-946113-04-1
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