Johann Kuhnau (1660-1772)
André‑Cardinal Destouches (1672-1749)
Friedrich Robert Volkman (1815-1883)
Carlos Salzedo (1885-1961)
Andrew Imbrie (1921-2007)
Edison Denisov (1929-1996)
André Previn (1929)
Merle Haggard (1937-2016)
Felicity Palmer (1944)
Pascal Rogé (1951)
Pascal Devoyon (1953)
Julian Anderson (1967)
and
Raphael (Rafaello Sanzio da Urbino) (1483-1520)
Joseph Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936)
From the New Music Box:
On
April 6, 1897, the U.S. government granted Thaddeus Cahill a patent for
his Telharmonium, or Dynamophone, the earliest electronic musical
instrument. Cahill built a total of three such instruments, which
utilized a 36-tone scale and used telephone receivers as amplifiers. The
first one, completed in 1906 in Holyoke, Massachussetts was 60 feet
long and weighed 200 tons. It was housed in "Telharmonic Hall" on 39th
Street and Broadway New York City for 20 years.
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