This blog is dedicated to the sublime instruments called nose flutes and which produce the most divine sound ever. We have chosen to discard all the native models from S. Pacific and Asia, for they need fingering to be played. We'll concentrate on "buccal cavity driven" nose flutes : the well patented and trademarked metal or plastic ones, plus, by a condemnable indulgence, some wooden craft or home-made productions.

Nov 28, 2012

Review: The Incredible and Mysterious Cello-Phone!

What does this thing do on a nose flute blog? Is this a vintage brass peg to hang your coat on a freshly painted wall?



No no no... It is the most incredible nose flute ever built, the Cello-Phone!

I got it from Mr. Bruno Kampmann, President of the ACIMV (Association des Collectionneurs d'Instruments de Musique à Vent - check this post please), who kindly accepted to separate from it, in order to help completing the consistency of my collection. Real big thanks to Bruno!

It's been more than a year that I knew the Cello-Phone existence, and since then, have attempted many researches to find pieces of info about this nose flute. All went totally fruitless. Nobody has any clue about it, none had never met such an instrument. The only objective datum is stamped on the mouth shield: "PAT.APPL'D.FOR", meaning the Cello-Phone has an anglo-saxon origin.
Even this administrative form is of no help in dating precisely this UFO (unidentified Fipple Object!).



For sure, I searched patents through US, British, but also German, French, European databases, with IPC numbers or with loose keywords... Nothing. The name is unknown by antique newspapers and ads, and the internet is totally mute. Naught! Nichts! Rien! Nada!

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The Cello-Phone is an incredible brass nose flute composed of 3 major parts: A nose saddle for collecting the air flow, a long tube as air duct, and a round mouth shield with a rectangular hole for fipple.



The nose saddle is an oval plate of brass that has been bent following its thirds to shape a rest. The air entrance is perfectly round and connected (soldered) to the tube.



The air duct is the most stunning part of the flute. It seems to be made of iron, having been plated with copper, and is a long tube, rounded to follow an open circle (diameter 10mm, length 185mm). You already caught it: wheteher it's an air way, it's also a handle!



The tube has been flattened at the other end and soldered onto the shield, just under the mouth hole.



Indeed — and it's another Cello-Phone singularity – the fipple is positioned upside-down: because of the instrument configuration, the air flows upward to meet the labium! The mouth plate is round, not perfectly circular, but ellipsoidal.



So, the Cello-Phone is a singular instrument. Brass and iron made, with a huge handle and a unique shape, a reversed labium... And those features cannot be linked to any another known instrument that would have helped for a datation.
However, it looks very antique. In the 1920's, for instance, all the metal nose flute had a rather similar shape. Made of stamped tin plate, they were more or less imitations of the leader: Humanatone. And the Humanatone shape was the fruit of some ergonomical, technical and producibility evolution: The 1891 Carter's Nasalette was strange, not very efficient and a bit uncomfortable. The 1899 Couchois' whistle corrected some of the Nasalette design flaws, and the 1903 (Stivers') Humanatone abandoned the mouth tube system for a comfortable mouth shield.

Contrarywise, the Cello-Phone looks totally out of the Humanatone "modern design" advances. However, it already offers a nose saddle (and not a hood) and a flat mouth shield. It is probably posterior to the Humanatone, but not much. I would risk to date the Cello-Phone from the 1910's, with no certainty though.

Where did its name come from? The instrument doesn't look nor sound like a cello. Might it have had some relation with a cell? Or with the name of its inventor? Was it a pun with the cellophane which was invented in 1908 [some nose flutes were produced in celluloid, but not before 1920]?




Sound

As an instrument, let's immediately say that the Cello-Phone is not a good nose flute, and this is the result of age, but also of several points of misconception.

The venerable instrument is torn is some places, notably at the junction of the nose rest with the tube. There is an small air leak from there. But the flow is also weakened because of the nose saddle shape itself. I could probably modify the wings angle to reduce the gaps, but won't certainly do it!

Then, the tube duct, as funny as it is as a handle, is a very bad choice on a musical point of view. The air has a so long way to go through before getting split by the labium, that there is no real compression by Venturi effect, and certainly no sound attack.

Finally, the tapered end of the air duct is not flat enough to produce a thin air blade.

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All in all, the Cello-Phone is a weak nose flute producing a rather dull and windy sound. It is slow in response, and ranges its tonalities in a rather narrow bandwidth, with no low basses and no real sharps.

But on a historic point of view, the Cello-Phone is the most desirable nose flute, extremely rare and so singular! A must for a collector!

Here is a very short sound sample (I did my best with this difficult and ingrate instrument, but I wanted to shorten the pain :):





7 comments:

  1. Stunning instrument, stunning photography, pure Steampunk if you ask me, a superb addition to the collection!

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  2. Very cool indeed. A great addition to your collection.

    I once taped one end of a 50 cm. piece of plastic hose to my hacked whistle and with the other end in the nose it played OK. I guess the length of the tube is not as important as the shape and position of the end part.

    Maybe if the end of the tube in the Cello-Phone was better angled and positioned to direct the air to the blade it would play much better.

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  3. Yes Luis. The (bad) sound comes from a mix of misconception and age: for sure the angle airway/labium is not the best ...

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  4. I have one of these! My grandfather who was born in 1905 gave it to me.

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  5. I have one of these! My grandfather who was born in 1905 gave it to me.

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    1. Wonderful! If you had any info about it (really any), I would appreciate a lot! For instance, do you know in which country it was made or sold? Which years? ... And if you could send me pictures of yours, it would be great and very kind ... contact[at]noseflute[dot]org.

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