Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers

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Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers. 7/12/2017 0 Comments Horns Trumpets. Brass Percussion. FRENCH HORNS, used and vintage. N a good double. Verwacht Besson Sovereign Euphonium model 967/4 ventielen Zo goed als nieuwe besson sovereign euphonium nieuw € 6200,00 nu € 3895,00 inruil en gespreide betaling mogelijk incl. Besson serial numbers besson brass serial numbers year number year number 1870. 1 - find serial number on weapon 2- find book with serial number data for weapon you have. Where can I find a serial number list for Willson Euphoniums? Asked By Wiki User. Verwacht Besson Sovereign Euphonium model 967/4 ventielen Zo goed als nieuwe besson sovereign euphonium nieuw € 6200,00 nu € 3895,00 inruil en gespreide betaling mogelijk incl. Besson serial numbers besson brass serial numbers year number year number 1870. A member of the brass instrument family, the euphonium derives its name from the Greek word euphonos, for 'well-sounding' or 'sweet-voiced.'

  • 1The Normaphone
    • 1.1Richard Heber
    • 1.2The Normaphone in action

The Normaphon was a saxophone shaped trumpet with one bell.The history of the Normaphone is more or less the same as the history of the two-belled Jazzophone. Where the Jazzophone originated on the Czech side of the border, in Graslitz, the inventor of the Normaphone lived in Markneukirchen at the German side, only a few miles away.

Richard Oskar Heber at work
Schützenstrasse 36 Markneukirchen photo's copyright Ines Ann Heber
Normaphons, photo copyright by Ines Ann Heber

Richard Heber

The Normaphon was invented by Richard Oskar Heber (1872-1938). Between 1900 and 1935 he produced brass instruments under the Norma-brand at the Schützenstrasse 36 in Markneukirchen. Heber advertised the Normaphone as very appropriate for 'Jazz-Band und sonstige Effekt-Kapellen'. Roughly 100 Normaphons were built from approximately 1924/25 until 1930, and were distributed through wholesalers such as C.A. Wunderlich in Siebenbrunn, R.O. Adler, Johannes Adler and C.G Glier in Markneukirchen, Ammon Gläser in Erlbach and M. J. Kalashen in New York. The Gebrüder Schuster in Markneukirchen, 'Fabrik und Export von Musikinstrumenten und Saiten', from 1854, had the Normaphone in their Katalog Nr. 70, (ca. 1929). Normaphones were sent out to musical directors all over the world to promote the new instrument.

Like the Jazzophon the Normaphone also had a D.R.G.M-registration, dates 26.02.1926, number 51c. 945 751, under the name 'Metallblasinstrument', on Richard Hebers name.

The C.G.Glier catalog from October 1926 states that patents are claimed both at home and abroad. There were four sizes of the instrument (specials possible), but most of them were build in tenor. Albert Rice explains that they were build not only with piston but also with rotary valves. The National Music Museum in Vermillion SD owns the only known rotary valve example. The soprano also had a version with an echo effect-valve, similar to the Jazzophon. Initially, there also was a choice between high and low pitch.

Max Adler from Erlbach offered in his catalogue number 25 also the English high pitch and the Normaphon in C and in F for the same price. Adler advertises the Normaphon as a solo instrument.

Remarkable: C.A. Wunderlich offered around 1928 also a soprano version of the Normaphon with an echo effect valve, a kind of Jazzophon in fact. The New Langwill Index states that C.A. Wunderlich held the Normaphon patent, that could be a misinterpretation or Wunderlich must have acquired it from Heber.

In or after 1931 Robert Oswald Adler still (and only) offered the sopran, alto and tenor Normaphon, as did Johannes Adler in his Liste 31. The 1934 C.A.Wunderlich catalog shows no Normaphons nor Jazzophons anymore.

Pieter Aafjes, from 1907 - 1947 musical director of Crescendo, a concert band in Culemborg, the Netherlands, obtained an alto Normaphon from C.A. Wunderlich with serial number 0104, to give it a try. Through Riet van Dillen, the daughter of his successor Jac van Dillen, it came in my possession.

Alto Normaphon in Eb, originally nickel plated, serial number 0104. On the bell: C.A. Wunderlich Siebenbrunn Vogtl. coll. Gerard Westerhof

Normaphon with rotary valves, serial number 0200, coll. NMM

The National Music Museum of the University of South Dakota has a soprano and two tenor Normaphons, one of them having rotary valves. This last one (serial number 0200), the only example with the usual Normaphon D.R.G.M. Germany engraving with rotary valves known so far, has no distributor name engraved.


Normaphones can be found amongst others at the Edinburgh University Collection of Historic Musical Instruments, the MIM in Phoenix, the Museum of Musical Instruments of the Leipzig University, the HJM Brass Collection in Turku, Finland and the Trompetenmuseum in Bad Säckingen (that has a tenor from Schuster & Co.).

Leopold Renz

Normaphone in Bb, coll. Musikinstrumenten Museum Markneukirchen. Engraved: Leopold Renz, Instrumentenmacher Berlin N 58 Gaudystr.14

Leopold Renz, Instrumentenmacher, Berlin, N58 Gaudystr.14, made this tenor instrument, with a total length of 277 cm. Günter Dullat, who used it for the cover of his book Blasinstrumente names it also a Normaphone and states that the Normaphone (this Normaphon?) in the nineteen twenties was developed by Robert Schopper (1859-1938) in Leipzig. Renz worked as an instrument maker from 1916 onwards, and from 1927 under his own name. According to Dullat, he worked in Graslitz (Kaiserstr. 1051) as a woodwind instrument maker and moved to Berlin around 1936. This instrument is dated 'before 1939'.

The Normaphone in action

Willson euphonium serial numbers chart

Damen Kapellen

Sofar the only pictures of a Normaphone in an ochestral setting found are those of the Damen Trompeter Korps Rheinland Mecklenburg (thanks to Vaclav Muska).

Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers Online

  • The Damen Trompeter Korps Rheinland - Mecklenburg with different sizes of Normaphons (2 sopran, 1 alto, 1 tenor, 1 baritone)

  • The full orchestra with Normaphons hanging at the wall in the back right.

In the German speaking countries of Europe in the 1890s through to World War I there appeared a large number of “Damen Kapellen”, troupes of entertainers: brass/wind ensembles, string “orchestras”, salon “orchestras”, singing, dancing and theatre variety groups. These largely consisted of women, usually led by a man, and occasionally including males as players. These were professional groups and performed in theatres, as part of larger variety and vaudeville programmes, also at various concert venues in town and countryside.

The female brass ensembles were generally known as “Damen Blasorchester” or “Damen Trompeterkorps” and consisted of a variety of instrumentalists, almost exclusively brass (though some groups did double up on stringed instruments, drums or handbells - for example). In addition to their instrumental playing they would sometimes also sing and dance and go through various costume changes as part of their performances. Fanfare trumpets were a feature of some ensembles.

The music performed ranged from the popular tunes of the day, military marches, and “salon music” to sophisticated arrangements of classical and operatic works. These were written and transcribed by the members, though perhaps more usually by the male “Director” of the ensemble. (I parafrase 'Damen und Damen - Ladies’ professional travelling brass ensembles of the German Empire 1871-1918 by Gavin Holman, 2017, who borrows a lot from Dorothea Kaumann's 'routinierte Trommlerin gesucht' from 1996.)

Ensembles including brass instruments were particularly popular in some environments – e.g. restaurants and outdoor events – where their music could be heard over the background noise. These brass groups had their origins in the military bands of the early 19th century which included woodwind and brass instruments, the brass being increasingly dominant as the instruments evolved, using piston valves and more efficient manufacturing techniques. The relatively low cost, ease of learning and playing of the brass instruments, made them eminently suitable for the new women’s ensembles (as also for the village and town bands). Indeed, many of these groups maintained the links to the earlier bands by adopting costumes modelled on military uniforms. Other costumes were based on traditional folklore dress and more normal female attire of the day.

It was not until the 1890s that the numbers of women’s groups increased significantly. Each city had at least one group resident or as part of a touring company, in Dresden alone, there were up to ten Damen Kapellen of various types regularly performing after 1900. They took advantage of the economic prosperity around the turn of the century, the popularity of theatres and vaudeville shows, the demand from large restaurants, bars and exhibitions for entertainers, and the easing of the labour market for women. Their engagements generally lasted from two weeks to several months, depending on the venue and tour commitments of the ensembles, moving on to the next town for their new contract, even beyond the traditional German speaking countries.

An analysis by Dorothea Kaufmann from adverts in “Der Artist” (a German version of “The Stage” or “Variety”) shows an increase in the numbers of Damen Kapellen from 43 in 1894, peaking at 299 in 1913, then declining sharply in the early 1920s, running around 30 or so until WW2. The groups averaged seven to eight females and up to two or three males. After WW1 the groups tended to reduce in numbers to three/four female and perhaps one male on average. The decline of these bands after WWI might be one of the reasons why the Normaphon and the Jazzophone didn't gain a market.

Karl Linsenmeijer

In 1956 Karl Linsenmeijer, then 16 years old, entered the Musikverein Offnadingen (a small village near Freiburg, Germany) and played an alto Normaphon untill he changed to clarinet in 1965. He played it together with Karl Schleer, who changed to flugelhorn. The Musikverein had severe losses during WWII, having only 5 active members left in 1945. The Normaphon was bought because at the time the money was very tight and sometimes even two musicians had only one instrument, so Jürgen Schleer, now chairman and son of Karl. Where it was bought is not known, after 1965 it went to a music store. In the orchestra the Normaphon was counted as a flugelhorn, the notes were always rewritten by the conductor, mostly from the tenor horn. 'The exotic Normaphon has always been a highlight and an eye-catcher at every party and every performance', says Jürgen.

Nat King Cole

In 1957 Nat King Cole performed 'Rosetta' in one of his shows together with Billy Eckstine (8 July 1914 – 8 March 1993), Eckstine playing a tenor Normaphone (from 2.12').

William 'Hicky' Kelley

William 'Hicky' Kelley played a Normaphone (probably an alto) in 1959 and 1960 with the Modern Jazz Disciples on two records, 'The modern jazz disciples' and 'right down front'. Kelley (March 12, 1929 Cincinnati - May 9, 1998 Cincinnati) started his musical career on the trumpet and later picked up the Normaphone. The notes to the original first album of the Modern Jazz Disciples state that Kelley would like it made clear that that his use of the Normaphon (and the euphonium on one track) is 'not one of novelty. He is dedicated to their use as jazz pieces. He has no desire to become an 'avant-courier' for them in the field of jazz.' Here's Kelley on the Normaphone in Disciples Blues (as of 4.50') (and here's more about this piece).

  • William 'Hicky' Kelley

  • MJD, left: William Kelley

Scott Robinson

Multi instrumentalist Scott Robinson from Teaneck, New Jersey, played a tenor Normaphon on his first LP Multiple Instruments from 1984 and in later years with Hazmat Modine on their CD Bahamut.

Tom Guralnick

Tom Guralnick has a tenor Normaphon (serial number 0238) that he got from Bob Klein in New York around 2001. Bob's father played in the NY Philharmonic and taught in a community music school where he discovered it some 50 years ago when he closed down the music school, and Bob gave it to Tom some 15 years ago. Tom is the director at Outpost, Albuquerque, and occasionally shows the instrument to guest musicians. 'Rosewell Rudd dug it'. Here's jazz trumpeter Bobby Bradford (1934) trying, with Tom looking.

  • Bobby Bradford and Tom Guralnick 12 april 2004, photo Mark Weber

Bob Zajíček

Legendary Prague trumpeter and cornettist Luboš 'Bob Zajíček (6-10-1938) and his quintet performed on December 18th, 2013 at ...., with Bob (center) on a soprano Normaphone, ... on Violinophone and .. on a Jazzophone, probably pitched in Eb. Bob Zajíček also hosts a programm called JAZZOFON on radio station Vltava. Zajíček and his friends, playing what's now called traditional jazz, are keeping alive a tradition of which the Jazzophon is the ultimate icon.

  • Bob Zajíček Kvintet

  • Soprano Normaphon coll. B.Zajíček

Normaphons overview

Here's an overview of the Normaphones I detected so far. Please let me know when you know of others. Serial numbers range from 0104 till 0441, suggesting that there might have been a few hundred of them. I didn't manage to find another Heber instrument with a serial number yet, to see if he used these numbers for all his instruments or for the Normaphones exclusively.

  • 1

  • 2

  • 3

  • 4

  • 5

  • 6

  • 0117

  • 0315

  • 0344

  • 0441

  • 1525

  • 200

  • 0109

  • 0104

  • 0187

  • 240

  • 267

  • 306

  • 362

  • 390

  • 238

  • 150

  • 350

nr 0104 alto Normaphon D.R.G.M. C.A.Wunderlich Siebenbrunn Vgtl. valve casings stamped 28,29,30 coll. Gerard Westerhof, Netherlands

nr 0109 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M Trade Mark/Fabrik Marke coll. Gigion Erino @ern_brass Yogyakarta Indonesia

Euphonium

nr 0117 soprano Normaphon D.R.G.M. Germany valve casings and caps stamped 10, 11 and 12. coll. NMM 7350 Joe R. and Joella F. Utley Collection, 1999 Vermillion South Dakota US US

nr 150 alto Normaphon, coll. Scott Robinson, Teaneck New Jersey, US

nr 0164 tenor Normaphon coll. Eric Budd, Melbourne Australia

nr 0187 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. D.R. Patent Germany valve casings stamped 10,11,12, offered on Ebay 2017

nr 0196 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. C.A.Wunderlich Siebenbrunn Vgtl. coll. Museum für Musikinstrumente der Universität Leipzig

Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers

nr 0200 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. Germany rotary valves coll. NMM 1526, Vermillion South Dakota US

nr 0238 tenor Normaphon coll. Tom Guralnick Albuquerque US

nr 0240 soprano Normaphon D.R.G.M. D.R. Patent, valve casings stamped 1,2,3, for sale on Ebay.be 2018

nr 0260 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. Germany 8188/M. J. KALASHEN/NEW YORK, valves and valve caps stamped: 16, 17, 18, coll. NMM 1525, Vermillion South Dakota US, acquired in 1977, on display at Meredith Willson Museum, Mason City, Iowa US

nr 0267 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. Germany 39819 sold through Ebay 2015

nr 0306 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. C.A.Wunderlich Siebenbrunn Vgtl. sold through Ebay.de 2014

nr 0315 tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. coll. Edinburgh University, UK

Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers

nr 0344 alto Normaphon, D.R.G.M. acquired in 2010, coll. Han Savelkoel, Netherlands

nr 350 tenor Normaphon, coll. Scott Robinson, Teaneck New Jersey, US

nr 362 tenor Normaphon, D.R.G.M, sold through Auktionshaus Mehlis 2018

nr 0390 soprano Normaphon D.R.G.M. acquired in 2017 by Dirk Arzig GE

nr 0441 alto Normaphon coll. Heikki Moisio Turku, Finland

1. tenor Normaphon D.R.G.M. coll. MIM, Phoenix US, (until 2011 Fiske Museum, Claremont, US) (Albert Rice speaks of an alto, D.R.G.M./GERMANY'—sold by C.A. Wunderlich)

2. tenor Normaphon, D.R.G.M. Germany, restauration with new mouthpipe in 2012 by Robb Stewart, coll. Rick Schwartz, Virginia US

3. soprano Normaphon D.R.G.M. Germany sold in 1998 through Butterfield & Butterfield (maybe same as 0117) alto

4. tenor Normaphon, D.R.G.M. C.A.Wunderlich Siebenbrunn, Vgtl, offered from Sintra, Portugal through Olx.pt 2016

Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers Doreen

5 tenor Normaphon C.A.Wunderlich Siebenbrunn, Vgtl, coll. Musik-Museum Basel

6 bell of a sopran Normaphon D.R.G.M. diameter 11 cm, sold through Ebay.de in 2017

Other sax shaped trumpets

Somehow it seems to be attractive to make trumpets that have the form of a saxophone. The Jazzophone and the Normaphone are presumably the first ones, dating from the jazz crazy twenties of the last century. But there are more examples, some produced inserie, others built as project horns.More at the brasspedia page about Other sax shaped trumpets

Retrieved from ‘https://brasspedia.com/index.php?title=Normaphone&oldid=4208’

The development of a serial number list has been very difficult because of the lack of official records. Mr. H. N. White kept very detailed records but when the company was sold to the Seeburg Corporation all official records were destroyed. When looking up the age of your instrument, complete the following steps: (1.) Find your instruments catalog page and year that the catalog was made. Pay special attention to the small details on your instrument because most artists drawings account for unique changes and features. (2.) Compare your findings to the serial number list. Please keep in mind that most catalogs were dated on the back and should be trusted more than the serial number list.

  • Early instruments will have a 'lion head' by the serial numbers and are engraved 'The King'.
  • In 1918 the company was incorporated and 'Co' was added to the engraving of all instruments, before 1918 the engraving read simply as 'H. N. White.'
  • In 1926-1928 H. N. White introduced Sterling Silver bells to his instruments.
  • In 1948-1950 'Silver Tone' engraving was changed to read 'Silversonic'.
  • After 1966, all instruments were manufactured in Eastlake and engraved with 'King Musical Instruments.'

1/01/2008 We have reevaluated the serial number list to reflect new information. The number of instruments produced in the early years 1893-1905, has been reduced.

The serial number lists are NOT 100% accurate.

Brass King Serial Numbers

DateSerial Number
1893-18991-4,000
1900-19034,001-6,000
1904-19056,001-9,000
1905-19109,001-25,000
1910-191525,001-40,000
1915-192540,001-78,000
1925-193078,001-126,000
1930-1935126,001-176,000
1935-1936176,001-186,000
1936-1937186,001-200,000
1937-1938200,001-212,000
1938-1939212,001-225,000
1939-1940225,001-239,000
1940-1941239,001-254,000
1941-1942254,001-264,000
1942-1945264,001-267,500
1945-1946

267,501-277,000

1946-1947

277,001-287,000

1947-1948287,001-296,500
1948-1949296,501-301,500
1949-1950301,501-308,000
1950-1951308,001-316,500
1951-1952316,501-322,000
1952-1953322,001-330,000
1953-1954

330,001-337,000

1954-1955337,001-340,000
1955-1960340,001-370,000
1960-1965370,000-406,500
1965-1970406,501-457,600

String Serial Numbers

Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers Diagram

American Standard String Bass Serial Numbers
1934 001
1935 200
1936 400
1937 800
1938 1200
1939 1600
1940 2200
1942-1946 No Production WWII
1947 Limited Production
1949
1950
1951
1952 2450
1953 2600
1954 2800
1955 3000
1956 3200
1957 3400
1958 3600
1959 3800
1960 4000
1961 4200
1962 4400
1963 4600
1964 4800
1965 5000
1936 001
1937 185
1938 480
1939 790
1940 1010
1941 1320
1942-1946 No Production WWII
1947-1948 No Production
1949 1400
1950 1500
1951 1600
1952 1700
1953 1800
1954 1900
1955 2000
1956 2100
1957 2200
1958 2300
1959 2400
1960 2500
1961 2600
1962 2700
1963 2800
1964 2900
1965 3090
Euphonium

Cleveland and American Standard Serial Numbers:

Willson Euphonium Serial Numbers

DateSerial Number
1919-19301-10,000
1930-193510,000-30,000
1935-194030,000-40,000
1940-194540,000-45,000
1945-195045,000-50,000
1950-195550,000-65,000
1955-196065,000-100,000
1960-1965100,000-160,000
1965-1970160,000-420,000

Willson Euphonium For Sale

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