part 1
http://www.oddmusic.com/gallery/om14725.htmlThe Armonica: Its Place in Colonial History: An Ingenious invention of The Enlightenment Destroyed by Medical Quackery and Hysteria.
by
David Mauldin
Benjamin Franklin’s musical invention, “The Armonica” is an example of pragmatic
visionary thinking that typified the 18th Century, only to be ruined by a quack physician
and a society easily influenced by rumors and given over to hysterics. On September 17th,
2007 I had the pleasure of introducing the armonica to a group of elementary school
teachers. Their reaction to the instrument is one of uniform amazement. Its ethereal tones
elicit quizzical reactions. Yet, rather than asking questions as to how the instrument
works, they want to know why they have never heard the instrument before? “Why is this
instrument so obscure?” “We all know who Benjamin Franklin is, we know he was an
inventor, but why haven’t we heard about the armonica, his ‘favorite invention’, before?”
“Why did this instrument find such initial success, yet just a few years later, vanish from
the face of the earth?” In the following paper I will attempt to answer these questions by
introducing the armonica in its 18th century context along with its rise in popularity. Next,
I will discuss its downfall in popularity attributed to the physician Franz Mezmer. and
the paradox of credulity within the enlightenment. Finally, I will show that the
armonica’s history typifies the struggle between reason and emotionalism in the
enlightenment.
Benjamin Franklin’s early life, born in 1706, could be viewed as a launching point
for the enlightenment. Franklin’s own minister, Cotton Mather, regrettably, had
participated in the Salem Witch Trials only a few years earlier and these events had only
served to decrease the power of the clergy and encourage alternative philosophies to
emerge. Franklin would become a leader in a period of history known as The Age of
Enlightenment. This, defined by Immanuel Kant, “is man’s emergence from his nonage.”
This nonage or immaturity he continued was caused not by “lack of intelligence, but lack
of determination to use that intelligence without another’s guidance.”1 In other words the
enlightenment is an era of history where theorists embraced new ideas about religion and
liberalism (reason being the primary basis of authority.) These ideas manifested
themselves in a form of systematic thinking. Theorists applied it to all areas of human
activity. More and more, as the 16th Century progressed, men began to think, if not to
say, that things were true in science because their own experience told them so-through
observation and experiment.2 As a result, the 18th century became the discovery point of
many new inventions, one being the armonica. Benjamin Franklin’s evidence of
enlightened thinking can be exemplified in this invention. Most people today are familiar
with the association of glass and music. It is a common occurrence at dinner parties to
hear someone producing a sound from a goblet. This practice has been around for
hundreds of years. The ancient Egyptians are known to have used porcelain in musical
instruments.3 During the 16th century, Galileo Galilei wrote about the effect of the “wet-
finger-around-the-wine-glass phenomenon”.4 However, it wasn’t until the age of
enlightenment that performers began to specialize in the genre.
These performers, Anne Ford and C.W. Gluck, could be found in Europe
during the early to mid 18th century.5 Benjamin Franklin attributes his first introduction
to glass music to a “Mr. Richard Pockeridge” who became famous for performing
challenging tunes upon his “Angelic Organ”.6 This “Organ” was an arrangement of wine
glasses filled at different levels with water. The glasses were set on a table with three
different levels that allowed Mr. Pockeridge to reach without stooping over. These, when
rubbed, would produce a variance of sounds which enabled him to play a range of notes
and perform musical compositions. Afterwards Franklin took this idea and improved
upon it by arranging the glasses in a “narrower compass, so as to admit a greater
number of tunes, and all within reach of the hand”.7
Franklin’s invention transformed musical glasses (which could be awkward and
difficult to arrange and limited in their musical possibilities) into one convenient
instrument. “Wishing to see the glasses disposed in a more convenient form,”8 Franklin
nested the bowls inside of one another. These ascended in diameter from left to right. He
eliminated the need to fill the glasses with water, tuning the glasses by engineering their
size and thickness. They were also created with holes in the bottom and attached together
with the use of a rod