US3562394A - Electronic musical instrument with finger-depressable note heads on musical score - Google Patents

Electronic musical instrument with finger-depressable note heads on musical score Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3562394A
US3562394A US800094A US3562394DA US3562394A US 3562394 A US3562394 A US 3562394A US 800094 A US800094 A US 800094A US 3562394D A US3562394D A US 3562394DA US 3562394 A US3562394 A US 3562394A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
musical
score
note
performer
heads
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US800094A
Inventor
Paul Edwin Kiepe
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3562394A publication Critical patent/US3562394A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09BEDUCATIONAL OR DEMONSTRATION APPLIANCES; APPLIANCES FOR TEACHING, OR COMMUNICATING WITH, THE BLIND, DEAF OR MUTE; MODELS; PLANETARIA; GLOBES; MAPS; DIAGRAMS
    • G09B15/00Teaching music
    • G09B15/02Boards or like means for providing an indication of notes
    • G09B15/04Boards or like means for providing an indication of notes with sound emitters
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10GREPRESENTATION OF MUSIC; RECORDING MUSIC IN NOTATION FORM; ACCESSORIES FOR MUSIC OR MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR, e.g. SUPPORTS
    • G10G7/00Other auxiliary devices or accessories, e.g. conductors' batons or separate holders for resin or strings
    • G10G7/02Tuning forks or like devices
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10HELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
    • G10H1/00Details of electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H1/32Constructional details
    • G10H1/34Switch arrangements, e.g. keyboards or mechanical switches specially adapted for electrophonic musical instruments
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10HELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
    • G10H2220/00Input/output interfacing specifically adapted for electrophonic musical tools or instruments
    • G10H2220/155User input interfaces for electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H2220/221Keyboards, i.e. configuration of several keys or key-like input devices relative to one another
    • G10H2220/236Keyboards, i.e. configuration of several keys or key-like input devices relative to one another representing an active musical staff or tablature, i.e. with key-like position sensing at the expected note positions on the staff

Definitions

  • E Ray ABSTRACT An electrically operated musical device with controls and tones resembling an electric organ, whose tunes are programmed by exchangeable scores that the performer plays by finger pressure seriatim upon their semiattached note heads.
  • a score adapted for the device When in playing position, a score adapted for the device, that may be a page in a book of such scores, is-in effeet-its keyboard, being in preferred size somewhat larger than conventional sheet music to make room for note heads big enough for the finger tips. Finger pressure upon each such note head transfers its effect to subjacent metallic connective pieces. Each such metallic piece, when it descends, connects electrically across an appropriate pair of subjacent conductor bars that interconnect with the pitch-determining electronic elements of an associated control console and oscillator-amplifier-loudspeaker system.
  • the performer need not know the code of musical scoring to play a tune; the score in playing position determines for him what note sequence will issue forth as he touches the note heads one after the other.
  • the disadvantageous selector pin or stylus is the chief object of the present invention.
  • the performer need not keep his eyes fixed unswervingly upon the next note head to be struck, nor make exacting eye-hand coordinative movements of a hand-held object. It is necessary only that he contact, one after the other, the depressable not heads of the said score with his finger tips. These note heads are attached flexibly to the score.
  • the performers finger pressure transfers its thrust to underlying metallic pieces that are, in effect, the moveable members of electrical pushbutton switches, each pushbutton being in control of a musicaltone appropriate in pitch to the note heads score position.
  • the playing of musical compositions can be learned and enjoyed from tactile cues alone, and thus the device becomes available for use by the blind.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide the described score in a form readily exchangeable at the console of the device, so that a performer may play musical compositions or musical exercises easily one after the other.
  • a further object of the present invention is to offer, optionally, the playable score in a booklike form of such scores so as to facilitate, in a classroom or concert situation, the performance of extensive musical pieces requiring several score pages.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide at the instruments console three switching systems and a volume control for giving into the performers hand unoccupied by the note heads the power of producing a range of organ like effects.
  • a switching system may vary tonal timbre or bring on percussivesounds; with another he may quick-tune the instrument's gamut to any musical key; with a third he may raise or lower any score note his fingertip is touching a half tone, in order to supply sharps and flats.
  • a volume control he may give to each score note its appropriate musical expression.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide, in the playable score depressable note heads of a particularity of shapes to transmit to performers in various classes immediate knowledge of musical time values.
  • the invention offers not'e heads in a code of graduated standard lengths corresponding to the length of time each note head is to be held down.
  • the invention offers note heads in a code of shapes in a trice apparent to the touch,
  • a final object of the present invention is to provide in the device, optionally, an overcontrol of the performer's audible output.
  • the teacher or director, in a concert situation
  • this overcontrol feature called herein Director's Override, which is simply an interconnected duplicate of console controls
  • the director may supply musical elements, such as halftone adjustment, where the performer fails to do so.
  • the director has means to switch down-or even off-the audible product of any performer in error so as to avoid an unpleasing concert result.
  • the device may be played rewardingly by persons of little musical gift.
  • the device will accommodate a range of musical scores in any key, and musical key may be preset for any score through rapid manual switching.
  • the performer may produce musical accidentals at will, and he has at hand means of controlling musical expression.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the herein described electri cally operated musical device in preferred embodiment, showing a fragment of the replacable score as torn away to reveal the conductor-bar array beneath, andillustrating the device, particularly its console, at about one-fourth practical size in its physical aspect.
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic block diagram of the herein described electrically operated musical device in its electrical aspect.
  • FIG. 3 is an enlarged perspective view of the tom-away score fragment of FIG. 1, shovw'ng the score and the depressable note heads in a size practical for use by children.
  • the near edge of the score appears in sectional view, and the conductor-bar array, in part, juts from beneath the score fragment at the right-hand edge.
  • FIG. 4 is a sectional view of the replaceable score of FIG. I enlarged beyond normal size to show its several parts, to depict certain alternative embodiments claimed herein, and to illustrate preferred, smallscale means for securing depressability in the semiattached note heads.
  • FIG. 5 is a perspective view of an alternative mode of the herein described replaceable score in the form of a book of such scores that plugs into the console of FIG. I as a substitute forthe single exchangeable score shown in FIG. 1 in playing position.
  • FIG. 6 is a sectional view of a typical score in the alternative booklike mode of FIG. 5.
  • FIG. 7 is a sectional view of an embodiment of the exchangeable score that depicts alternative means for securthis invention provides mechanical and electrical means for unskilled persons to produce readily many of the musical sounds of an electric organ, and to play easily musical compositions thereon by fingertip pressure on the note heads of an exchangeable musical score, that may be a page in a book of such scores that fits the device in such manner as to be its keyboard.
  • Principal parts of the device are (a) a console for accommodating both the said exchangeable score and an aggregation of pitch, tone, and volume controls; (b) atone-making oscillator-amplifier-Ioudspeaker system that creates organlike sounds; and (c) the said exchangeable score in one of several useful modes.
  • FIG. 1 The physical character, inpreferred embodiment, of the electrically operated musical device described herein that provides for single scores is apparent from FIG. 1.
  • the console is like a desk top, or may be a desk top, or may rest on top of a desk, table, or sturdy music stand.
  • console 5 is shown as supported by legs 18, two in the drawing being concealed. Since the members of conductor-bar array 12 are strips of conductive metal in a precise pattern and electrically insulated from each other, console Sis, in whole or in relevant part, composed of rigid, stable, dielectric material where the conductor-bar array lies inserted.
  • Console 5 has three general surface areas: In FIG. 1, shown at left is the controls area; shown at center is the conductorbar area; shown at right is a necessary smooth surface area unoccupied.
  • the controls area accommodates switches and their operational members within reach of the performers left hand, said switches being the following: quick-tuner toggle switches marked C, D, E, F, G, A, and B for the corresponding musical notes, each switch having the three options, sharp/natural/flat', ⁇ tone-formant pushbutton switches with hold feature on or off, marked X, V, O, H, and T for special tones such as of the Xylophone, vibrato oboe, horn, and timpani, etc.; halftone pushbutton switches for momentary contact with spring-actuated return 6 and 7, marked S for Sharp and F for Flat; and slide operating volume control 10.
  • the centrally located conductor-bar area determines the position behind which the performer sits or stands so that he may be within reach of evry note on score 13 which a score holder 15, permanently attached to the console, locates and holds in its correct playing position after manual insertion. Correct playing position describes a physical relationship that score.
  • each metallic connective piece such as connective piece 11:, FIG. 1, where it is shown detached form the score 13 for illustrative purposes, lies directly over a pair of conductor bars 12: controlling a corresponding pitch determinator in the interconnected oscillator system.
  • the array of conductor bars 12 is let into the dielectric surface of console ;5 so the upper surfaceof all lies flat and smooth.
  • the performer may exchange rapidly again and again without damage.
  • Through the under side of console 5 run the connective wires from both the conductorbar array and the switches of the controls area.
  • the conductor bars 123, 123, etc., shown in FIG. 3 in practical size for a childrenss instrument, are of a size, spacing, and orientation at the surface of the console 5, FIG. 1, to correspond to the size and spacing of the staff linesand staff spaces of score 13, as set forth herein abovezthat is, each pair of conductor bars lies beneath a space or a line of each of the staves of the score 13 when the latter is in playing position-
  • the conductor bars are composed of an inexpensive conductive metal, such as copper, and bear gold plating for stable conductivity at their upper surface, that is, at the interface where they meet the gold-plated bottom surfaces of metallic connective pieces 11.
  • a conductor-bar array of specific dimensions will accommodate exchangeable scores of corresponding dimensions, and no others, creating. in
  • the right-hand area of theconsole 5 remains unoccupied so that the performer may slide the exchangeable scores in and.
  • FIG. 1 CONSOLE-MULTIPLE S CORE
  • FIG. 1 is'receptacle- 22 for plugging in replaceable scores in the alternative ,booklike mode depicted in FIG. 5 and FIG. 6 and described more'fully hereinbelow.
  • the loudspeaker system as it appears in FIG. 2 in block diagram with its principal control input, the conductorbar arrayl2, at upper left, and with its loudspeakeroutput at upper right, relates both to the single-score mode of FIGS. 1,
  • FIG. 1 shows in.
  • FIGS. 1, 3, 4, and 7 The principal novel elements of this invention, the depressable note heads in an exchangeable score mechanism are illustrated in the case of single scores in FIGS. 1, 3, 4, and 7 principally, and are illustrated in the case of multiple scores in booklike form in FIGS. 5 and 6 principally.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 depict a score mechanism easily made by smallscale methods; whereas FIG. 7 depicts a score requiring considerable tool expense and hence mass production. Score 13 is shown in FIGS.
  • a topmost layer 130 composed of whitesface cardboard or the like; a nether layer 130, composed of similar material with its under surface prepared so as to be highly dielectric; and an in between score membrane 13b, composed of thin, flexible material such as sheet rubber.
  • the score sheet 13a bears upon its upper surface the score markings, note stems, note flags, and other similar matter associated with conventional sheet music
  • the note heads l4e, etc., of FIG. 3, and the note heads 14x and 141, of FIG. 4 are cut out of the score-sheet material, reduced slightly in size, and set aside.
  • Score backing 130 is then suitabIy prepared by the cutting out of holes corresponding to the note-head cutouts of 13a, only larger in both lateral dimensions 30 as to produce the apertures 19a, 19x, etc.
  • Score membrane 13b now is cemented to the top of 130.
  • the top of score membrane 13b is prepared with cement, care being exercised to get no cement over the apertures 19a, etc.
  • score sheet 130 is laid on, and the cement allowed to harden. Thereafter, small amounts of cement are applied to the bottoms of the cutout note heads, and these are inserted where they belong in the score sheet.
  • the three-layered score mechanism now with its note heads attached depressably, is turned over, and the metallic connective pieces 11a, 11x, 112, etc. are cemented to the score membrane in each place where the membrane appears through the score-backing apertures.
  • the depressable note heads of this invention are made the depressable note heads of this invention, the connective pieces 11a, etc. acting as the moveable members of momentary-action pushbutton switches when score 13 is in playing position upon console 5, each such moveable member standing ready to connect across two appropriate stationary switch members in the conductor-bar array 12 to make its score position sound forth.
  • the score 13 can be'made more easily, as illustrated in FIG. 7.
  • the score 13 and the score sheet 13a are identical; only one layer is required, the top layer.
  • Cardboard is, as above, a suitable material, with its under side prepared so as to be highly dielectric.
  • the note heads are cut, and the pieces discarded.
  • a note head Mr composed of flexible material such as molded rubber.
  • metallic connective piece llr To the bottom of each such note head is molded in, or later cemented, metallic connective piece llr.
  • the flexible note heads are cemented into place in the score sheet, this version of the replaceable score now operating like the version made by small-scale methods described hereinabove.
  • the quantity, quality, and location of rubber associated with connective piece 11 determines touch as to softness or hardness. A little sponge rubber, not illustrated, back of connective piece 11, not only softens touch, but minimizes clicking.
  • Parts of the exchangeable score 13 are the score sheet 13a, the score membrane 13b, the score backing 13c, all similar to the single score, and now is added conductor-bar sheet 13d that bears upon its upper surface in the technology of flexible printed circuitry, metallic conductor bars 12, with upper surfaces laid bare and preferrably gold plated, beneath the several apertures of the score backing in such manner as to receive the corresponding conductive pieces 11 from above.
  • Distal ends of the bars 12 connect through flexible wiring to the book plug 23 that the performer inserts into receptacle 22, FIG. I, for connection to the loudspeaker system.
  • Several book pages per book may be accommodated to the system as shown, and books may be exchanged through the plug-receptacle arrangement.
  • depressable note heads of the score in the case of the multiple-score book, are formed and operate as in the case of the single score, the connective piece 11y, FIG. 6, under fingertip pressure 20, proceeding downward to connect electrically across a pair of conductor bars 12y through aperture 19y in score backing 13c.
  • the score 13 occurs in an alternative mode, hereinafter claimed as of inventive merit, wherein the musical score markings upon the upper surface of score sheet are not only printed, but are also, or alternatively, embossed or engraved upon that surface as suggested in FIG. 4 by marking 21 and in FIG. 6 by engraving 24, the purpose of this modality being to provide in musical notations a tactility sufficiently different from adjacent surfaces to be readable by touch as well as sight, or even by touch alone, to aid performers with little or no vision. correspondingly, the depressable note heads 14, at their upper surface, occur in tactility to inform the blind, ex-
  • this invention offers the depressable note heads in two simple codes of shapes to denote musical time values.
  • One code, particularly adapted for children, is illustrated in the first measures of score 13, FIGS. 1, 3, and 5, wherein. the varying lengths of the note heads, in values of a quarter note and above, occur in a range of standard length: corresponding to the length of time the.
  • FIG. 1 A second code, particularly adapted for the blind, is illustrated in the last three measures of score 13, FIG. I, wherein each musical time value occurs in a specialshape, not elongated, but apparent in a trice to sensitive finger tips when augmented by a surface tactility different from adjacent surfaces as described hereinabove. Any given score code of this sort, to be of value, must, of course, be learned.
  • the particular shapes depicted in FIG. 1 are intended to be illustrative only of the inventive idea,
  • tone-formant pushbutton T brings into a play a Timpani option so that the performer may render, then, a timpani score, mutatis mutandis, instead of a tonal one.
  • An electrically operated musical'device that provides a keyboard in the form of an exchangeable musical score with depressable note heads, said note heads being the effective heads of momentary-contact electrical pushbutton switches adapted to fingertip pressure that control the utterances of an interconnected oscillator-amplfiier-loudspeaker system through circuitry wherewith a sound for each musical staff position gains expression when the performer touches a note head in that score position.
  • the electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a quick-operating musical-key changer that provides an integrated array of halftone-controlling electronic elements interconnected with a corresponding array of handoperated electrical switches whose options change in a trice that tuning of said oscillators gamut from one musical key to another through circuitry wherewith each one of said switches provides the tones of said oscillator with a sharp option, a flat option, and a natural option through interconnected pitch determinators that said switches employ and disemploy.
  • the electrically operated musicaldevice of claim I in combination with a timbre control that provides handoperated switching for the performer to employ. and disemploy tone formants in the said osicllator that alter the wave form of oscillator output in options to produce utterances imitative of musical-instrument sounds, percussive sounds, and other sounds brought to utterance by the performer's touch upon a note head.
  • the electrically operated musical device of claim 1 structured in a combination of the said exchangeable score and a console that provides a desklike supporting surface with a score holder for said exchangeable score, anarray of conductor'barssubjacent to said score when within said score holder, and a switch space containing switch levers for controlling orv ganlike tone, pitch, and volume options, said conductor bars being interconnected with said oscillator by pairs in a circuit arrangement where contact between pair members bringson a musical-tone utterance, said array of conductor bars lying subjacent to said exchangeablescore within its holder so that each pair of conductor bars (by being suitably embedded ,in,
  • a musical score mechanism which provides. a musical score of semirigid material whose face bears the staves and the notes of musical notation, with heads of the notes discrete from said score sheet but kept snugly, yet flexibly, attached to said score so as to be depressable, and with a metallic connective piece attached subjacent to each such note head.
  • the musical score of claim 9 in a multiple arrangement that provides in a booklike form several such scores as pages,

Abstract

An electrically operated musical device with controls and tones resembling an electric organ, whose tunes are programmed by exchangeable scores that the performer plays by finger pressure seriatim upon their semiattached note heads. When in playing position, a score adapted for the device, that may be a page in a book of such scores, is-in effect-its keyboard, being in preferred size somewhat larger than conventional sheet music to make room for note heads big enough for the finger tips. Finger pressure upon each such note head transfers its effect to subjacent metallic connective pieces. Each such metallic piece, when it descends, connects electrically across an appropriate pair of subjacent conductor bars that interconnect with the pitch-determining electronic elements of an associated control console and oscillator-emplifier-loudspeaker system. The performer need not know the code of musical scoring to play a tune; the score in playing position determines for him what note sequence will issue forth as he touches the note heads one after the other.

Description

United States Patent Paul Edwin Kiepe 113 Village Lane, Boise, Idaho 83702 [21] Appl. No. 800,094
[22] Filed Feb. 18,1969
[45] Patented Feb. 9, 1971 [72] Inventor [54] ELECTRONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENT WITI-I FINGER-DEPRESSABLE NOTE HEADS ON MUSICAL SCORE 14 Claims, 7 Drawing Figs.
[52] U.S. Cl H 84/l.0l, 84/1.17, 84/l.28, 84/470 [51] Int. Cl. ..G09b 15/04; GlOh 5/00, GlOh 1/00 [50] Field ol'Search 84/l.01,
3,186,291 6/1965 Pedicano 84/470 3,376,778 4/1968 Musser 84/483 3,394,625 7/1968 Grow .t 84/471 3,460,425 8/1969 Kiepe 84/470 3,470,785 10/1969 Shallenberger etal 84/470 Primary Examiner-W. E Ray ABSTRACT: An electrically operated musical device with controls and tones resembling an electric organ, whose tunes are programmed by exchangeable scores that the performer plays by finger pressure seriatim upon their semiattached note heads. When in playing position, a score adapted for the device, that may be a page in a book of such scores, is-in effeet-its keyboard, being in preferred size somewhat larger than conventional sheet music to make room for note heads big enough for the finger tips. Finger pressure upon each such note head transfers its effect to subjacent metallic connective pieces. Each such metallic piece, when it descends, connects electrically across an appropriate pair of subjacent conductor bars that interconnect with the pitch-determining electronic elements of an associated control console and oscillator-amplifier-loudspeaker system. The performer need not know the code of musical scoring to play a tune; the score in playing position determines for him what note sequence will issue forth as he touches the note heads one after the other.
PATENTEDFEB 9197:
sum 1 OF 2 in wlmkzwwimoh mam/3L fisom 1.11 mz v .60.
mwma mm m 0l 5% 200 wmo mm MO QEQQIQ PATENTFUFEH 9m?! SHE 2 OF 2 I 3,562,394
ELECTRONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENT WITH FINGER- DEPRESSABLE NOTE HEADS ON MUSICAL SCORE The principal purpose of musical devices in this class is to make easier of accomplishment musical rendition through programming in the exchangeable score the note sequence of compositions performed. Antecedents of the present invention are principally :the U. S. Patents of Leonardson, Pedicano, and Musser as well as the'pending application of the present inventor, Ser. No. 539,815, now U. S. Pat. No. 3,460,425, all of which have in common with the present device a musical score that the performer not only reads, but plays. By following this line, the present invention enjoys its benefit, namely the ease with which such devices may be caused to produce musical tunes and harmonies by persons of good motor skills but little musical gift.
These antecedent devices prove to have a shortcoming, however, in that the performer, to play them, must strike the note heads of the playable score with a hand-held stylus. Performance requires considerable skill, taxing continuously the eye-hand coordinative abilities of the performer. Indeed, the motor skills required exceed the abilities of many.
To eliminate from devices in this class the disadvantageous selector pin or stylus is the chief object of the present invention. Using the present device the performer need not keep his eyes fixed unswervingly upon the next note head to be struck, nor make exacting eye-hand coordinative movements of a hand-held object. It is necessary only that he contact, one after the other, the depressable not heads of the said score with his finger tips. These note heads are attached flexibly to the score. The performers finger pressure transfers its thrust to underlying metallic pieces that are, in effect, the moveable members of electrical pushbutton switches, each pushbutton being in control of a musicaltone appropriate in pitch to the note heads score position.
The novelty of playable note heads that require only fingertip pressure aims at being of especial value to persons, particularly children, who are physically or mentally handicapped. Generally speaking, it is this class of persons that lacks the abilities required to manipulate the playing stylus the present invention does away with.
In one of the variant modes of the present invention, where the note-head surfaces and the score markings occur in a tactility different from nearby surfaces, the playing of musical compositions can be learned and enjoyed from tactile cues alone, and thus the device becomes available for use by the blind.
A further object of the present invention is to provide the described score in a form readily exchangeable at the console of the device, so that a performer may play musical compositions or musical exercises easily one after the other.
A further object of the present invention is to offer, optionally, the playable score in a booklike form of such scores so as to facilitate, in a classroom or concert situation, the performance of extensive musical pieces requiring several score pages.
A further object of the present invention is to provide at the instruments console three switching systems and a volume control for giving into the performers hand unoccupied by the note heads the power of producing a range of organ like effects. With one switching system he may vary tonal timbre or bring on percussivesounds; with another he may quick-tune the instrument's gamut to any musical key; with a third he may raise or lower any score note his fingertip is touching a half tone, in order to supply sharps and flats. By means of a volume control he may give to each score note its appropriate musical expression. v
A further object of the present invention is to provide, in the playable score depressable note heads of a particularity of shapes to transmit to performers in various classes immediate knowledge of musical time values. To the child perfonner the invention offers not'e heads in a code of graduated standard lengths corresponding to the length of time each note head is to be held down. To the blind performer the invention offers note heads in a code of shapes in a trice apparent to the touch,
from which correct musical time values may be learned then employed with facility thereafter.
A final object of the present invention is to provide in the device, optionally, an overcontrol of the performer's audible output. When the teacher (or director, in a concert situation) plugs in this overcontrol feature, called herein Director's Override, which is simply an interconnected duplicate of console controls, he may supply musical elements, such as halftone adjustment, where the performer fails to do so. Thus means exist in the device, optionally, for a learner at first to manipulate only the depressable note head 3 while the teacher controls the rest of the device. In a concert situation, through his over-riding control of volume output, the director has means to switch down-or even off-the audible product of any performer in error so as to avoid an unpleasing concert result.
The advantages provided by the present invention include the following:
l. The device may be played rewardingly by persons of little musical gift.
2. It may be played by persons of considerable physical or mental impairment, even by children in these classes.
3. The device will accommodate a range of musical scores in any key, and musical key may be preset for any score through rapid manual switching.
4. The performer may produce musical accidentals at will, and he has at hand means of controlling musical expression.
5. From one of two simple note-head code systems the performer may gain command of musical tempo.
6. From note-head surfaces and score'markings of a tactility different from adjacent surfaces the performer may learn to play the device though he be blind.
7. From employment of the Directors Override option, many classes of handicapped personseven persons handicapped only by little musical talent-may learn to master the device one element at a time, whilst the teacher controls other elements.
8. Several of the devices in concert need not bear the ineptitude of single performers, sincethe director may control a performers audible output electrically without marring a concert situation socially.
9. From concerts performed on these easily played devices by the handicapped on special occasions, such as holiday programs at schools and the like, the joy of musical celebration can come to players and to interested listeners alike.
The manner in which the foregoing and other objects and advantages of this invention are accomplished and the construction of the mechanical and electrical contrivances for accomplishing them will be apparent from the accompanying specifications and claims considered together with the drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the herein described electri cally operated musical device in preferred embodiment, showing a fragment of the replacable score as torn away to reveal the conductor-bar array beneath, andillustrating the device, particularly its console, at about one-fourth practical size in its physical aspect.
FIG. 2 is a schematic block diagram of the herein described electrically operated musical device in its electrical aspect.
FIG. 3 is an enlarged perspective view of the tom-away score fragment of FIG. 1, shovw'ng the score and the depressable note heads in a size practical for use by children. The near edge of the score appears in sectional view, and the conductor-bar array, in part, juts from beneath the score fragment at the right-hand edge.
FIG. 4 is a sectional view of the replaceable score of FIG. I enlarged beyond normal size to show its several parts, to depict certain alternative embodiments claimed herein, and to illustrate preferred, smallscale means for securing depressability in the semiattached note heads.
FIG. 5 is a perspective view of an alternative mode of the herein described replaceable score in the form of a book of such scores that plugs into the console of FIG. I as a substitute forthe single exchangeable score shown in FIG. 1 in playing position.
FIG. 6 is a sectional view of a typical score in the alternative booklike mode of FIG. 5. I
FIG. 7 is a sectional view of an embodiment of the exchangeable score that depicts alternative means for securthis invention provides mechanical and electrical means for unskilled persons to produce readily many of the musical sounds of an electric organ, and to play easily musical compositions thereon by fingertip pressure on the note heads of an exchangeable musical score, that may be a page in a book of such scores that fits the device in such manner as to be its keyboard. Principal parts of the device are (a) a console for accommodating both the said exchangeable score and an aggregation of pitch, tone, and volume controls; (b) atone-making oscillator-amplifier-Ioudspeaker system that creates organlike sounds; and (c) the said exchangeable score in one of several useful modes.
Considering the foregoing in greater detail and with particular reference to theldrawings:
TI-IE CONSOLE SINGLE SCORE The physical character, inpreferred embodiment, of the electrically operated musical device described herein that provides for single scores is apparent from FIG. 1. The console is like a desk top, or may be a desk top, or may rest on top of a desk, table, or sturdy music stand. In FIG. 1 console 5 is shown as supported by legs 18, two in the drawing being concealed. Since the members of conductor-bar array 12 are strips of conductive metal in a precise pattern and electrically insulated from each other, console Sis, in whole or in relevant part, composed of rigid, stable, dielectric material where the conductor-bar array lies inserted.
Console 5 has three general surface areas: In FIG. 1, shown at left is the controls area; shown at center is the conductorbar area; shown at right is a necessary smooth surface area unoccupied. The controls area accommodates switches and their operational members within reach of the performers left hand, said switches being the following: quick-tuner toggle switches marked C, D, E, F, G, A, and B for the corresponding musical notes, each switch having the three options, sharp/natural/flat', {tone-formant pushbutton switches with hold feature on or off, marked X, V, O, H, and T for special tones such as of the Xylophone, vibrato oboe, horn, and timpani, etc.; halftone pushbutton switches for momentary contact with spring-actuated return 6 and 7, marked S for Sharp and F for Flat; and slide operating volume control 10. The centrally located conductor-bar area determines the position behind which the performer sits or stands so that he may be within reach of evry note on score 13 which a score holder 15, permanently attached to the console, locates and holds in its correct playing position after manual insertion. Correct playing position describes a physical relationship that score.
holder 15 maintaihs between conductor-bar array 12 and score 13 so that each metallic connective piece, such as connective piece 11:, FIG. 1, where it is shown detached form the score 13 for illustrative purposes, lies directly over a pair of conductor bars 12: controlling a corresponding pitch determinator in the interconnected oscillator system. By a router operation, or by other suitable means, such as metallic etching, the array of conductor bars 12 is let into the dielectric surface of console ;5 so the upper surfaceof all lies flat and smooth. Thus score 13 the performer may exchange rapidly again and again without damage. Through the under side of console 5 run the connective wires from both the conductorbar array and the switches of the controls area.
The conductor bars 123, 123, etc., shown in FIG. 3 in practical size for a childrenss instrument, are of a size, spacing, and orientation at the surface of the console 5, FIG. 1, to correspond to the size and spacing of the staff linesand staff spaces of score 13, as set forth herein abovezthat is, each pair of conductor bars lies beneath a space or a line of each of the staves of the score 13 when the latter is in playing position- Preferrably, the conductor bars are composed of an inexpensive conductive metal, such as copper, and bear gold plating for stable conductivity at their upper surface, that is, at the interface where they meet the gold-plated bottom surfaces of metallic connective pieces 11. A conductor-bar array of specific dimensions will accommodate exchangeable scores of corresponding dimensions, and no others, creating. in
widespread use of the device a need amongst manufacturers;
for standardization.
The right-hand area of theconsole 5 remains unoccupied so that the performer may slide the exchangeable scores in and.
out of playing position rapidly and without damage- Shown in FIG. I attachedto the underside of console. 5 is osciIlator-ampIifier-loudspeaker system :l6that producesthe,v
console 5, FIG. 1, is receptacle 8=for plugg ing in an optional foot-operated expression control (not shown) such as. occurs in most electric organs: Along side of receptacle 8 is receptacle 17 for plugging in the Director's Override described more fully hereinbelow.
CONSOLE-MULTIPLE S CORE At the front of console 5, FIG. 1, is'receptacle- 22 for plugging in replaceable scores in the alternative ,booklike mode depicted in FIG. 5 and FIG. 6 and described more'fully hereinbelow.
LOUDSPEAKER SYSTEM The oscillator-ampIifier-loudspeaker system 16, hereinafter.
called the loudspeaker system, as it appears in FIG. 2 in block diagram with its principal control input, the conductorbar arrayl2, at upper left, and with its loudspeakeroutput at upper right, relates both to the single-score mode of FIGS. 1,
3, 4, and 7 and to the multiple-score mode of FIGS. 5 and 6'. Other elements in the system are: an audiofrequency oscilla minators of the system being modifiable both by the QUICK. TUNERS and the'SI-IARP/FLAT CONTROL. By note-head.
pressure and by switch manipulations the-performer modifies the loudspeaker systems tonal output along the control lines suggested by the simplified connective s of the block diagram of FIG. 2. A director or teacher, optionally, can modify the tonal output also, along the control lines indicated as interconnecting with the DIRECT ORS OVERRIDE which consists of an effectively overriding duplicate of the performers controls of pitch and volume. The QUICK TUNERS of the device supplement conventional initial tuning of the gamut, ordinarily in the key of C. By way of illustrating the function of the QUICK TUNERS and their peculiar value to the device, particularly as a means of performance simplification, FIG. 1 shows in.
playing position a score 13 written in the key of F-major, which requires that all B notes be played as flats. Hence, before starting to play, the performer has switched quick-tuner 3 -or in the case of a child performer, the teacher has done so to the right, i.e., to the iz (flat) position. Now, as the performer plays the piece, he need not resort to halftone button 7 to flat each B when it occurs in the score; by the presetting of switch 3, that is already done. The instruments gamut now is option that is t tuned to the key of F-major. As scores in the higher key signatures appear, the herein described system of quick tuning becomes more important. In fact, scores in such keys as A- flat-major and A-sharp-major cannot be played by ordinary persons even after considerable practice through employment of the halftone buttons; the task of flatting or sharping four tones out of seven requires too much musicianship. So these complex keys are preset in the QUICK TUNERS. Use of the halftone buttons 6 and 7 thus is reserved for accidentals only, which means they are employed but rarely in the average composition. In FIG. 2 the halftone button switches of FIG. I bear the block designation SHARP/FLAT CONTROL. This control ties into the main stem of the oscillator, adding-a halftone or subtracting a halftone from any note sounded; it raises or lowers the tuning of the whole gamut.
EXCHANGEABLE SINGLE SCORE The principal novel elements of this invention, the depressable note heads in an exchangeable score mechanism are illustrated in the case of single scores in FIGS. 1, 3, 4, and 7 principally, and are illustrated in the case of multiple scores in booklike form in FIGS. 5 and 6 principally. In essentials the difference between the forms is slight, and identical numbers in the several drawings indicate essentially similar parts, with the associated lower-case letters marking slight variations described hereinafter. In the case of the single-score mode, FIGS. 3 and 4 depict a score mechanism easily made by smallscale methods; whereas FIG. 7 depicts a score requiring considerable tool expense and hence mass production. Score 13 is shown in FIGS. 3 and 4 as comprising a topmost layer 130, composed of whitesface cardboard or the like; a nether layer 130, composed of similar material with its under surface prepared so as to be highly dielectric; and an in between score membrane 13b, composed of thin, flexible material such as sheet rubber. The score sheet 13a bears upon its upper surface the score markings, note stems, note flags, and other similar matter associated with conventional sheet music In small-scale manufacture, the note heads l4e, etc., of FIG. 3, and the note heads 14x and 141, of FIG. 4, are cut out of the score-sheet material, reduced slightly in size, and set aside. Score backing 130 is then suitabIy prepared by the cutting out of holes corresponding to the note-head cutouts of 13a, only larger in both lateral dimensions 30 as to produce the apertures 19a, 19x, etc. Score membrane 13b now is cemented to the top of 130. Next, the top of score membrane 13b is prepared with cement, care being exercised to get no cement over the apertures 19a, etc. Then score sheet 130 is laid on, and the cement allowed to harden. Thereafter, small amounts of cement are applied to the bottoms of the cutout note heads, and these are inserted where they belong in the score sheet. When this cementing hardens, the three-layered score mechanism, now with its note heads attached depressably, is turned over, and the metallic connective pieces 11a, 11x, 112, etc. are cemented to the score membrane in each place where the membrane appears through the score-backing apertures. Thus, in preferred embodiment, are made the depressable note heads of this invention, the connective pieces 11a, etc. acting as the moveable members of momentary-action pushbutton switches when score 13 is in playing position upon console 5, each such moveable member standing ready to connect across two appropriate stationary switch members in the conductor-bar array 12 to make its score position sound forth.
In mass production, the score 13 can be'made more easily, as illustrated in FIG. 7. Here, the score 13 and the score sheet 13a are identical; only one layer is required, the top layer. Cardboard is, as above, a suitable material, with its under side prepared so as to be highly dielectric. Out of 13a the note heads are cut, and the pieces discarded. Then, for each size and shape of note-head aperture is prepared a note head Mr, composed of flexible material such as molded rubber. To the bottom of each such note head is molded in, or later cemented, metallic connective piece llr. Then the flexible note heads are cemented into place in the score sheet, this version of the replaceable score now operating like the version made by small-scale methods described hereinabove. What makes the embodiment first described here seem preferrable is the tool costs involved in the second version for making the flexible note heads of rubber in molds. Only large-scale production in tens of thousands could pay out such molds. By showing two methods of attaining depressability in the note heads, it is not intended that the herein claimed inventive idea should be limited to these embodiments; rather, it is intended that these embodiments should be examples of the conception of depressable note heads acting as momentary-action pushbutton switches in an exchangeable score mechanism. Moreover, the inventive idea herein expressed is intended to include note-head pushbuttons that, optionally, would sound musical chords from a staff position of the chords leading tone or elsewhere on the score. Concerning the feel" of the device to the performer: the distance of travel between the bottom of connective piece 11 and the top of conductor bar 12, which may be varied by making 11 either thicker or thinner, determines the touch of the device-whether light or heavy". Similarly, the quantity, quality, and location of rubber associated with connective piece 11 determines touch as to softness or hardness. A little sponge rubber, not illustrated, back of connective piece 11, not only softens touch, but minimizes clicking.
EXCHANGEABLE MULTIPLE SCORE By the expedient of transferring the conductor-bar array 12 from the upper surface of console 5 to a conductor-bar sheet 13d of FIGS. 5 and 6, the exchangeable scores, alternatively, may occur in books of scores that comprise several compositions or the several pages of a single composition. To facilitate this mode of the present invention, which is not the preferred mode because of higher cost factors, it is not needful to employ a console different from FIG. I, but only to ignore the conductor-bar array 12 embedded in the console surface and to use this space to accommodate the score book of FIG. 5, employing console receptacle 22 to accommodate book plug 23.
Parts of the exchangeable score 13 are the score sheet 13a, the score membrane 13b, the score backing 13c, all similar to the single score, and now is added conductor-bar sheet 13d that bears upon its upper surface in the technology of flexible printed circuitry, metallic conductor bars 12, with upper surfaces laid bare and preferrably gold plated, beneath the several apertures of the score backing in such manner as to receive the corresponding conductive pieces 11 from above. Distal ends of the bars 12 connect through flexible wiring to the book plug 23 that the performer inserts into receptacle 22, FIG. I, for connection to the loudspeaker system. Several book pages per book may be accommodated to the system as shown, and books may be exchanged through the plug-receptacle arrangement. The depressable note heads of the score, in the case of the multiple-score book, are formed and operate as in the case of the single score, the connective piece 11y, FIG. 6, under fingertip pressure 20, proceeding downward to connect electrically across a pair of conductor bars 12y through aperture 19y in score backing 13c.
ALTERNATIVE MODES The score 13 occurs in an alternative mode, hereinafter claimed as of inventive merit, wherein the musical score markings upon the upper surface of score sheet are not only printed, but are also, or alternatively, embossed or engraved upon that surface as suggested in FIG. 4 by marking 21 and in FIG. 6 by engraving 24, the purpose of this modality being to provide in musical notations a tactility sufficiently different from adjacent surfaces to be readable by touch as well as sight, or even by touch alone, to aid performers with little or no vision. correspondingly, the depressable note heads 14, at their upper surface, occur in tactility to inform the blind, ex-
amples being given in the raised note head 141. of FIG. 4 and the roughened note head 14y of FIG. 6, also the raised, rubber note head of FIG. 7.
Toproduce a suitable musical efiect, fingertip pressure seriatim by the performer upon the depressable note heads of this inventions replaceable score must, of course, occur in correct musical tempo. Each note must be held so long. To simplify this task of the performer, this invention offers the depressable note heads in two simple codes of shapes to denote musical time values. One code, particularly adapted for children, is illustrated in the first measures of score 13, FIGS. 1, 3, and 5, wherein. the varying lengths of the note heads, in values of a quarter note and above, occur in a range of standard length: corresponding to the length of time the.
child is to" keep the note depressed. An eighth-note in this code is a triangularhalf of a quarter-note, as shown, thinner notes lengthwise being impractical. A second code, particularly adapted for the blind, is illustrated in the last three measures of score 13, FIG. I, wherein each musical time value occurs in a specialshape, not elongated, but apparent in a trice to sensitive finger tips when augmented by a surface tactility different from adjacent surfaces as described hereinabove. Any given score code of this sort, to be of value, must, of course, be learned. The particular shapes depicted in FIG. 1 are intended to be illustrative only of the inventive idea,
hereinafter claimed, of having the said depressable note heads in coded shapes to express time values, no especial merit being claimed for the particular shapes illustrated, these having been chosen because easily drawn. Differences of tactility, that is, surface texture, in combination with fewer different shapes, may constitute a better embodiment, and the illustrations and claims are intended to cover these possibilities.
The musical scores depicted in FIGS. 1, 3, and are illustrative of scores suitable to production of musical sounds and musical renditions that involve variations in pitch. Nothing,
however, need be altered in the inventive mechanisms herein described and claimed to produce drum music or other timpani sounds, in their variety, except employment of a suitable oscillator, ,FIG. 2, and its engagement by the performer through console management of the tone-formant switches. The tone-formant pushbutton T, FIG. 1, brings into a play a Timpani option so that the performer may render, then, a timpani score, mutatis mutandis, instead of a tonal one.
Having thus described my invention in its preferred embodiment and alternatives,
lclaim: I
1. An electrically operated musical'device that provides a keyboard in the form of an exchangeable musical score with depressable note heads, said note heads being the effective heads of momentary-contact electrical pushbutton switches adapted to fingertip pressure that control the utterances of an interconnected oscillator-amplfiier-loudspeaker system through circuitry wherewith a sound for each musical staff position gains expression when the performer touches a note head in that score position.
2. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a sharp/flat control that provides handoperated switching for the performer that employs and disemploys pitch determinators within the said oscillator to raise by a half tone, and to lower by a-half tone, the pitch of any musi cal sound brought to utterance by the performers touch upon a note head. i
3. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a quick-operating musical-key changer that provides an integrated array of halftone-controlling electronic elements interconnected with a corresponding array of handoperated electrical switches whose options change in a trice that tuning of said oscillators gamut from one musical key to another through circuitry wherewith each one of said switches provides the tones of said oscillator with a sharp option, a flat option, and a natural option through interconnected pitch determinators that said switches employ and disemploy.
4. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in the combination with a variable volume control for performer I manipulation that so interconnects with the saidamplifierloudspeader arrangements volume -determinators as to control the musical expression of any sound-brought to utterance by the performers touch upon anote head.
5. The electrically operated musicaldevice of claim I in combination with a timbre control that provides handoperated switching for the performer to employ. and disemploy tone formants in the said osicllator that alter the wave form of oscillator output in options to produce utterances imitative of musical-instrument sounds, percussive sounds, and other sounds brought to utterance by the performer's touch upon a note head.
6. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 structured in a combination of the said exchangeable score and a console that provides a desklike supporting surface with a score holder for said exchangeable score, anarray of conductor'barssubjacent to said score when within said score holder, and a switch space containing switch levers for controlling orv ganlike tone, pitch, and volume options, said conductor bars being interconnected with said oscillator by pairs in a circuit arrangement where contact between pair members bringson a musical-tone utterance, said array of conductor bars lying subjacent to said exchangeablescore within its holder so that each pair of conductor bars (by being suitably embedded ,in,
the upper surface of said console) controls a tonal utterance in pitch corresponding to the score position of each said depressable note head that lies immediately above.
7. The electrically operated musical device of claim I in combination witha directors override system that provides a disconnectably connectable sharp/flat control for the said oscillator-amplifier for operation remotely by one other than lator-amplifier for operation remotely by one other than the' performer to add and to subtract volume to and from any musical sound brought to utterance by theperformers touch upon a note head.
9. A musical score mechanism which provides. a musical score of semirigid material whose face bears the staves and the notes of musical notation, with heads of the notes discrete from said score sheet but kept snugly, yet flexibly, attached to said score so as to be depressable, and with a metallic connective piece attached subjacent to each such note head.
10. The musical score of claim 9 with staves, musical symbols, and note-head surfaces made in a tactility enough different from nearby surfaces to inform the blind.
11. The musical score of claim 9 with said note heads formed in the shape of rectangles whose lateral dimension occurs in graduated standard lengths so asi'to constitute a reada-- ble code for telling the performer eachnotes musical time value according to a system where longer note heads mean longer time values.
12. The musical score of claim 9 with said note heads so formed in shapes apparent at once to sight as constitute an immediately readable code for telling the performer musical time values.
13. The musical score of claim 9 with said note heads so formed in shapes apparent in a trice to touch as to constitute an immediately readable code for telling the blind performer musical time values.
14. The musical score of claim 9 in a multiple arrangement that provides in a booklike form several such scores as pages,
with a subjacent array of conductor bars. beneath said metallic connective pieces, individual bars of said array being formed in pairs of conductor bars that lie directly beneath said metallic connective pieces so as to interconnect therewith as the related members of momentary-contact electrical switches, said connectable disconnectably to a musical device suitably made for its accommodation in such manner as to make the said

Claims (14)

1. An electrically operated musical device that provides a keyboard in the form of an exchangeable musical score with depressable note heads, said note heads being the effective heads of momentary-contact electrical pushbutton switches adapted to fingertip pressure that control the utterances of an interconnected oscillator-amplfiier-loudspeaker system through circuitry wherewith a sound for each musical staff position gains expression when the performer touches a note head in that score position.
2. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a sharp/flat control that provides hand-operated switching for the performer that employs and disemploys pitch determinators within the said oscillator to raise by a half tone, and to lower by a half tone, the pitch of any musical sound brought to utterance by the performer''s touch upon a note head.
3. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a quick-operating musical-key changer that provides an integrated array of halftone-controlling electronic elements interconnected with a corresponding array of hand-operated electrical switches whose options change in a trice that tuning of said oscillator''s gamut from one musical key to another through circuitry wherewith each one of said switches provides the tones of said oscillator with a sharp option, a flat option, and a natural option through interconnected pitch determinators that said switches employ and disemploy.
4. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in the combination with a variable volume control for performer manipulation that so interconnects with the said amplifier-loudspeader arrangement''s volume determinators as to control the musical expression of any sound brought to utterance by the performer''s touch upon a note head.
5. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a timbre control that provides hand-operated switching for the performer to employ and disemploy tone formants in the said osicllator that alter the wave form of oscillator output in options to produce utterances imitative of musical-instrument sounds, percussive sounds, and other sounds brought to utterance by the performer''s touch upon a note head.
6. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 structured in a combination of the said exchangeable score and a console that provides a dEsklike supporting surface with a score holder for said exchangeable score, an array of conductor bars subjacent to said score when within said score holder, and a switch space containing switch levers for controlling organlike tone, pitch, and volume options, said conductor bars being interconnected with said oscillator by pairs in a circuit arrangement where contact between pair members brings on a musical-tone utterance, said array of conductor bars lying subjacent to said exchangeable score within its holder so that each pair of conductor bars (by being suitably embedded in the upper surface of said console) controls a tonal utterance in pitch corresponding to the score position of each said depressable note head that lies immediately above.
7. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a director''s override system that provides a disconnectably connectable sharp/flat control for the said oscillator-amplifier for operation remotely by one other than the performer to add and to subtract pitch to and from any musical sound brought to utterance by the performer''s touch upon a note head.
8. The electrically operated musical device of claim 1 in combination with a director''s override system that provides a disconnectably connectable volume control for the said oscillator-amplifier for operation remotely by one other than the performer to add and to subtract volume to and from any musical sound brought to utterance by the performer''s touch upon a note head.
9. A musical score mechanism which provides a musical score of semirigid material whose face bears the staves and the notes of musical notation, with heads of the notes discrete from said score sheet but kept snugly, yet flexibly, attached to said score so as to be depressable, and with a metallic connective piece attached subjacent to each such note head.
10. The musical score of claim 9 with staves, musical symbols, and note-head surfaces made in a tactility enough different from nearby surfaces to inform the blind.
11. The musical score of claim 9 with said note heads formed in the shape of rectangles whose lateral dimension occurs in graduated standard lengths so as to constitute a readable code for telling the performer each note''s musical time value according to a system where longer note heads mean longer time values.
12. The musical score of claim 9 with said note heads so formed in shapes apparent at once to sight as constitute an immediately readable code for telling the performer musical time values.
13. The musical score of claim 9 with said note heads so formed in shapes apparent in a trice to touch as to constitute an immediately readable code for telling the blind performer musical time values.
14. The musical score of claim 9 in a multiple arrangement that provides in a booklike form several such scores as pages, with a subjacent array of conductor bars beneath said metallic connective pieces, individual bars of said array being formed in pairs of conductor bars that lie directly beneath said metallic connective pieces so as to interconnect therewith as the related members of momentary-contact electrical switches, said array being contained in a layer of dielectric material cemented to the nether side of said musical score, said array being intracircuited with corresponding members within the booklike pages then terminaled at its distal end so as to be connectable disconnectably to a musical device suitably made for its accommodation in such manner as to make the said musical score in booklike form the keyboard of the said device, its means of being brought to utterance.
US800094A 1969-02-18 1969-02-18 Electronic musical instrument with finger-depressable note heads on musical score Expired - Lifetime US3562394A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US80009469A 1969-02-18 1969-02-18

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3562394A true US3562394A (en) 1971-02-09

Family

ID=25177468

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US800094A Expired - Lifetime US3562394A (en) 1969-02-18 1969-02-18 Electronic musical instrument with finger-depressable note heads on musical score

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3562394A (en)

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4098165A (en) * 1976-08-19 1978-07-04 Kakunosuke Akiyama Music studying device
US4246827A (en) * 1978-02-10 1981-01-27 Giovanni Gazzola Device for teaching music
EP0057335A1 (en) * 1981-01-22 1982-08-11 Claude Esparseil Electronic musical instrument played by direct contact of a finger on a musical score
WO1996021217A1 (en) * 1994-12-30 1996-07-11 Continental Photostructures S.P.R.L. Device and method for playing a piece of music from the score
BE1008984A3 (en) * 1994-12-30 1996-10-01 Continental Photo Device and process for interpreting a musical composition from a score
US5803748A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-09-08 Publications International, Ltd. Apparatus for producing audible sounds in response to visual indicia
US5868581A (en) * 1993-10-26 1999-02-09 Scanna Technology Limited Document interpreting systems
US5902946A (en) * 1995-08-09 1999-05-11 Kenji Nagase Instrument for musical therapy
US6452081B1 (en) * 2000-05-18 2002-09-17 Steven F. Ravagni Stringed instrument finger positioning guide and method for teaching students to read music
US20060005693A1 (en) * 2004-07-07 2006-01-12 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and performance apparatus control program
US20060236846A1 (en) * 2005-04-06 2006-10-26 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method therefor
US20070022868A1 (en) * 2005-07-29 2007-02-01 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method therefor
US20070022865A1 (en) * 2005-07-29 2007-02-01 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method using the performance apparatus
EP1833046A2 (en) * 2006-03-06 2007-09-12 Yamaha Corporation Music performance apparatus and tone generation method using a matrix keyboard wherein key coordinate positions represent timing and pitch
NL1031996C2 (en) * 2006-06-13 2007-12-14 Petrus Hubertus Peters Music teaching aid for children, comprises tablet for placing bricks with length determining duration of musical note so that composed music can be reproduced when key is pressed
US20080141849A1 (en) * 2006-12-15 2008-06-19 Johnston James S Music notation system
US20090112748A1 (en) * 2007-10-31 2009-04-30 Target Brands, Inc. Transaction product with electrical circuit
US20120247305A1 (en) * 2011-03-31 2012-10-04 Masanori Katsuta Musical score playing device and musical score playing program
US20130000461A1 (en) * 2011-06-08 2013-01-03 Shaw Justine G Method and apparatus for musical instruction
US20140033903A1 (en) * 2012-01-26 2014-02-06 Casting Media Inc. Music support apparatus and music support system
US9640161B2 (en) * 2014-03-24 2017-05-02 Kawai Musical Instruments Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Musical score displaying and performing program, and musical score displaying and performing device

Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US672678A (en) * 1898-02-11 1901-04-23 Cyrus Kitching Device for teaching music.
US1821311A (en) * 1930-11-26 1931-09-01 Charles J Lamp Apparatus for teaching sight-singing
US2516579A (en) * 1947-10-03 1950-07-25 John F Leonardson Electrically operated musical device
US2879685A (en) * 1955-05-31 1959-03-31 Page Mark Musical squeeze blocks
US2888849A (en) * 1955-09-14 1959-06-02 Humphrey Electronic musical instruments
US3186291A (en) * 1960-07-08 1965-06-01 Ernest A Pedicano Electrically operated musical device
US3376778A (en) * 1966-10-27 1968-04-09 Musser Clair Omar Electrical musical instrument with conductive tune sheet
US3394625A (en) * 1966-05-31 1968-07-30 Harlow B. Grow Music education device with tone generators corresponding to notes on a staff
US3460425A (en) * 1966-04-04 1969-08-12 Paul Edwin Kiepe Electrically operated musical device
US3470785A (en) * 1967-08-14 1969-10-07 Conn Ltd C G Teaching aid for electric keyboard instrument

Patent Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US672678A (en) * 1898-02-11 1901-04-23 Cyrus Kitching Device for teaching music.
US1821311A (en) * 1930-11-26 1931-09-01 Charles J Lamp Apparatus for teaching sight-singing
US2516579A (en) * 1947-10-03 1950-07-25 John F Leonardson Electrically operated musical device
US2879685A (en) * 1955-05-31 1959-03-31 Page Mark Musical squeeze blocks
US2888849A (en) * 1955-09-14 1959-06-02 Humphrey Electronic musical instruments
US3186291A (en) * 1960-07-08 1965-06-01 Ernest A Pedicano Electrically operated musical device
US3460425A (en) * 1966-04-04 1969-08-12 Paul Edwin Kiepe Electrically operated musical device
US3394625A (en) * 1966-05-31 1968-07-30 Harlow B. Grow Music education device with tone generators corresponding to notes on a staff
US3376778A (en) * 1966-10-27 1968-04-09 Musser Clair Omar Electrical musical instrument with conductive tune sheet
US3470785A (en) * 1967-08-14 1969-10-07 Conn Ltd C G Teaching aid for electric keyboard instrument

Cited By (39)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4098165A (en) * 1976-08-19 1978-07-04 Kakunosuke Akiyama Music studying device
US4246827A (en) * 1978-02-10 1981-01-27 Giovanni Gazzola Device for teaching music
EP0057335A1 (en) * 1981-01-22 1982-08-11 Claude Esparseil Electronic musical instrument played by direct contact of a finger on a musical score
US5868581A (en) * 1993-10-26 1999-02-09 Scanna Technology Limited Document interpreting systems
WO1996021217A1 (en) * 1994-12-30 1996-07-11 Continental Photostructures S.P.R.L. Device and method for playing a piece of music from the score
BE1008984A3 (en) * 1994-12-30 1996-10-01 Continental Photo Device and process for interpreting a musical composition from a score
US5902946A (en) * 1995-08-09 1999-05-11 Kenji Nagase Instrument for musical therapy
US5803748A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-09-08 Publications International, Ltd. Apparatus for producing audible sounds in response to visual indicia
US6041215A (en) * 1996-09-30 2000-03-21 Publications International, Ltd. Method for making an electronic book for producing audible sounds in response to visual indicia
US6452081B1 (en) * 2000-05-18 2002-09-17 Steven F. Ravagni Stringed instrument finger positioning guide and method for teaching students to read music
US20060005693A1 (en) * 2004-07-07 2006-01-12 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and performance apparatus control program
US7536257B2 (en) 2004-07-07 2009-05-19 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and performance apparatus control program
US20060236846A1 (en) * 2005-04-06 2006-10-26 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method therefor
US7371957B2 (en) 2005-04-06 2008-05-13 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method therefor
US7342164B2 (en) 2005-07-29 2008-03-11 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method using the performance apparatus
US20070022865A1 (en) * 2005-07-29 2007-02-01 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method using the performance apparatus
US7394010B2 (en) 2005-07-29 2008-07-01 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method therefor
US20070022868A1 (en) * 2005-07-29 2007-02-01 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method therefor
US7709724B2 (en) 2006-03-06 2010-05-04 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method
EP1833046A3 (en) * 2006-03-06 2007-12-12 Yamaha Corporation Music performance apparatus and tone generation method using a matrix keyboard wherein key coordinate positions represent timing and pitch
EP1833046A2 (en) * 2006-03-06 2007-09-12 Yamaha Corporation Music performance apparatus and tone generation method using a matrix keyboard wherein key coordinate positions represent timing and pitch
US8008565B2 (en) 2006-03-06 2011-08-30 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method
US20070214947A1 (en) * 2006-03-06 2007-09-20 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method
US20100037754A1 (en) * 2006-03-06 2010-02-18 Yamaha Corporation Performance apparatus and tone generation method
NL1031996C2 (en) * 2006-06-13 2007-12-14 Petrus Hubertus Peters Music teaching aid for children, comprises tablet for placing bricks with length determining duration of musical note so that composed music can be reproduced when key is pressed
US20100251875A1 (en) * 2006-12-15 2010-10-07 Johnston James S Music notation system
US7982115B2 (en) * 2006-12-15 2011-07-19 Johnston James S Music notation system
US20080141849A1 (en) * 2006-12-15 2008-06-19 Johnston James S Music notation system
US7767895B2 (en) * 2006-12-15 2010-08-03 Johnston James S Music notation system
US8342412B2 (en) 2007-10-31 2013-01-01 Target Brands, Inc. Transaction product with electrical circuit
US20090112748A1 (en) * 2007-10-31 2009-04-30 Target Brands, Inc. Transaction product with electrical circuit
US7815108B2 (en) 2007-10-31 2010-10-19 Target Brands, Inc. Transaction product with electrical circuit
US20110024498A1 (en) * 2007-10-31 2011-02-03 Target Brands, Inc. Transaction product with electrical circuit
US20120247305A1 (en) * 2011-03-31 2012-10-04 Masanori Katsuta Musical score playing device and musical score playing program
US8536437B2 (en) * 2011-03-31 2013-09-17 Kabushiki Kaisha Kawai Gakki Seisakusho Musical score playing device and musical score playing program
US20130000461A1 (en) * 2011-06-08 2013-01-03 Shaw Justine G Method and apparatus for musical instruction
US20140033903A1 (en) * 2012-01-26 2014-02-06 Casting Media Inc. Music support apparatus and music support system
US8878040B2 (en) * 2012-01-26 2014-11-04 Casting Media Inc. Music support apparatus and music support system
US9640161B2 (en) * 2014-03-24 2017-05-02 Kawai Musical Instruments Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Musical score displaying and performing program, and musical score displaying and performing device

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3562394A (en) Electronic musical instrument with finger-depressable note heads on musical score
US7674969B2 (en) Finger musical instrument
US6018119A (en) Stringless twitch fret instrument
US3555166A (en) Guitar-like electronic musical instrument with plural manuals
EP0220423A2 (en) Electronic keyboard musical instrument
US3460425A (en) Electrically operated musical device
US7790972B2 (en) Keyboard having key spacing
US3943811A (en) Keyboard type musical instrument
US3828108A (en) Binary organ and coding system for operating same
US3482028A (en) Guitar type keying system for other instruments
US20010003942A1 (en) Electronic musical toy instrument
JP2700874B2 (en) Music therapy equipment
US2820391A (en) Fingering indicator for keyboard musical instruments
US3954039A (en) Chord selection system for a musical instrument
US4628792A (en) Modified musical instrument keyboard
US3833750A (en) Reed accordion with programmable electronic organ sound
US3118961A (en) Electronic organ with automatic means for playing chords and facilitating the learning thereof
JP3738732B2 (en) Electronic musical instruments
US3099700A (en) Musical instrument
US3013462A (en) Chord selectors for chord organs
US3186285A (en) Piano having electrically actuated key playing means
GB2092816A (en) Electronic Chord Indicator
US2618190A (en) Chime system using harmonically tuned chimes
JP3554624B2 (en) Pedal switch and electronic keyboard instrument using the same
JPH10161659A (en) Electric musical instrument