glassichord
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]glassichord (plural glassichords)
- A 19th-century musical instrument made of glass plates that are struck by hammers or sticks.
- 1844, United States. Patent Office, Annual Report of the Commissioner of Patents, page 514:
- A patent has been granted for the combination of the glassichord with the piano; and in the same connexion an improvement has been made in the tones of the glassichord itself, by a more elastic mode of suspending the strips of glass than has been before used.
- 1870, Modern American Spiritualism:
- Amongst other phenomena, let it be remembered that the glassichord and the drum were skilfully played upon with both sticks.
- 1883 March, “Remarkable History of a Harvard Student”, in Facts, volume 2, number 1, page 51:
- The instruments usually comprised a guitar, an accordion, several bells, a glassichord struck with cork hammers, and a small drum with the requisite sticks.
- Synonym of glass harmonica
- 1879, Horace Wemyss Smith, Life and Correspondence of the Rev. William Smith:
- He revived and improved the harmonica, or glassichord, and extended his speculations to the finer arts; showing that he could taste and criticise even the compositions of a Handel!
- 1962, Lubov Breit Keefer, Baltimore's Music: The Haven of the American Composer, page 19:
- Curiously, he omitted the only indigenous instrument, Franklin's glassichord.
- 2017, Daniel Mark Epstein, The Loyal Son: The War in Ben Franklin's House, page 88:
- His glassichord was a sensation in the intersecting spheres of art and science, capitalizing as it did upon a fad in London of playing concertos upon musical glasses.
- (figurative) Anything that produces a similarly pure continuous sound.
- 1867, Ersilia: or, The ordeal, page 130:
- The moveless, still air acted as a glassichord on the waters, which rang under the shrill voice of the singer.
- 1887, William Hamilton Gibson, Happy Hunting-grounds: A Tribute to the Woods and Fields, page 119:
- Turning upon his perch , he brings to view his “glassichord," or shrilling organ, upon his back — a glass-like spot upon his wings just behind the thorax, or what might appear to be facetiously inclined as an exceedingly uncomfortable-looking collar.
- 1897, William Sloane Kennedy, In Portia's Gardens, page 220:
- Bobolink. For notes from the "glassichord" of fifteen bobolinks see Chapter III., near end.