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Robert Heilbuth - Band Organ Builder
By Andrew Barrett

Dear Mr. Rhodes, Mr. Schutt, Mr. Tikker and group,  First, I really
appreciate your posts on Mr. Robert Heilbuth.  Thank you, Mr. Tikker,
for saving his unique pipe organ and I would love to hear it when it
is finally all up and running again.

Thank you also for updating us on the current status of some of his
instruments.  You may wish to also update Mr. Schutt directly, since
I'm not sure he has any current information on these.

Robbie Rhodes, in his paragraph comment appended to Mr. Schutt's post
in 150831 MMDigest (August 31st, 2015), gives two links to audio files
I'd never heard before of Mr. Heilbuth's marvelous, magnificently
voiced band organ.

  https://app.box.com/shared/1hhuo1donc  Robert Heilbuth song 1.mp3
  https://app.box.com/shared/eqyxk5kgkq  Robert Heilbuth song 2.mp3

But first: after having viewed the video of the band organ
(orchestrion) playing Mr. Heilbuth's arrangements of "Minuit Polka"
by Waldteufel, and the old pop hit "Never on Sunday") that was posted
to YouTube several years ago:

  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5At0FSdY7w4
Attachment thumbnail Robert Heilbuth - eccentric pipe organ builder/composer I noticed how much Mr. Heilbuth's instrument, although voiced and scaled like a band organ (and very finely, in my opinion!) seems to actually be constructed along the lines of a large Popper cabinet-style piano orchestrion, sans the piano of course, with a different type of homemade spoolbox, and with some of the components arranged "mirror image", that is, with things that would normally be on the left side in a Popper (drums, triangle, wood block) now on the right, but still in the same general orientation, and with what I perceive as some similar design features. Could this be a sign that Mr. Heilbuth worked at the Popper factory at some point? Is there any evidence of this? What do you European orchestrion experts out there think? Obviously (quite unlike European orchestrions, or for that matter, most band organs) the organ seems to be built with castoff materials, scrap lumber, et cetera, but I think it is quite well-built considering all of this, and plays/functions remarkably well (at least in the video). Anyway, to get back to the topic at hand, I listened with great interest to the first audio file, "Robert Heilbuth song 1" Robbie labeled it as one of Mr. Heilbuth's compositions, but it is not, and it exists in other vintage arrangements for large European fairground organs, and I have seen enough different versions of it to assume it originally had some popularity. I recognize it from a Wilfried Hömmerich / CHOR Music fairground organ CD that I have, "Schneider`s Große Konzertorgel" which is CD #2016 and is a large 78-keyless Wrede organ playing the 36 Ruth scale music. On this CD the tune is track #4 and is titled "Die Peruanerin". This CD may still be purchased here: http://www.drehorgelverleih.ch/?m=shop&c=2 Ueli's Chilbi & Drehorgel Verleih > CD Verkauf After a simple YouTube search I came upon this video of the Kleuser family's style 36 Ruth organ (with very distinctive facade) playing what I believe is the same exact arrangement as on that CD (possibly a Ruth factory-arrangement, does anyone know?), and you can hear it here, starting at 0:37 in the following video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PfHUnweS48U
Attachment thumbnail 36er Ruth von 1910 der Familie Kleuser spielt Die Peruanerin I have also found this record by Jacques Rotter and his Orchestra (recorded under a pseudonym), with vocal chorus, from 1921, on YouTube. This record was apparently recorded in Vienna, and I would guess this tune to thus date from around 1921(?). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmTSrbYX5_g
Attachment thumbnail Jacques Rotter 1921: Die Peruanerin [... Rudolf Nelson's original ragtime-influenced-song & hit ...] Finally, here is a very entertaining theatrical production, the "Nelson Revue" from 1982, which includes this song. I do believe the musical production itself might be titled "Die Peruanerin" (The Peruvian) but I'm not sure. Does anyone know more about the history of this show or this song? I can't understand the lyrics. The video clearly gives the credits of the song's authorship: The words were written by O. A. Alberts, and the music was composed by Rudolf Nelson. Does anyone know more about them?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUH7rHttqpE
Attachment thumbnail Gerrie van der Klei en Jan Mesdag met "Die Peruanerin" Comparing the records and the Ruth 36 scale arrangement with Mr. Heilbuth's arrangement, I find his arrangement is much less straightforward (except at the beginning) and gets extremely elaborate and _really_ impressive near the end! Phew! I especially like his registration in the middle, with the great flute solo punctuated by lightning fast bell fills. I think this use of registration is also extremely impressive, and makes for really exciting registration much like a really good live band. This is similar to what other of the very best arrangers of the old days (including Mr. Gustav Bruder) did in their arrangements: they were fearless, and rather than bow to convention and merely grind out blah-sounding arrangements (or decent and musical-sounding but not terrific arrangements) like a few of their predecessors, Mr. Bruder and others of his stature decided they wanted their arrangements to have all of the excitement and musicality of a live band, and they were willing to spend extra time making sure the arrangement was perfect on the roll (good phrasing, articulation, etc) to achieve this end. Also, they were not afraid to use the automatic registers, other than just turning them on at the beginning of a chorus and off (or, changed) between choruses, they would bring them on and off within sections of the music, with lightening rapidity, just like in the more exciting arrangements played by bands and orchestras of that day. I hear this in Mr. Heilbuth's roll. He really was a genius arranger and if this roll is really adaptable to the Wurlitzer 165 roll scale as someone mentions in the archives (or even if adaptable to a slightly larger scale along the lines of Stinson "European" scale with 8 bass notes, 20 counter-melody, 22 melody etc etc), then I think it should really be scanned and recut from the hand-cut original and shared! This would be fantastic to hear on other organs, if the current owner is willing to loan it. Thoughts? Sincerely, Andrew Barrett [ "Die Peruanerin" (in French, "La peruvienne") is a revue by [ Rudolf Nelson, text by O. A. Alberts, Berlin, 1918. A biography [ of Nelson is at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Nelson [ [ At http://www.abebooks.co.uk/Peruanerin-Kleinkunst-Bilder-Text-O.A-Alberts-Musik/6458509709/bd [ [ "The magnificent, yet apolitical Nelson revues were a constituent [ of the Golden Twenties in Berlin. ... After the seizure of power by [ the Nazis in 1933 Nelson slipped away to Vienna with his revue, but [ even there the dismissal was enforced. [ "Nelson went to Switzerland and while a guest performer in Zurich [ in 1934, he was hired away to Amsterdam. Here he led the exile [ cabaret 'La Gaîté' and guested during the summer months in [ Scheveningen. By 1940, Nelson had created nearly 100 programs that [ changed biweekly. After the invasion of the Wehrmacht he escaped in [ hiding from deportation. When the war ended, he returned to Berlin [ and wrote here in 1949 his last revue, 'Berlin Weh Weh [Berlin Woe]'" [ [ -- Robbie

(Message sent Tue, 8 Sep 2015 10:28:49 +0000 (UTC) , from time zone +0000.)

Key Words in Subject:  Band, Builder, Heilbuth, Organ, Robert

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