The Encore Automatic
Banjo was the first American coin-operated automatic
stringed musical instrument to be commercially successful. The first
Automatic banjo was introduced in 1896, before the name "Encore" was
used. It operated on the electromagnetic system of which none are
known to survive today. The electromagnetic system proved
impractical due to the availability of electricity and the danger of
sparks igniting the machine. It is theorized that many of this type
were converted to the later pneumatic system that all the extant
machines feature. In 1897, the name "Encore" was trademarked. The
name appeared both in the crest casting on top of the cabinet and on
the lower portion of the neck of the banjo itself, inlaid in
mother-of-pearl.
Two
companies were formed to produce the instrument. Charles B. Kendall
established the New England Automatic Banjo Company located in
Boston, which governed the rights to Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont,
and Massachusetts with nonexclusive rights to foreign countries. The
American Automatic Banjo Company of New Jersey was established with
W. Scott O'Connor, the major stockholder, as president, this company
retained the rights to New York, where it was located, and the rest
of the United States outside of New England. It must have been
intended to be the parent company since all the patents were
assigned to this company. The American Automatic Banjo Company
licensed or partially owned several Encore distributors, and it was
the sole producer of music rolls for the
machine.
The
two companies used the same parts and the outside appearance was the
same. Both used the same custom made banjo, the same case, most of
which were of quarter-sawn oak with a half-dozen of mahogany, the
same cast-brass decorative corners of which there were two designs,
and the same coin slide and counter. Some of the oak-cased machines
were made without coin mechanisms as home models. The Encore
utilized an electric light bulb not only for illumination but also
for temperature and humidity control. The animal-skin head of the
banjo would stretch and shrink not only affecting the tuning but the
depth of stroke of the picker mechanism as
well.
June
28, 1898, Walfrid Gustafson was granted patent U.S. No. 606,207. The
patent included an improvement in the pneumatic picking device of
the Encore. This device most closely resembles the style of pickers
that survive today. The device forces the picker to travel in an
elliptical path around the string. The picker picks the string once
and then returns to its original position, without hitting the
string on the backstroke, ready to be activated again. A pneumatic
hinge, two springs, and a guide template, which the picker follows,
accomplish this fete consistently and
accurately.
The
New England Automatic Banjo Company produced perhaps 200 machines
between 1897 and 1900. This version was somewhat of a primitive
machine. The cabinet had an early style crest, which featured the
Encore name in script. The paper roll was loaded from the rear of
the machine and operated a valve chest that used 5/16-inch diameter
steel balls for valves, which proved unreliable and inefficient. The
companies ran into severe financial trouble. Kendall and O'Connor
decided to re-form the two companies and start
over.
The American Automatic
Banjo/American Automusic
Company
In
April of 1899, the American Automatic Banjo Company began to
break-up into two companies. It was the sole producer of music rolls
for the Encore, but it also made rolls for other companies'
products. The name of the company was changed to a less descriptive
American Automusic Company. A year later, the music roll
manufacturing part of the company split to form the Connorized Music
Company with James O'Connor (presumably W. Scott's son) as president
and treasurer. James O'Connor was instrumental in the development of
the first electromagnetic automatic banjo and helped to perfect the
pneumatically operated Encore Banjo. The American Automusic Company,
with W. Scott O'Connor remaining as president, continued to
manufacture the Encore while sharing their factory with the
Connorized Music Company. The American Automusic Company provided a
catalog of about 2,000 available musical numbers and tried to keep
as current as possible to offer the very latest musical selection of
the day, such as "My Old Kentucky Home," "Yankee Doodle Dandy," "On
the Banks of the Wabash," and "The Maple Leaf
Rag."
A
new style Encore was produced that remained unique to the New York
factory. The valves were improved by using a small pneumatic, which
moved a flat lead valve. The roll frame was moved from the rear to
the front of the machine, which was much more accessible. The cast
metal plate on the top crest kept the original company name, the
Automatic Banjo Company of New Jersey, and listed many of the
patents that led to the current machine. The American Automusic
Company sold, as well as leased, their machine through several dozen
sales agents, primarily music stores and arcades operators. The
Encore sold mostly in the $350 to $500
range.
The New England Automatic
Banjo/Auto-Manufacturing
Company
It
was not until March of 1901, that the Eastern Specialty Company and
the New England Automatic Banjo Company were re-incorporated to form
the Auto-Manufacturing Company. From then on the company went
downhill, while the New York firm prospered until around 1903. The
Auto-Manufacturing Company produced its banjos in Boston. The
machines were rented out to such public places as taverns, theatres,
lodges, restaurants, and drug stores. The Boston version of the
Encore was experimented with unsuccessfully. For example, instead of
changing the ball-valve system, aluminum balls were sought to
replace the steel balls because aluminum is lighter, therefore
hopefully requiring less electricity to operate. The roll frame of
the Boston style was kept in the rear, which caused some problems
since the rolls were made to operate the machine produced by the New
York firm, the sole producer of the paper
rolls.
Fleeting
Fame The
novelty of an automatic banjo quickly wore off as automatic pianos
were introduced. The nickelodeon's popularity soon made the Encore
obsolete. In 1906, W. Scott O'Connor had abandoned the automatic
banjo business for the much more lucrative music roll business. The
Connorized Music Company became a major manufacturer /distributor of
player piano rolls and moved to a larger factory. James O'Connor
didn't give up entirely on the automatic banjo. In 1914, he
introduced the Banjorchestra, an orchestrion that featured an
automatic banjo identical to the Encore, along with drums,
tambourine, castanets, triangle and piano. The Banjorchestra was
never as successful as the Encore. But even as successful as the
Encore was, by 1916, used models were sold for as little as
$25.
The
actual number of Encores produced is very difficult to determine
since there are many conflicting statements from various sources
concerning the quantity made. Richard Crandall, an Encore Banjo
enthusiast, estimated the number of machines produced by relying on
financial statements, production papers, and serial numbers of
extant machines. He believes that there were around 2500 Encores
built. Compared to other novelty instruments; the Encore was
extremely successful. There are at least 20 known to be
extant.
Today, the Encore Automatic Banjo is both highly
desirable and very rare. It may be the elusive,
never-to-be-recaptured feeling of an earlier era that make such
instruments so fascinating today. The sound produced by a properly
restored Encore is the exact sound that our ancestors heard and
enjoyed. One can listen to an old phonograph record or view an old
film but the experience is reproduced through a medium. It is not so
with automatic musical instruments such as the Encore. There is no
medium between today's listener and the "performer" of years ago.
The performer is here today, and plays for you undiminished, with
nothing lost or changed, just as in years past. The performance that
delights the listener today may have delighted, in exactly the same
way, Queen Victoria, Teddy Roosevelt, a New York beer hall patron,
or a Paris streetwalker years ago. Through the music of such
machines, the emotions of another time, another place, the
entertainment of another era comes to life unaltered and undimmed
today. This along with its history makes the Encore a choice
instrument to be acquired by today's collectors. The demand for
Encore Banjos is so high that a market has developed for newly made
instruments.
The New Encore Automatic
Banjo
In
1977, David Ramey, a highly respected restorer and founder of the D.
C. Ramey Piano Company, purchased various parts of original Encores.
From these original parts, copies were made, which led to the
remanufacture of the Encore Automatic banjo. Mr. Ramey made some
engineering improvements that enable his model to out-perform its
predecessor while keeping the outward appearance the same. Primary
valves were added to the picker system to enable the new Encore to
pick quickly and accurately. The new model features a custom crafted
banjo utilizing the superior "Whyte Laydie" tone ring and a
synthetic-skin head to ensure a consistent high quality tone that
requires little maintenance.
Copies of some original music rolls were made. Art
Reblitz, a noted author, restorer and music roll arranger, arranged
two new five tune rolls, the first new arrangements of music for the
Encore since the closing of the American Automusic Company, nearly a
century ago.
To
date, D. C. Ramey Piano Company has built over 40 new Encores that
have been sold to all parts of the world. They have also built a few
Double Encore Banjos of Mr. Ramey's own invention. It consists of
two banjos mounted side by side in a custom made "stretched-out"
Encore cabinet. D. C. Ramey Piano Company also manufactures their
version of the Banjorchestra, the Ramey Banjo-Orchestra.
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