Music box by George Baker & Co.
Made c 1885-1895
This music box is significant as a fine example of music box manufacturing and technology in Switzerland during the late nineteenth century. As one of the best examples of a large sized cylinder music box in the Powerhouse Museum’s collection it exemplifies several aspects of the quality and skills that were required to make these mechanical musical instruments.
Manufactured by George Baker and Company, who were one of the leading makers of larger music boxes in Switzerland, this music box shows the quality of materials used for the casework and decoration as well as the precision used to create the mechanism and the pinned cylinder. It is also an example of more complex music boxes with a series of additional effects to enhance the tune being played. This example features chimes or bells, drums and a struck castanet.
The music box is also important as an early example of a form of recorded music which could ‘store’ popular tunes of the period and then be played back an infinite number of times. There are therefore strong parallels to the way we now listen to recorded music and are able to replay it. The information on a pinned music box cylinder is also a way of encoding musical information so again there are parallels to programmed codes used in digital music applications.
As a form of domestic entertainment music boxes were one of the first formats enabling mechanical recorded music to be played in the home. Unlike music recorded on record, CD or a digital format and replayed the music in the music box is played acoustically, activating devices or instruments within the music box to make the sound. However, the intention of having music in the home is still the same, when live musicians are not available. It is convenient and there is a choice of music that can be played, assuming the music box can play multiple tunes. Some larger music boxes were more suited for public entertainment rather than exclusively used for domestic entertainment.
Reference: Museum of Applied Art and Sciences