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Johann Nepomuk Maelzel (1772-1838)
Maelzel is known today as the inventor of the metronome.
He was also
the inventor of the Panharmonicon, a mechanical instrument that
reproduced the sounds of the full orchestra.
In 1813 he met Beethoven in Vienna and persuaded him to compose a
piece of music for his Panharmonicon to celebrate the victory of
Wellington over the French at the Battle of Vitoria in Spain. Such was the success of the piece that Beethoven later orchestrated
it and published it as Wellington's Victory (Battle Symphony) Opus 91. Maelzel made a series of ear trumpets to help Beethoven with his
deafness.
For a short time they were spectacularly successful, but as
his deafness worsened their amplification of sound became useless to
him.
Beethoven fell out with Maelzel when Maelzel printed posters in late
1813 claiming the Battle Symphony was his own property - a gift from
Beethoven. When Beethoven was told Maelzel was trying to get possession
of the orchestrated score, he began legal proceedings against him, but
it came to nothing when Maelzel left Vienna.
Maelzel died on a tour of America. The brig he was on, the Otis, went
down on its way from Havana to Philadelphia. Maelzel - and his
Panharmonicon - went down with it.
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