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Gulbransen
Gulbransen pianos are a popular choice for students, home enthusiasts and professional musicians alike. Our available Gulbransen pianos include a range of types, costs and conditions. Browse our available selection, or use our filters to refine your search by size, price, location, distance from you, or color. HOW OLD IS YOUR PIANO? - FIND THE AGE & SERIAL NUMBER OF YOUR PIANO. Some piano manufacturers place serial numbers in various places. The age of your piano is determined by the Serial Number. Pianos also have numbers other than serial numbers, such is the case with part or patent numbers.
Gulbransen Piano Dates
Gulbransen
2102 Hancock Street
San Diego CA 92110
(619) 296-5760
www.gulbransen.com
1915-90000 1916-101000 1917-110000 1918-120000 1919-130000 1920-140000 1921-150000 1922-165000 1923-182000 1924-195000 1925-218000 1926-240000 1927-265000 1928-282000 | 1929-300000 1930-301000 1931-303000 1935-304500 1933-306000 1934-307900 1935-308900 1936-312000 1937-322000 1938-333000 1939-338000 1940-344000 1941-349000 1942-354000 | 1943-354500 1944-355000 1945-357000 1946-358000 1947-366000 1948-380000 1949-395000 1950-405500 1951-416000 1952-420000 1953-428000 1954-435500 1955-443500 1956-452500 | 1957-461000 1958-470500 1959-479000 1960-488300 1961-497000 1962-506000 1963-515000 1964-524000 1965-542000 1966-551100 1967-559400 1968-565000 1969-571000 | |||
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Company Information
1904
Gulbransen, Inc. founded in Chicago, Illinois by Axel Gulbransen.
1917
Gulbransen, Inc. grows to be the world’s largest manufacturer of player pianos.
1928
Gulbransen produces its first organ (reed pump organ).
1942
Steinway and Gulbransen selected as the only two manufacturers of pianos for government use during World War II.
1957
Gulbransen introduces the world’s first all transistor organ.
1962-72
Gulbransen leads the high-tech home organ industry with many firsts: first electronic theater organ; first built-in automatic rhythm; first realistic piano voice in an organ; first instant playback; first automatic-walking bass plus many others.
1973
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) purchases Gulbransen, Steinway and Sons; Rodgers Organs; Gemeinhardt Flute; Lyon and Healy Harp; Fender Rhodes and others to form the world’s most prestigious musical instrument company.
1986
Gulbransen acquired from CBS by a California music company. Gulbransen continues the effort started at CBS to create high quality wave synthesis of instrumental sounds with enough oscillators to be used on organs where many different instruments must be available simultaneously.
1987
Gulbransen produces its first wave synthesis ASICs and enters the technology business selling complete designs of digital pianos to manufacturers in Asia.
1988
Digital pianos using Gulbransen technology take over more than 50% of the market in Korea. Gulbransen patents an optical sensor strip which detects velocity of piano keys for use with MIDI devices. Elton John, Billy Joel and others choose the Gulbransen MIDISystem for use in their acoustic pianos.
1992
Gulbransen re-spins its ASICs increasing the output accuracy to 20 bits and installs 18 bit DACs to eliminate all vestiges of background hiss.
1994
Gulbransen begins custom designs to penetrate the PC integrated circuit market with low-cost, high-quality wave synthesis, full custom chips, which are backward compatible with existing software. Additionally, Gulbransen introduces a high quality portable digital hymn player containing over 5,000 songs for the church market.
1996
Gulbransen introduces the G392, the first PC sound chip with the capabilities to play 64 simultaneous voices through a hardware based synthesizer engine.
1997
World renowed keyboard manufacturer, Baldwin Pianos, selects the Gulbransen MIDISystem as the foundation component in launching its Concert Master piano line.
1998
Gulbransen sells the assets of its chip design division to National Semiconductor. Gulbransen continues its musical instrument manufacturing business. The company’s highly regarded MIDISystems line and the Gulbransen Digital Hymnal remain defining, state-of-the-art, music products.
(The above is from the ” Gulbransen Web site” )
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exhibited at Museum of Making Music
electronic home organ
Gulbransen Company was a musical instrument manufacturer of player pianos and home organs in the United States. It also made reed organs. It was originally established in 1904 by Axel Gulbransen as Gulbransen Piano Company.[1][2]
In the history of musical instruments, Gulbransen is notable for several innovations. In its early years, Gulbransen made the first upright piano with a player piano mechanism in the same case. In the 1920s, thousands of player pianos were manufactured by the firm under the Gulbransen and Dickinson name.[1] In the electronic organ era, Gulbransen pioneered several innovations in the production of home electronic organs that became industry standards:[2]
- Built-in Leslie speaker system
- Chime stop and Piano stop
- Automatic rhythm (built-in drum machine)
- Automatic walking bass (bass accompaniment)
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In 1957, Gulbransen released the first transistorizedelectric organ 'Gulbransen Model B' (Model 1100),[2] although its use of transistors was limited to the tone generators, and vacuum tubes were still used for the power amplifier. (The first fully transistorized organ for churches was later built by Rodgers Instruments.)
Also in the 1960s, Gulbransen released one of the earliest transistorized rhythm machines 'Seeburg/Gulbransen Select-A-Rhythm',[4][5] collaborating with Seeburg Corporation.Note that Seeburg invented a fully transistorized rhythm machine in 1964, which was patented in 1967.[6]
On the other hand, the owner of Gulbransen has changed several times since the 1950s. Around 1950, it was sold to CBS, then in 1964, merged with Seeburg Corporation, and production was once ceased in 1969.[1] In 1985, Mission Bay Investments acquired the brand and produced Elka organs under the Gulbransen name.[2] In 2002 or 2003,[7] QRS Music Technologies acquired the brand and pianos were made by Samick.[1]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ abcdJames Grebe (2011). 'The Gulbransen Piano Company'. Yesterday Once More Publications.
- ^ abcd'The Gulbransen Organ'. TheatreOrgans.com. May 2006. Includes 1957 brochures of 'Gulbransen Model B organ'.
- ^'Rare Early Seeburg Rhythm Prince Synthesizer Drum Synth'. MatrixSynth. May 13, 2009.
- ^ ab'Select-a-Rhythm Vintage Drum Machine'. EricArcher.net. Archived from the original on 2011-09-16. Retrieved 2011-11-20.
- ^Seeburg Portable Select-A-Rhythm Service Manual(PDF). Seeburg Sales Corporation. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2012-04-25.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link) Rhythm patterns were electronically generated by a 48-step binary counter using 6-stage flip-flops.
- ^US patent 3,358,068, Richard H. Campbell, Jr., Gilford, N.H. (assigned to Seeburg Corporation), 'Musical Instruments', issued 1967-12-12
— related patents filed at the same time were: Automatic Rhythm Device, Automatic Repetitive Rhythm Instrument Timing Circuitry, and sound circuits of Snare Drum Instrument and Cow Bell Instrument. - ^'QRS acquires Gulbransen: plans new types of reproducing technologies. (Industry Forefront)', Music Trades (March 1, 2003), archived from the original on 2016-04-13,
QRS Music Technologies, Inc., has acquired Gulbransen, Inc., ...
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gulbransen Company. |
Gulbransen Piano Serial Number Location
- www.qrsmusic.com — Gulbransen history at QRS Music Technologies, Inc.