Take a look at this one...
https://www.guitarcenter.com/Used/In...al-Mandolin.gc
Attachment 176906
Printable View
Take a look at this one...
https://www.guitarcenter.com/Used/In...al-Mandolin.gc
Attachment 176906
Strange. It only has 3 columns of keys. Wonder if everything played in 5th double stops.
When I was a child we had a keychord banjo
Sure saves the fingertips!
Interesting discussion from 2013 on “KeyKord” instruments.
https://www.banjohangout.org/archive/273357
An excerpt from that discussion:
“KeyKords were invented by Dean M. Solenberger, president of the Simplex Piston Ring Co. of Cleveland. Solenberger contracted with Stromberg-Voisinet to put his devices on 3 instruments: tenor banjo, Venetian tenor guitar, and Spanish tenor guitar. Presumably Simplex made the KeyKord devices in Cleveland and shipped them to S-V in Chicago. S-V had nothing to do with marketing them. So far, we don't know how KeyKord sold them. The only trade press notice of them came in early 1930 and it's pretty certain they were around in 1929. Whether they made it beyond 1930 is unknown, but it wouldn't be much longer. The KeyKord scale is 20", longer than a baritone uke (19") but shorter than the tenor banjo and tenor guitar (21" or 23"). Here's where it gets funky. KeyKords are meant to be tuned like a ukulele. The tenor guitar was invented (by Regal) in 1926 and by 1928 or so people were tuning them alternatively as a tenor guitar (tenor banjo) or baritone ukulele, either re-entrant or low D, which is, of course, essentially like a guitar. KeyKords were meant to be played in ukulele tuning, or really in baritone ukulele tuning, even though the baritone uke wasn't invented until 1948. Thus, like a baritone uke or guitar: DGBE. However, the chord forms used were for soprano uke. Those forms are the same for soprano or baritone, but essentially what the KeyKord does is transpose keys from what you see in the music down to a baritone key. So, while KeyKords look like tenor banjos and tenor guitars, they really are (baritone) banjoleles/banjo-ukes and baritone ukuleles, albeit with an extra 1" in the scale. This is why they don't work if you try to play them tuned like a tenor.”
And an old listing from Folkway Music with several close-up photos.
http://www.folkwaymusic.com/museum/o...ord-1929-0213/
Makes sense. Id hate to have to fix that 1 chord that buzzes :)
I would imagine you would need 24 keys, every triad in major and minor, wonder which ones they skipped.
Seems silly to skip one row of three chords, when that would complete the picture, maybe I am being OCD here. :-)
If I had to take a wild guess I would guess they skipped these:
F# major, C# major, but I can't figure the last one, maybe Cm. :-)
Way back when I was a pup, the guy that owned the store I worked at, had an “Arthur Murray ukulele chord player” very much like this, it was held on by rubber bands, if memory serves, it made eight chords. It looks like the same kind of thing. The “Arthur Murray” thing was a mail in the the show with box tops or something I think.
It was “nifty” to say the least!
Arthur Godfrey maybe?
Saw this one on Reverb:
https://reverb.com/item/10625045-eme...ment-50-s-60-s
Yep! Thanks to both of you! I tripped over my teeth or fingers or whatever, Hey I’m fighting some stupid kind of spring coughing, sneezing misery!
At least I was cognizant enough to remember Arthur! Today, I can sort of remember my own name.
Here's a closeup of the Keykord buttons from a different Reverb listing.
Attachment 176947
I would guess that the numbers and available chords might reference a songbook that might have been offered along with this instrument.
Now we just need one based on the Nashville numbering system that can be moved up and down the neck.
Now if someone would invent a gizmo that mounts near the bridge to do the strumming we'd be all set, just push the buttons.
This pedal would go great with that:
Attachment 176948
It took me a while to find my copy of that pedal. They don't work very well for me. I prefer the BigMon pedal myself.
It was done, all the way back in mediaeval times, the instrument is called a hurdy-gurdy.
The return of the autoharp. ~:>