The entire dulcimer is odd. Beautifully done, carvings excellent, yet electrified I am sure after the fact. Otherwise the plug could have been drilled properly and replacing it would have matched the back. Or the access could have been drilled from the side and replaced with a preamp volume control.
Can Anyone Identify the maker of this dulcimer.
Dusty Turtle
@dusty
4 years ago
1,765 posts
I certainly don't know who made that interesting dulcimer. Several luthiers use those sheaves, though, so that might not be a revealing clue.
It is an odd combination of a very traditional, truly diatonic fretboard (with no 6+ fret) and a very modern, solid body electric.
--
Dusty T., Northern California
Site Moderator
As a musician, you have to keep one foot back in the past and one foot forward into the future.
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Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
4 years ago
1,459 posts
I think wheat sheaves have shown up on some Clemmer instruments. Though I wouldn't guess this to be a Clemmer. I could be wrong.
True. The added magnetic pickup was after the fact. There is a bore hole in the back and there are screws attaching some piezos I think. There is no knobs, no equalizer, no gain controls or volume. It would require a preamp although with the mag pickup probably a direct amp plugin would also work. It is those wheat sheaves that I am trying to place. I saw them before on on instruments by a good luthier. Can't remember where. The carving is excellent.
Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
4 years ago
1,459 posts
I don't have a clue who made it. The lack of a 6.5 fret seems to indicate it has some age on it. Perhaps the electric part was made after the fact yet it looks to be made by someone with skill and a skilled builder would have known electrification of some type would have been needed on a solid wood body.