Mellodephoneum May 2026

It sounds like something Carl Linnaeus might have named after a late-night botanical bender. Or the lost chapter in an E.A. Poe manuscript. Or—and this is my favorite theory—a 19th-century parlor instrument that never quite made it into the orchestra.

Not in Grove. Not in Harvard’s dictionary. Not even in the footnotes of a forgotten doctoral thesis on Aeolian attachments to harmoniums. mellodephoneum

Maybe it was a salesman’s sample. A prototype that never sold. Or a hoax by a bored auctioneer. But the phrase “one set of spare reeds” suggests someone believed in it. Enough to order replacement parts. We live in a time of digital abundance—thousands of synth presets, every piano sample imaginable, AI that can mimic any sound. And yet, we’re hungry for the almost-there . It sounds like something Carl Linnaeus might have

It doesn’t shout. It mellows . I found the word once—buried in a handwritten inventory from an estate sale in upstate New York, dated 1892. The item was listed as: Mellodephoneum, patent pending, one set of spare reeds, case worn. No maker’s name. No surviving images. Just those nine words. Or—and this is my favorite theory—a 19th-century parlor

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Ralf Gengenbach
Graduate Chemical Enginees (Dipl.-Chem.-Ing. TU)
Managing Director

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