Rembert Wurlitzer Co.


Rembert Wurlitzer Co. was a distinguished firm in New York City that specialized in fine musical instruments and bows.
Founded in Europe in 1856, the Wurlitzer Co. was a world-famous musical instrument company known for its many ateliers in the United States.
Rembert Rudolph Wurlitzer, violin expert and a grandson of the founder of Chicago's Wurlitzer Co., bowed out of the family firm in 1949 to found Manhattan's Rembert Wurlitzer Co., which has bought, sold, authenticated and or restored more than half the world's 600 known Stradivariuses, and supplied instruments to Fritz Kreisler, David Oistrakh and Isaac Stern among others.
"Wurlitzer had built up a first-class workshop inviting the great Simone Fernando Sacconi and his pupil Dario D'Attilli, where many of the best American repairers were trained in. In his last years Sacconi spent much time teaching in Cremona, Italy, and published I segreti di Stradivari, setting out in detail Stradivari’s working methods."
They amassed a very important collection of the finest instruments which included Antonio Stradivarius, Giuseppe Guarneri, Domenico Montagnana, Sanctus Serafin, Lorenzo Storioni, Francesco Ruggeri, Joannes Baptista Guadagnini, Nicolas Lupot, J. B. Vuillaume to name a few, as well as an important fine bow collection including bows by François Tourte, Dominique Peccatte, Nicolaus Kittel, Jean Pierre Marie Persois and many others. Most importantly was the acquisition of the Henry Hottinger Collection in 1967.
"He had an early interest in the violin, and bought his first Stradivari in 1935. His ambition after the war was to acquire one outstanding example of each of the old Cremonese masters, and in the case of Stradivari and Guarneri ‘del Gesù’, one example from each significant period of their production.
An illustrated catalogue was published following the collection's sale to Rembert Wurlitzer Co..
The instruments were subsequently dispersed all over the world."
This shop became a leading international centre for rare string instruments and was patronized by many of the preeminent names in the concert world.
From the turn of the century, the shop also imported many fine instruments made by the best contemporary makers of Europe including Albert Nürnberger, whom they represented as "the greatest modern bow maker".

Biography

American firm of instrument makers and dealers. Started in Cincinnati in 1853 by Franz Rudolph Wurlitzer who was a German immigrant from the musical instrument making region of Markneukirchen in Saxony, the company was directed successively by his three sons until 1941, when it moved to Chicago. From importing musical instruments it turned in the 1880s to marketing automated instruments, including disc-changer machines and coin-operated pianos; the ‘Mighty Wurlitzer’ theatre organ was introduced in 1910, followed by the successful coin-operated phonograph, or juke-box. In 1909 the company began making harps; they were far more durable than European prototypes, and from 1924 to the 1930s eight acclaimed models were available. The firm's violin department, independently directed by Rembert Wurlitzer from 1949, became a leading international centre for rare string instruments. Among Wurlitzer's electronic instruments, beginning with electric reed organs in 1947, the most important have been the fully electronic organs, especially the two-manual-and-pedals ‘spinet’ type for domestic use.

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