Anyone know about Kohlert?
Anyone know about Kohlert?
21:35 on Saturday, June 9, 2007
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Re: Anyone know about Kohlert?
10:59 on Monday, June 11, 2007
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Re: Anyone know about Kohlert?
11:48 on Tuesday, June 12, 2007
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Re: Anyone know about Kohlert?
21:00 on Tuesday, June 12, 2007
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saggio (2 points)
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"As an afterthought, a Chinese company (I believe) has recently bought the Kohlert name and is making bassoons using this label, so any brand new Kohlerts will not be the same."
Really? I was under the impression that the Kohlert name was dead - having been bought out by Moosman when the company tanked in the early 70's. I can confidently say that my bassoon is pre-WW2, however.
"i play a kohlert bassoon as my main horn in my school band. all i know about them is that a good one on ebay will go for about 50k but i'd like to know how old it is. is there a way to tell"
50k? Is that in dollars, or cents? From what I've read, it seems that there are a couple of (relatively) reliable ways to tell the age of the bassoon (approximently. As Drew pointed out, it seems the original list of serial numbers was destroyed). I guess the most distinctive is the tenor joint. Does it have a flat "strip" where most of the keywork is placed on? This is supposed to be a copy of the Heckel #3000 series, and was made predominantly before the war (although after the company was nationalized, this was the only model that was produced). The second is to look at the stamp on the bell. What does it say? Mine says "Kohlert and Sohne", and under it "Graslitz" - this is important, as Graslitz was the place where Kohlert (and I believe Puchner also) made their bassoons before the Second World War. The Kohlert company was evacuated along with many others from this particular area of Germany to what was then West Germany. I can't remember the name of the town where Kohlert produced instruments after the move, but it may be where Moosman currently has their workshop (this is a guess, I don't really know).
Another good way is to look at the keywork itself. Is it obviously old? Mine has no rollers, no high D, no trill keys or anything fancy like that - just as my last bassoon, also a pre-WW2 (a Penzil-Mueller). Finally, the best way to date a bassoon (other than Kohlert, apparently) is by it's serial number. These are sometimes stamped on the instrument itself (the bell, maybe the boot) but generally are stamped on the piping of the boot joint underneath the boot cap, usually next to the batch number.
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Re: Anyone know about Kohlert?
15:15 on Wednesday, June 13, 2007
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Re: Anyone know about Kohlert?
05:27 on Sunday, July 1, 2007
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Sherlock (1 point)
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Dear Kohlert-owners,
All Kohlert instruments are numbered sequentially, starting in 1901, when old man Kohlert went to his reward, and the three sons succeeded. The bassoons do not have a separate series. Often you can tell if the joints match by looking for the identifying numbers scratched on the underside of the keys. Often, the bells are odd, because they were turned so thin to save weight, that even a minor fall would crack them. I find that this lightness of the upper joints makes them a pleasure to play.
Very early ones have no whisper key, or one obviously added later. Later ones have the vent between finger holes IV and V. Instruments made after 1938 are stamped "Sudetengau". Before then, it is "Czecho Slovakia", and - presumably before 1919 - "Bohemia"
Post-WWII Czech specimens are all flat-backs without the Kohlert stamp, and by repute, dreadful (I haven't tried one). The firm then relocated in Winnenden, W. Germany, and the serial numbers started again. Early instruments from Winnenden are copies of later Heckel models, with the three holes under the b-flat pad on the back of the butt joint, etc., and were high-quality, but they declined as they went on.
I have an instrument of unknown number (mismatched with a 227xxx bell) and a 230xxx flat-back model, which are probably both from the late-20's, but I am not sure.
I'll post again when I find a chart of numbers.
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Re: Anyone know about Kohlert?
17:24 on Sunday, July 1, 2007
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