Lioret Le Merveilleux
LIORET "LE MERVEILLEUX" ca. 1895 French and English
Versions
Henri Lioret was a highly respected clockmaker in France when he first became
interested in 'talking machines' in 1893. Working with dollmaker Emile Jumeau, he
created a phonograph for a talking doll which would ultimately prove far more successful
than the failed Edison doll. In addition
to a clockwork motor (rather than Edison's hand-cranked doll) he used removable cylinders
made of molded celluloid. The success of the Bébé Jumeau talking doll led Lioret to
make this very unusual phonograph starting in 1895. The basic mechanism is the same
as was used in the doll, however it was mounted into a tiny pasteboard box with simulated
leather covering measuring only 7-1/2" tall. The side door opens to allow access
to the removable cylinders, and the top lid reveals the simple celluloid horn. The
Merveilleux played only the smallest of Lioret cylinders, of only 30 seconds duration.
Despite its very simple construction, it is ingeniously designed and plays remarkably
well for such an early phonograph.

The picture on the left shows the tiny spring-motor phonograph of the Merveilleux,
removed from its box, with the cylinder in position and the celluloid horn pointing
upwards. The original ad on the right was published in 1896..
It is amazing to realize how advanced this simple machine was when compared
to phonographs being made in the United States at the same time. Columbia was still
developing heavy spring motors to replace the cumbersome battery-powered electric
phonograph motors of the early 1890s, offering machines like the Type
G at $75 and Type K at $150.
Edison was also struggling to make the phonograph more user friendly, acquiring the
rights to the Capps spring motor and offering the Edison Spring Motor Phonograph
at a hefty $100. The fragile brown wax records offered by both companies required
stethoscopic eartubes to hear them clearly. Yet Lioret's little "Merveilleux"
sold for a mere 20 Francs (equivalent to only $4!) and played cylinder records molded
out of nearly indestructible celluloid which offered surprisingly clear and loud
reproduction. (Lioret's larger machines, such as the Lioretgraph
Modèle A, were obviously superior in construction and sound quality.) Lioret was
unquestionably far ahead of his time. (He went on to make 4-minute celluloid cylinders
as early as 1898, fully 14 years before Edison's famous Blue Amberol records.) The
Merveilleux also featured an automatic shutoff, and a simple push button would instantly
reset the stylus to the beginning of the record -- quite sophisticated for such a
simple mechanism.
The Merveilleux was sold primarily in France but was also
marketed in England, with English-language records. In the photograph at the top
of the page the machine on the left features English instruction labels and a London
dealer's address. Curiously, the phonograph on the right, marketed in France, has
French labels pasted on top of English ones! It was apparently destined for sale
in England then reconverted for the French market.
Because of the extremely
fragile cardboard construction of the case and the simple wire-framed motor, very
few of these diminutive machines have survived the past century. They are fascinating
examples of surprisingly advanced technology for the times.
Paper instruction labels inside the lids were printed in French or English
depending upon the market.
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