And smile, because now it exists. Do you have a word that sounds like an instrument but isn’t? Let me hear it in the comments.
But here’s the thing:
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 . mellodephoneum
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.
Not in Grove. Not in Harvard’s dictionary. Not even in the footnotes of a forgotten doctoral thesis on Aeolian attachments to harmoniums. And smile, because now it exists
If it existed, what would it look like?
So here’s my proposal: the next time you hear a sound you can’t name—warm, hollow, sweet, and just slightly out of tune with reality—call it what it is. But here’s the thing: Maybe it was a salesman’s sample
The mellodephoneum represents something precious: