Muscat Daily

Cloning musical heritage in the key of 3D

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When Mina Jang played the same melodious tune on two different flutes behind a screen, she said the examiners grading her couldn't tell the difference.

Yet the two instrument­s were made in dramatical­ly different ways. One was a handmade version of an original early 18th-century flute crafted in 2001, while the other was made of white plastic and "cloned" using a 3D printer in 2019.

The Museum of Music in Paris, whose collection includes a 2,500 year old flute made of a vulture bone, has recently begun experiment­ing with the technique in an effort to better preserve period instrument­s.

"The idea was to find out how to rapidly obtain a copy of an instrument whilst respecting the original flute," said the 35 year old profession­al flautist and researcher in baroque music, who initiated the idea.

Before being printed, the carefully copied 18th-century flute was x-rayed to identify its precise characteri­stics.

The original it was based on was made by the celebrated French composer and flute maker Jacques-Martin Hotteterre and is today preserved behind glass at the museum.

Musical time travel

3D printing has advantages over handmade instrument­s, taking just 24 hours to make, compared to a month in a workshop, and costing hundreds instead of thousands of euros.

But Stephane Vaiedelich, in charge of the museum's laboratory which worked with other partners on the project too, says the move is purely about conserving musical heritage.

"3D printing isn't about replacing instrument makers," he told AFP.

"The idea is to recreate a historical instrument so that the public can appreciate its sound and to revive an important heritage. It's an extraordin­ary way of travelling through time and recapturin­g old repertoire­s," he said, adding that a second flute had also been cloned.

While 3D printing has become increasing­ly popular in different sectors over the last 20 years, Vaiedelich said the museum believed it was the first to experiment with the 3D reproducti­on of old instrument­s, using a scientific approach.

A few orchestras play using original instrument­s from the period, such as the French group Les Siecles (The Centuries), but wind instrument­s struggle to withstand humidity.

"It expands wood and can break the instrument­s," Vaiedelich said.

The museum chose to copy a transverse flute, precisely because - unlike an oboe - most of the musician's breath passes outside the instrument.

"The material has less of an impact on the timbre," Vaiedelich said.

Using plastic for the 3D reproduced instrument­s also raises environmen­tal issues. Vaiedelich said the ideal would be to print using recycled materials.

Fanny Menard, vice-president of the trade union grouping together makers and repairers of instrument­s, said the material used was the only downside.

"For craftsmen, plastic cannot be compared to wood," Fanny said. "A woo-den sound box is fundamenta­l for a violin."

On the whole though, Fanny said that 3D printing presented an opportunit­y. "It's not a danger, but rather a very good tool for sharing informatio­n and prototypes between craftsmen," she said.

 ?? (AFP photo) ?? Musician Mina Jang plays a wooden transverse flute next to its white 3D-printing replica at the music lab of Musee de la Musique in Paris on January 17, 2020
(AFP photo) Musician Mina Jang plays a wooden transverse flute next to its white 3D-printing replica at the music lab of Musee de la Musique in Paris on January 17, 2020

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