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Biography
Renold
Otto Schilke, Sr., was born in
Green Bay
,
Wisconsin
on
June 30, 1910
, to a musical family. His father was a singer and
his mother an organist, and Renold began studying
cornet at age eight. He was a soloist with the
Holton factory band, otherwise a band made up of
adults, in 1921 at the age of eleven.
Notwithstanding his actual age, he was billed at
that time, vaudeville style, as a 7 year old
"boy wonder" because of his small size.
He told a former employee that as a youth he had
the run of the Holton factory and observed the
science and art of musical instrument design and
manufacturing first hand. The old German workmen
at the plant insisted that "if you play the
instrument, you should know how to make it,"
and, with their help, Schilke made his first
instrument at age 11.
In
addition to his interest in music, Schilke was
also greatly interested in guns. He began working
part-time at a
Green Bay
gun shop when he was 14 in 1924. The interest he
had in machine work that was nurtured at the
Holton factory, intensified here. By the time he
was 17 he knew enough of tool and die making that
he was able to make trumpet mouthpieces on the gun
shop machinery and to make custom mouthpieces for
brass instruments for others.
In
1927, Schilke went to
Brussels
,
Belgium
, to study at the Brussels Conservatory. While
there he became familiar with the work of Victor
Mahillon, the 18th century Belgian acoustician and
brass instrument designer, who Schilke attributed
to having the greatest influence on Schilke's own
design work.
Mahillon's
theories included the idea that one could control
the intonation of brass instruments by making
changes in the rate of taper in the in the tubing.
Schilke claimed that such theories were mostly
ignored by the other manufacturer of trumpets.
In
1928, when Renold Schilke came to
Chicago
from
Brussels
to study trumpet with Edward Llewellyn, the
principal trumpet player in the Chicago Symphony,
he took a part time job working for a small
mouthpiece maker in
Chicago
who made the mouthpiece that Llewellyn played.
Schilke also played the same mouthpiece during his
career with the Chicago Symphony. The current
Schilke exterior is a variation of this
mouthpiece.
During
the early 30's, Schilke earned a steady income by
his playing and was able to take technical school
courses in tool and die making. He also took
courses in metallurgy and music at
Northwestern
University
in
Evanston
and the
University
of
Chicago
. He and Llewellyn would often visit the Holton
factory in
Elkhorn
,
Wisconsin
, during this time so that Holton could perform
custom work on Llewellyn's instruments. Holton
recognized Schilke's studies and expertise in the
field even while in his younger 20's and they
asked him to help solve tooling problems at the
factory while providing him the opportunity to
make and test his own design ideas using Holton
facilities. His original design for the tuning
bell trumpet was made during this time (around
1929) mostly as a way to switch bells easily while
experimenting.
Schilke
was a member of the
US
Olympic team in 1932 and 1936 in pistol shooting.
He continued his interest in guns and in
competitive shooting till the end of his life.
During the early 40's, to assist in the war
effort, he worked as a civilian employee for
Douglas Tool and Die, assisting in the development
the M-1 rifle during the day and working as a
symphony trumpet player at night.
At
Llewellyn's death in 1936, Schilke became a member
of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. It was at this
time that he decided to supplement the income of
Mrs. Llewellyn by manufacturing and selling the
mouthpiece known as the E. B. Llewellyn Personal
Model (which eventually became the Schilke 9) and
he and Mrs. Llewellyn shared the income in some
fashion from the sales.
When
Schilke started with the Chicago Symphony he
became involved in trumpet design with Elden Benge
who had been with the Symphony since 1932. The two
were also neighbors and would carry on their
experiments in Schilke's home workshop. When Benge
became serious about manufacturing trumpets in
1938, Schilke did most of the tooling for the
production and many in the industry attributed
much of the success of Benge's instruments to
Schilke's tool development.
Schilke's
association with the Chicago Symphony began in
1937, and he served as principal trumpet from 1939
to 1941, succeeding Benge. His formal
association with the Chicago Symphony ended in
1951, although he continued in an auxiliary role
when needed through 1962. Schilke also continued
to perform with the Chicago Symphony Brass
Ensemble, a brass quintet throughout the 50's.
They recorded, gave recitals, clinics and
instrument demonstrations sponsored by Holton.
Adolph Herseth played first trumpet, Schilke
second. Schilke also performed with the Grant Park
Symphony and the WGN Radio Orchestra. He remained
active as a performer as a member of the Chicago
Lyric Opera Orchestra from 1954 until 1964. He was
also featured in a print
advertisement
for Scott Radios.
Philip
Farkas returned as principle horn in the Chicago
Symphony in 1947 and, in the early 50s. together
with Schilke, the two formed the company known as
Music Catalog, Inc. Their original goal was to
make one mouthpiece for each instrument: one
trumpet, one French horn, one trombone and one
tuba (already in development with the help of
Arnold Jacobs). As things progressed, the demand
for other models increased and the line was
somewhat expanded and Schilke's time was becoming
increasingly spent in areas other than trumpet
performance.
In
around 1956, Schilke bought out Farkas's half of
the business and the enterprise then known as
"The Schilke Company" was formed and
later incorporated as Schilke Music Catalog, Inc.
The company initially retailed Holton Catalog,
and, for one early year, manufactured and sold
music stands. He had presented his various trumpet
designs to numerous instrument companies but he
reported (proudly) that each told him that
"if we built those horns, we'd go
broke." No other manufacturer felt that they
could cost effectively build horns to his
specifications and tolerances, so he decided to
manufacture them himself and experienced workers
were hired to make the horns. Schilke's break came
when the William Franke Company, an instrument
manufacturer in
Chicago
, was suddenly dissolved and Schilke was able to
bid on and purchase the Franke equipment at thirty
cents on the dollar. Originally there were four
employees, Schilke, Ben Adowski, Bill Biehl, and
Will Scarlett, who ran the office until he secured
his position playing trumpet with the Chicago
Symphony in 1966. When Schilke decided to build
his trumpet designs, one of his first things he
did was to fly to
Los Angeles
and tell his Elden Benge of his intentions.
Most
of the horns in the Schilke catalog were developed
from between 1956 and 1965 with many prototypes of
each design slowly giving way to the final
designs. In only one instance, an E flat trumpet
which was first used by Armando Ghitalla in the
Boston Symphony was the first prototype a
successful design. At the other extreme, the
piccolo and G/F trumpets required many times the
number of prototypes than all his other
instruments combined.
In
1959, Schilke moved his workshop from his home in
Evanston
to 183 west
Washington
in
Chicago
, where it stayed until a move back to
Evanston
at
222 West Lake Street
in 1963. In 1967, the company operations were
moved to
Chicago
's loop area at
529 South Wabash Avenue
. From 1974 to 1981, the company also operated a
factory on
Beecher Street
in
Winfield
,
Illinois
, where the horns were manufactured, with the
finishing work taking place at the
Wabash
building. The move to the present location in
Melrose Park
was in August 1989, after Renold O. Schilke's
death. At each location, the shop was a clubhouse
for Brass Legends who came by to talk to Mr.
Schilke and his employees, play horns, and seek
advice.
Renold
Schilke taught trumpet from the late 30's until
the mid 60's at various universities in the
Chicago
area, including
Northwestern, DePaul, and
Roosevelt
. Among his notable
students were Vincent Cichowicz, Will Scarlett,
and Thomas Crown.
Scott
Laskey, former long-time Schilke employee, who
studied with Mr. Schilke for four years, described
Schilke's teaching philosophy as follows:
I
think Mr. Schilke's greatest value as a
teacher was that he taught trumpet. He did not
teach classical trumpet, he did not teach Jazz
trumpet, he did not teach lead trumpet or any
style of trumpet. He taught trumpet. He presented
you with the studies needed to develop the skills
and techniques needed to play trumpet. He then
allowed you to apply those skills and techniques
to what ever style of music you were playing.
While
not personally a master craftsman at all phases of
the manufacturing process, Schilke was a great
innovator in trumpet design, applying nodal
theories of Victor Mahillon and Dr. Willi Aebi, an
amateur horn player and physicist from
Burgdorph
,
Switzerland
. Schilke's design improvements first employed
mathematical formulas for locating nodal points
and possible disturbances. He then began using a
contact microphone to locate points of turbulence.
Adjustments were then made to the taper of the
tubing to correct the intonation or turbulence. A
fair amount of trial and error was also employed,
the results of which were, for example, a B flat
leadpipe with 14 such adjustments to correct
faulty pitches, and a clearly improved intonation
pattern. His designs significantly upgraded the
intonation and response of trumpets, especially
the previously neglected smaller trumpets,
concerning which Schilke remains unchallenged as
the industry leader and has historically sold more
than any other manufacturer even though the prices
are often double those offered by the competition.
Over
the years, the company has consistently produced
trumpets and cornets and mouthpieces for all brass
instruments. From time to time Schilke has
manufactured other instruments including
flugelhorns, bass trumpets, French horns and
tubas. Renold Schilke was an innovator who
frequently would tackle challenges that others
might resist.
In
the late 60's, Yamaha renewed its efforts to
market quality musical instruments in the
United States
. As part of that effort, Yamaha hired Renold
Schilke in 1966 as a consultant to assist in the
design both of the brass instruments and in the
manufacturing facility. This began a relationship
between Yamaha and Schilke which continued until
Mr. Schilke's death in 1982. In 1970, Schilke
wrote:
One
of the main things that attracts me to Yamaha, in
spite of criticism from home for sharing trade
secrets, is the fact that the company shares my
philosophy of pushing ahead with development of
improvements even though the market does not
demand them. From a strictly business point of
view, such research and development outlays may
appear wasteful, but the great progress made by
Yamaha in developing their present piano line from
its early very ordinary stages, suggested that we
shared the same artistic considerations. And in
truth, no real development of brass instruments
had been seen since 1884 when Victor Mahillon
designed them in the shape and style still in use.
Nearly
all of the early Yamaha trumpets had clear Schilke
design influence and, though that relationship has
been over for almost twenty years, the Yamaha
professional lightweight trumpets still bear very
clear relationship with their Schilke forebears.
For example, The Yamaha YTR 6310Z began its life
as a copy of the Schilke B6, a medium step-bore
design. Though the Yamaha has been through several
models (the YTR 732, YTR 636, 736, 6310, 6310B and
the 6310Z) it remains visually identical to the
Schilke with the exception, of course, of
Schilke's trademark hexagonal valve caps, buttons,
and braces. Yamaha mouthpieces share the Schilke
labeling system. The Yamaha trumpet line also
included copies of the B5 and X3 for almost 30
years.
Mr.
Schilke's old friend Philip Farkas assisted him
with the development of the Yamaha french horns,
often traveling with him to Japan, and other
artists, including Chicago Symphony members Arnold
Jacobs and Frank Crisafulli, assisted him in the
development of the low brass line for Yamaha.
During
this time, Schilke, on behalf of Yamaha, applied
for and was granted U.S. Patent 3,257,135 for his
tunable
bell design on September 8,
1970. He transferred it to Yamaha because he felt
that only a company with the financial resources
of Yamaha could defend it adequately. Yamaha had
the design patented also in France, Japan, and
Germany. Schilke was proven correct when shortly
after the patent was received, Yamaha was forced
to sue the F. E. Olds & Sons company over
infringement of the design.
It
was a time of merger and consolidation in the
music industry which was reflected, if not
initiated, by the Selmer purchase of Vincent
Bach's brass manufacturing shop in 1962.
Originally a small limited production facility
similar to the current Schilke operation, Bach's
production grew astoundingly (from under 3000
trumpets per year to over 16,000) after Selmer
capitalized the Bach operation and moved the
manufacturing from Mt Vernon, New York, to
Elkhart, Indiana, where Selmer had purchased a
Conn factory in which to manufacture Bach's
designs. In a similar move, in 1971, King had
purchased the small limited production trumpet
shop of Elden Benge in Burbank, California,
infused it with capital, set up production in a
new facility in Anaheim, and production of Benge
designs skyrocketed. Yamaha, it appears at least
to me, hoped to bring Schilke horns to a much
wider audience in the same fashion Selmer was
succeeding with Bach. It would fit. The two
companies worked together on a number of projects.
Schilke began to "out source" valve
casing manufacturing to Yamaha, resulting in
the
Yamalloy problem, the Schilke
shop began to assemble some of the Yamaha pro line
horns. In addition, Schilke started to market
the
M series, a number of horns
which were made of primarily Yamaha components
which Schilke could assemble and sell for a lower
price than the Schilke custom trumpets. The
relationship between Yamaha and Schilke was not,
however, always a harmonious one and terminated at
Mr. Schilke's death.
During
Mr. Schilke's life, the company was at the
forefront of innovation in brass design with Mr.
Schilke bravely tackling problems and ideas that
most would not.
In
1980, Schilke's health began to decline and he
moved to
Arizona
for parts of each year. After a five week trip to
Japan
in late 1981, he stayed in
Arizona
until his death, of kidney failure, on
September 5, 1982
, at the age of 72 years.
Though
not involved at the time of his father's death,
Renold E. Schilke, who had previously been in the
family business for many years, assumed the role
of president of the company. Since that time, the
S series horns were introduced and the company
moved its shop from downtown
Chicago
to their current location in
Melrose Park
, originally built as a MacGregor Golf research
and testing facility.
Prior
to Renold O. Schilke's retirement and death, his
designs were preserved through scale drawings and
the retention of all the prototypes thus providing
a means of producing new tools should any of the
existing tooling be damaged or destroyed. The
primary emphasis of the company since then, at
least in my opinion, has been to eliminate some of
the more obscure Catalog and focus on maintaining
the extremely high manufacturing standards
established previously. This has been done
successfully and, unlike with Bach and Benge,
where the horns made during the earlier periods
are more highly sought after than current
production, nearly all agree that the quality and
playability of Schilke instruments remained
unchanged through both generations of Schilke
family managment.
On
October 31, 2002
, a new era began at Schilke Musical Catalog,
Inc., as the remaining members of the Schilke
family sold the company to Andrew Naumann, a
baroque trumpet maker and a member of the design
team of the Edwards Division of the Getzen
Company.
The
new owners of the Schilke Co. (2003) are
Andrew
Naumann,
Julie
Naumann from the Naumann Musical
Instruments
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