
Quick Facts
Biography
Albert Delin (Ath 17 April 1712 - Tournai 26 Nov 1771) (also Albertus Delin) was a Flemish harpsichord maker.
Biography
Born in Ath in Southern Netherlands (now in Belgium), he soon moved to the nearby town of Tournai to practice his trade. Little is known of his training but a remarkable number of his instruments have survived. His building style is quite contrary to his more famous contemporaries, like his neighbours Dulckens in Antwerp, the Hass family in Hamburg or the Taskins of Paris, that at the time created complex machines with an extensive variety of registers and knee leavers. Delin's surviving instruments are simple, reminiscent of the old Ruckers instruments of a century before and of good workmanship as witnessed by the number of surviving instruments.
Surviving instruments
- Two surviving harpsichords (1750 and1768), both have a single manual and have only two 8' choirs and a buff stop, with all battens protruding through the instruments side, similar to original Ruckers instruments.
- Kottick mentions four bentside spinets (1763, 1765, 1766, 1770), all with a single 8' choir. A colorful fifth bentside spinet signed "A.D. 1738" and bearing a rose with the initials AD, has been attributed to him as well.
- Three clavicytheria (1751, 1752, 1760), strung like his harpsichords with two 8' registers, and guidebattens protruding through the cheek. The clavicytheria have an elegant pivot mechanism of Delins' own design, needing no spring action and only gravity for the return. Chung describes Delins clavicytherium thus: "[he] succeeded in overcoming the difficulties of building an upright harpsichord better than any other builder. His three instruments, which are considered by many to be the finest of all surviving clavicytheria, have an amazingly fine touch that is achieved by a special action that upon the release of the keys allows the jacks to return without the need of springs or additional weights."
- The last surviving instrument is even more old fashioned then the rest, a small, hexagonal, octave spinet (1750).
Decor of the instruments
Delin's original case decor seems to have been simple, but some of his instruments later received "makeovers". Most notably his 1760 clavicytherium, was retrofitted with an extravagant gilded, rococo door. The 1738 spinet is elaborately painted with a forest scene on the inside of the lid, while the case is covered with a menagerie of monkeys playing musical instruments.
The soundboard paintings in Delins instruments are typical flemsh floral motifs, with visible outlines, flat coloring and little detail, a style similar to the Ruckers.
Image gallery
The 1750 harpsichord in the musical instrument museum in Berlin
The 1751 clavicytherium in the musical instrument museum in Brussels
The 1752 clavicytherium at the musical instrument museum in Berlin
The 1760 clavicytherium in Gemeentemuseum in the Hague
The 1765 bentside spinett in the musical instrument museum in Berlin