It began as a bet with his father.
Could you make your own concertina?
West Australian musician Eddy Jay decided to give it a try.
“My dad plays the concertina, he’s a teacher, a workshop leader in the UK, and he’d been wanting to make his own concertina for decades,” he said.
“I wasn’t very good at woodwork, so I bought a 3D printer and re-engineered it on a computer.
“All the linkages are different inside, it’s completely new, and no-one thought it would work, including my dad.“
Eddy Jay has the 3D printer set up in his shed. (ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy)
A professional accordionist, Jay’s career has taken him around the globe, including a small village tour across the UK and playing on Broadway in New York.
“I’ve travelled the world playing the accordion, which is basically a big concertina, but I also tune them,” he said.
“I know how they work inside and out, I’ve had them apart, and I just adapted what I knew.”
Ten prototypes for the new instrument were quickly rejected by his dad.
“Then I sold one, and then he wanted one, but he liked his own concertina,” Jay said.
Josephine Jay performing with the 3D-printed violin with her husband, Eddy. (ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy)
“So the concession was that I’ve printed the top of it in green, but it’s actually a real concertina underneath, and he plays that with pride.”
Over the past six years, Jay has made dozens of concertinas that have been sent to customers all over the world.
Each takes about a month.
It was indirectly how he met his wife and fellow musician, Josephine, who answered a call-out to deliver a concertina for him.
“I made her a violin, you’ll notice the blue, it’s the same shade as her eyes, but what’s especially distinctive is that it’s got an extra string,” Jay said.
“We played the violin and my accordion, which is mostly 3D printed as well, at our wedding.”
Eddy and Josephine Jay playing music together. (ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy)
Josephine Jay said it had a unique sound.
“It’s very smooth, velvety smooth, every note has this reverberance,” she said.
“It’s quieter, but in other ways it’s got this beautiful quality that I’ve never experienced in a wooden violin before.”
Trial and error
The new builds have required a lot of experimentation.
Eddy Jay has been teaching himself to play the concertina. (ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy)
“The way the levers work, the way the springs work, the way the buttons work, it’s all new,” Eddy Jay said.
“The plastic behaves very differently from wood and it resonates differently as well.
“I found carbon fibre sounds best, it sounds loudest, sharpest and unfortunately carbon fibre is grey, so it doesn’t quite look as nice as my early concertinas, which were pink and green and rainbow coloured.”
Jay now holds workshops to share his knowledge.
Knowledge sharing important
Using 3D printing to manufacture instruments is becoming more common and has been used for guitars and flutes in Australia.
Scott Wise is a luthier based in Margaret River who has been building instruments since 1978.
Eddy Jay applied the knowledge he gained as an accordion player and tuner to make concertinas. (ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy)
Mr Wise said publicly shared knowledge had always played a major role in the industry, with the platform shifting from magazines and newsletters to YouTube and other social media platforms.
“I was very fortunate in the mid to late 70s. There was an organisation called the Guild of American Luthiers, which was an information-sharing association,” he said.
“They published a quarterly magazine that revealed a lot of traditional secrets to us beginners.
“People who had innovative approaches to different things, like how the neck would be attached or different bracing patterns, those kinds of things, those were shared and publicised.”
Future challenges
Eddy and Josephine Jay continue to play together at festivals and events around WA, including a song inspired by the musical instrument manufacturing that happens in their home.
“He’s got a whole world in his accordion,” Jospehine Jay said.
“He can play so many different sounds, but he’s very generous with the way that he plays music, and that’s such a gift, so I really enjoy playing music with him.”
Perfecting the instruments takes time. (ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy)
Eddy Jay is now looking to use a CNC [computer numerical control] he made for wood projects.
“I hope to be making wooden violins using that, but using my computer design, and I’m hoping to be making wooden concertinas,” he said.
“So there is an irony here; there’s a full circle where I’m back to using wood to make beautiful instruments, even though it’s using the cutting-edge technology that I feel more comfortable with.”