- American Profile 1/28/01
Danilo Konvalinka is a gracious host who greets visitors with a bowl of candies before showing them around his elegant mansion on
Maine’s mid-coast. As fingers touch the goodies, they set off the tinkling melody that’s the real treat in the porcelain dish.
It’s the perfect introduction to Konvalinka’s Musical Wonder House, an enchanting museum a lot like the thousands of vintage music
boxes filling its every nook and cranny—a feast for the eyes, a delight for the ears, and full of surprises.
Here, wooden boxes open to reveal miniature orchestras replete with chimes, snare drums, silver bells, even reed organs. A piano
performs a classical composition with all the expression of the composer’s original 1930 recital, but there is no pianist at the
keys. Tunes jingle merrily from unlikely places —wine flasks, pen-and-ink sets, even little black dogs.
Master of ceremonies is Konvalinka, 69, who opened his museum in 1963, a year after he moved to Wiscasset (pop. 1,233), an old
shipbuilding town near Brunswick, better known today for antique shopping and its claim as “Maine’s prettiest village.” The massive
19th-century sea captain’s home—a white elephant to any but the largest family, the real estate agent had warned—seemed plenty big
for Konvalinka’s modest music box collection. “Now,” the Austrian native says, “my main complaint is that the walls don’t stretch.
But a true collector never stops, even if he has no place for it.”
With dry humor that pokes through his formal demeanor, Konvalinka leads visitors through the maze that has become one of the world’s
largest collections of mechanical musical instruments. “I don’t have much to show you in here,” he apologizes, a mischievous twinkle
in his eye. “I don’t know how we could entertain you at all.” He opens the door to a lushly furnished room with enough mechanical
instruments—music boxes, gramophones, player pianos—to keep one entertained for days. And that’s just the first room.
Winding through the Victoriana, Konvalinka leaves music in his wake, lifting a lid here, pulling a crank there. From his 1912
Steinway Grand pianola, he coaxes a sound that’s a thousand concert halls away from the barroom melodies of its honky-tonk cousins.
Konvalinka has been smitten by this distinctive music ever since he was a child in Saltzburg. Both parents were pianists, and his
father, a metalsmith, made the housing for contemporary music boxes popular with American soldiers stationed in Austria after World
War II. One day an officer sought the senior Konvalinka’s help in repairing an antique box. “After I heard that piece, I said, ‘I
wish there was another like that in the world,’” Konvalinka says.
Years later, he found that other piece at an estate sale in Washington, D.C., where he settled in the mid-1950s. Made in Geneva in
the 1860s, the handsome box remains a personal favorite. Konvalinka, however, is charmed less by its satiny rosewood veneer than by
its sonorous music. “Let’s not talk over this one,” he says, pulling a lever and gazing intently at the spinning cylinder as a
tinkling symphony fills the room.
Unlike tinny-sounding contemporary music boxes, the old boxes are true instruments that perform rich, complex compositions. The chief
difference: the vintage boxes’ revolving drums have more pins plucking more metal teeth. “It’s like playing 18 keys on a piano versus
using the whole keyboard,” Konvalinka explains.
While most music boxes were made in Switzerland and Germany, Konvalinka has done most of his collecting in the United States, whose
soil has been free of the wars that destroyed so many instruments in Europe. Here, do-it-yourselfers are the chief threat to music
boxes. “People attempt to repair them, and they only make them worse,” says Konvalinka, whose collection is really just the hobby
side of his business, which specializes in music box repair and restoration.
At the end of a half-hour tour, Konvalinka typically escorts visitors back to the front hall and invites them to return another day.
“There’s not much up there,” he says, gesturing toward a grand staircase, “just two or three things you might like to see.”