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This guy, Thomas Bloch owns (and beautifully plays) an Ondes Martenot, a Glass Harmonica and a Crystal Baschet. _*http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=7qagAnX6eJ8&NR=1 *_As the guy in this interview says, 'there is probably no room in the world that has all three of these instruments in it. Skip to 1:24 of this video to hear Bloch play the Crystal Baschet on this French Talk show _*http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=G5RupsBUx6g*_ I love playing Crystal Wine Goblets so much that I investigated purchasing a Glass Harmonica (invented by Benjamin Franklin in 1781 and used in composition by Mozart, twice! _*http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=dE_MZzvigd4&feature=related*_ One company makes them..........hold onto your chair. $17,000 each! Interestingly, I have a custom Bowed Psaltery and , to my ears , it sounds like a perfect cross between a violin and a glass harmonica. _* http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=aD_dsfp1Uyk&feature=related*_ This is perhaps because there are chromatic and undampened strings so that all kinds of dissonant overtones are excited in much the same way as a Glass Harmonica The Bowed Psaltery set me back $100 (unbelievable for a beautiful custom instrument but the instrument maker liked me and made me several desert island instruments over a five year period............i met him at the flea market and he's dissappeared--- a Marxaphone and even a prototype Hurdy Gurdy that is so weezy that it's useless for Celtic music but fantastic for Industrial music............lol. And, just for oddities' sake check out this fascinating instrument that Hadyn composed for, the BARYTON It has plucked strings in back of the instrument (invisible to the audience) and bowed strings in the front. _* http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=QZApJANZjl0&feature=related*_ Finally, here is the amazing musician/instrument inventor playing his invention, the Bazantar which is a cross between a Sitar (with sympathetic resonating strings) and and a contra Bass. _*http://hk.youtube.com/watch?v=QZApJANZjl0&feature=related*_