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Newspaper Articles
Newspaper Articles
 
appearing in New York newspapers, autumn 1930
high-resolution image news1.tif (62 kb LZW compression)

news1.jpg (20 kb)7 Piano Firms to Lower Price by Machine Output
25% Reduction to Come With Abandonment of Hand Work
  Pianos manufactured on a mechanical production basis instead of by hand, and selling for 25 per cent less, will be put on the market on November 1 by seven piano companies.
  The competition of mounting radio sales has forced the industry to adopt "scientific production methods" and to abandon handicraft almost entirely, Berthold Neuer, vice-president of William Knabe & Co. explained yesterday in revealing the plan to The Associated Press.
  The new type of piano is the result of experiments conducted by Dr. C. N. Hickman, of the Bell Telephone Company, under the direction of George G. Foster, President of the American Piano Corporation.
  The experiments were instigated by manufacturers who saw piano sales decline in the face of radio competition by more than 25 per cent within the last five years.
  The concerns which will manufacture and sell the new pianos are Knabe, Chickering, J. & C. Fischer, Marshall & Wendell, Ampico, Haines Brothers and Foster & Co.  Player pianos will be among those affected by the price cut.
  "Until now, pianos were produced chiefly by hand,: Mr. Neuer said. "Workmen actually whittled out the keys and turned out each leg separately, the parts of one piano could not be changed to another.  The price was necessarily high. Now we purpose to make pianos by machine production, just as automobiles are made, and they naturally become cheaper.  The price cut will in no way affect the quality."


 
 
 
appearing in New York newspapers, autumn 1930
high-resolution image news2.tif (77 kb LZW compression)

news2.jpg(36 kb)TO MARKET PIANOS MADE BY MACHINE
Seven Companies Plan to Sell Standardized Instruments at Reductions of About 25%
FIRST CHANGE IN 107 YEARS
Interchangeable Parts to Simplify Repairs to Product - Makers Will Be Introduced Here Nov. 1.
  Pianos manufactured by new methods of scientific production and selling at reductions of about 25 per cent, will be placed on the market Nov. 1 by seven pianos companies in the United States, it was announced yesterday.  The new type pianos are the result of experiments conducted during the past five years, it was said, and embody the first radical changes made in 107 years.
  According to Berthold Neuer, vice president of William Knabe & Co., who made the announcement, the competition of radio sales has forced the industry to abandon the handmade piano almost entirely and adopt a modern method of construction which was evolved by Dr. C. N. Hickman of the Bell Telephone Company, who has been studying the piano industry and making experiments for several years.
  Under the direction of George G. Foster, president of the American Piano Corporation, Dr. Hickman has evolved a method of piano manufacture, Mr. Neuer said, which will standardize production and produce pianos which will have more accuracy of tone and will have an interchangeability of parts.  Because of the scientific methods of production Dr. Hickman developed, the pianos can be sold at a 25 per cent or more reduction.
  "Since Joseph Chickering made the first overstrung piano in 1823," Mr. Neuer said, "the methods producer by Dr. Hickman are the first radical changes made in the piano. The new pianos which will be placed on the market on Nov. 1 will have greater beauty and tone than the manufacturer was able to produce before; they can be repaired easily because of the interchangeability of parts and every piano of a type will have the same qualities."
  The new pianos, Mr. Neuer said, will be made in all models now on the market and will also be produced in a specially constructed small type and in period designs.
  The seven companies which will sponsor the new type of piano are all affiliated with the American Piano Company.  They are William Knabe & Co., Chickering & Sons, J. and C. Fischer, Marshall & Wendell, Ampico Corporation, Haines Brothers and Foster & Co.


 
 
 
Concert review in The Christian Science Monitor, October 26, 1929
high-resolution image news3.tif (118 kb LZW compression)


news3.jpg (21 kb)"A New Piano-Action"
By Winthrop P. Tryon
New York

  Piano-Action -- who knows what that means? When a tuner took the mechanism of keys and hammers out of an old square piano of mine last summer and bade me shut the door so that the wind, which was blowing into the house freshly from the west, might not do it harm, I got an idea of what a piano-action is; something very delicate when removed from its proper place and ever so slightly exposed to irregular treatment, and yet something capable of enduring wear and weather almost illimitable when set in the case as intended to be by the builder.

For all I know, the action of pianos has changed a good deal since the square, which I happen to treasure, was put forth from the factory, though, according to such casual observations as I have made, it has remained in general idea about the same. Now I lately looked under the lid of a grand piano and saw an arrangement of levers that appeared unusual, a great number of sticks formerly required being dispensed with.

  The instrument in question stood  on the platform of Town Hall and was being taken in hand by the movers, to be carted home to the warehouse. To me, it was an extraordinary object, while to them it was just a load for the truck; so I had little time to satisfy my curiosity. Such, however, as I did have sufficed, since a piano, after all, is its tone, which you do not see; and of this one I knew the tone — a quality just enough different from anything I am used to, to make me wonder if a fresh timbre in the year 1929 has been brought into existence.

  Harold Bauer's piano I'm speaking of, a concert grand lately out of the shop, carrying an action developed, information goes, in the experimental department of the American Piano Company, by C.N. Hickman, the physicist of the organization. It was played upon by Mr. Bauer at the Festival of Chamber Music at the Library of Congress, Washington, and it was played upon by him again here at the Town Hall on the evening of October 19.

Pianist and Carpenter

  Truly I am not going to try to make anyone believe that the new action, being a mere product of the bench anyway, had anything to do with the effect of Mr. Bauer's performance. Indeed, I am sure that the whole matter is a case of coincidence. A musician's artistry has taken on a certain interesting change, and an engineer's knack at invention has evolved a mechanical device (hoping "device" is a dignified enough term) at the same moment.

  Not precisely the same, either; for Mr. Bauer impressed me a year ago, when playing upon an instrument of the regular type, to be passing from one period as interpreter to another. He seemed to be getting well out of a state, which I thought he had for some time been in, of a want of confidence in himself, as though he had completed his communication and was leaving the next thing to be said by others. Austerity and positiveness, united with charm and suavity -- there's the four-in-hand of traits that's Bauer; and nobody from a piano company's research laboratory will show him how to drive the team, either.

  Bauer, then, was ahead of the carpenter. Nevertheless, both at Washington and in New York, I particularly took to the sound of the piano with the new action, equalized from top to bottom, like the scale of a good singer; a kind of sound that carries, even when very lightly produced, and one that does not offend the ear when brought out with full power of the hand.

Am I unwittingly praising the man who travels with Mr. Bauer, keeping the wires at the right tension and the hammers at the desired velvetness? Very well; let me commend him as having achieved a "voicing" that was most remarkably correct and appropriate for two of Mr. Bauer's pieces in particular; the F major Ballade of Chopin and the 'Reflets dans L'eau' of Debussy."

  Equalization

  Equalization -- to take a little thought of that as a tendency in instrumental expression today; upper notes a little less piercing and lower notes a little less gruff than formerly. It can be plainly observed, I think, in the orchestra, as a conductor like Arturo Toscanini adjusts ...

[At this point the photocopy becomes difficult to read and transcribe; there is no further mention of the piano or Bauer.]



 

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