Mechanical Music Digest  Archives
You Are Not Logged In Login/Get New Account
Please Log In. Accounts are free!
Logged In users are granted additional features including a more current version of the Archives and a simplified process for submitting articles.
Home Archives Calendar Gallery Store Links Info

Spring Fundraising Drive In Progress. Please visit our home page to see this and other announcements: https://www.mmdigest.com     Thank you. --Jody

MMD > Archives > March 1998 > 1998.03.23 > 15Prev  Next


Discreet Recording Pianos
By Dan Wilson, London

One of the questions Robert Perry asked was:

> 2. Was there ever a recording piano (i.e., a player that was used
> to record rolls) that could be mistaken for a normal player piano
> without close inspection?

Except that they were in a recording studio, this was surely true
of all the recording pianos used by the big companies, to judge from
photographs.  The recording artist had come to give a recital and
that's how it should be.

The only recording piano I've ever seen in action certainly met this
requirement.  This was a Steinway Model B pedal-electric Duo-Art grand
in the middle of the Autoplayer shop in Slough, England, in the middle
1970s.  It was even used to demonstrate (and come to that, edit new)
Duo-Art rolls.  Only a discreet multi-core cable betrayed its additional
role.

Speed-registering electrical contacts had been added to the piano
action and pedals.  Jazz recitals were held by celebrities at weekends
and the proceeds issued on roll maybe 2 to 6 weeks later, depending on
how well the computer was working and how many jaded old uprights were
in for repair.

The Duo-Art rolls produced by Autoplayer always seemed to me somewhat
tame, but I am sure this was thanks to constraints on editing time
rather than any default in the piano, which even then played Duo-Art
rolls well.

On the closure of the shop following the death of its proprietor Paul
Young in a road accident, the piano was bought by Peter Davis of the
London Player-Piano Group and completely rebuilt, the contacts being
removed.  It remains his star instrument and the rebuild was such that
it is now certainly the easiest pedal-electric grand I've met on which
to pedal ordinary rolls.

Dan Wilson, London


Key Words in Subject:  Discreet, Pianos, Recording

Home    Archives    Calendar    Gallery    Store    Links    Info   


Enter text below to search the MMD Website with Google



CONTACT FORM: Click HERE to write to the editor, or to post a message about Mechanical Musical Instruments to the MMD

Unless otherwise noted, all opinions are those of the individual authors and may not represent those of the editors. Compilation copyright 1995-2024 by Jody Kravitz.

Please read our Republication Policy before copying information from or creating links to this web site.

Click HERE to contact the webmaster regarding problems with the website.

Please support publication of the MMD by donating online

Please Support Publication of the MMD with your Generous Donation

Pay via PayPal

No PayPal account required

                                     
Translate This Page