I just turned on CNN's Headline News, and there was that special report
which the two Gannett television stations broadcast on 3/3/97. Usually,
the same 'human interest' breaks are repeated on CNN and Headline News
through the day, and often the next. Those who are interested in close-
up shots of a #5 Leabarjan perforator at work, plus a view of the
Studio's #8-B Leabarjan in the background, should check out CNN and
Headline News today and tomorrow!
For a change, a tuned player piano is featured. Again, Mark Lutton's
2-piano/8-hand transcription of The Chrysanthemum by Scott Joplin was
featured for the continuous musical background, and part of the actual
performance. (This roll will be issued in Duo-Art form when released
later in Spring, having been delayed by the fire at the Play-Rite plant
in California.)
The spot has several messages in its compact 2-1/2 minutes running time:
a) Grand pianos had player actions; b) Player pianos should be tuned,
and don't have to be presented as 'off-key' novelties; c) Music rolls
are _arranged_, and hand-playing has nothing to do with the final
product; d) An 'involved' human is needed for interpreting/monitoring
the music roll's performance, which is fined-tuned via levers, pedals
and sundry player action controls.
Let's hope this helps bury some of the mythology about the pneumatic
instruments and their paper rolls. It's perforate-duplicate-interpret
-- a medium that's void of an alleged artist legacy. Having the
individual participate in the music roll performance is what gives
the pedal player and the lever-controlled reproducing piano its lasting
appeal.
Regards, Douglas Henderson
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