Mechanical Music Digest  Archives
Home Archives Calendar Gallery Store Links Info
MMD > Archives > November 2002 > 2002.11.28 > 03Prev  Next


Impact Of the Player Piano Upon Society
By Christofer Noering

Hello!  Dan Wilson wrote:

> In England ... old players still exist ... in fossilised form in
> stupendous number - far more than can ever be adopted by the thousand
> or so aficionados.  The cost of restoring them increases as their
> condition deteriorates, so there is now unlikely to be a great
> resurgence in interest.

Does he mean that in England there are literally thousands of unwanted
player pianos, wasting away?  For some reason (advent of the Pianocorder
and Disklavier? yesterday's youngsters coming of age?) the player piano
seems less popular today than, say, in the 'seventies and 'eighties.

With the hand-cranked paper-roll organs (such as the 20-note variety)
it's different.  In the 'eighties only Carl Frei and Hofbauer built them,
now do the "Orgelbauer" come by the dozens!  Can anyone explain that?

Wein und Sonnenschein!
Christofer Noering
Stockholm


(Message sent Thu 28 Nov 2002, 19:28:00 GMT, from time zone GMT+0100.)

Key Words in Subject:  Impact, Piano, Player, Society, Upon

Home    Archives    Calendar    Gallery    Store    Links    Info   



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 1995-2008 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

Pay via PayPal

No PayPal account required

                           
Pay via Amazon
Amazon Honor System Click Here to Pay Learn More
Please do not use
the anonymous option!
. .