Yup, the piano is relatively young, but technology has pretty much maxed out it's capabilities.
Heck, valved horns are in much the same age bracket.
The Arpeggione, unfortunately, didn't age as well...
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Piano is just 300 years old? There's more.
I've never seen the evolution of musical instruments referred to or even thought about it myself. Here's the timeline. Enjoy.
There are quite a lot of aficionados for fortepianos. Generalizations are always difficult. Many fortepianists are excellent musicians but in general I dislike the instrument. It sounds like a pre pubescent harpsichord to me. It’s easier for a sensitive pianist to scale down a Steinway to play Mozart than to have a fortepianist try to project Beethoven |
This timeline intrigued me. It struck me as illogical as it tells us that the earliest instruments were flutes. My Grove Dictionary says there is a lot of controversy on this subject. I always supposed some sort of rudimentary drum, but thinking it through now that can't be right either. The answer is clear and can't be in doubt: The first musical instrument had to be the voice. Cheers and thanks for this stimulating post. |
The pianos of Stuart & Sons represent a fairly recent technological advancement in piano design and modern exotic materials are now appearing in pianos. I am sure the merits of these "improvements" can be debated, but tiny changes have been happening. It would be particularly nice if piano actions can be made more durable, but, I suppose piano makers have no interest in innovations that will decrease demand for new pianos. |
Knowing that much of the readership here is from the USA, that about half the adult population of the USA seems to believe in creationism, and that everybody has to profess a belief in God, nevertheless I want to point out that the piano did not suddenly pop into existence fully formed some 300 years ago as if from the hand of God. No. The piano has evolved, and is still evolving. Just seven years ago the world's first 108 key concert grand piano was built in Tumut, Australia, about 100-km from where I live in Canberra, by the Stuart and Sons mentioned above. The lowest note is 16-Hz and the range is almost two octaves more than the 88-note pianos that ruled the last century. They in turn had about twice the octave span of the first recognised pianos by Cristofori. Christofori did not start from scratch, either. He started from the harpsicord, which was itself a development of the harp. The harpsicord adds a keyboard, where pressing a key causes the corresponding string to be mechanically plucked. Unfortunately the player cannot control the volume of the plucking - Sir Thomas Beecham described the harpsicord as sounding like "two skeletons copulating on a tin roof". Christofori's mechanism converted the 'pluck' into a 'whack' where the player could control the volume depending on the speed the keys were pressed, emphasised by the words forte for loud and piano for soft. Mozart had to make do with about five octaves. It took about 100 years for iron frames to find their ways into pianos, allowing much more tension to be applied to the strings. The fortepiano evolved into the pianoforte. Beethoven in particular forced much of the evolution, getting up to 6 ½ octaves in his last compositions and trying to use the German hammerklavier rather than piano to describe the instrument. Although the number of keys seemed to have stalled for a bit more than a century, overall sizes, orientations and capabilities did not. I am especially thinking of recording pianos which punched, and could replay, piano rolls. 2L has released a superb surround recording of Grieg’s Piano Concerto which is the equal of any modern recording, though the piano part was recorded over 100 years ago by Australian pianist / composer (and sad-masochist) Percy Grainger. Metallurgy did not stand still either. Modern steel wires have far higher breaking strengths these days. Even cast iron has been transformed from an extremely brittle material into a ductile one that can be used, for example, for engine crankshafts. Moulten iron from a blast furnace is supersaturated in carbon, and when it cools the carbon precipitates as graphite sheets which give grey cast iron its colour and its weakness. Adding a little magnesium makes the graphite form into balls which are more benign! Stuart and Sons have done more than extend the keyboard. They have revolutionised the way the wires feed the frame, downwards rather than sideways. They have optimised the cast iron frame using Finite Element Analysis, and even added a fourth pedal which moves the hammer pivot closer in, allowing more nuanced softer passages. Not to mention electronic pianos ... |
I love classical and jazz piano and factory tours! Here is a sample of piano factory tour documentaries available on YouTube (in alphabetical order but couldn't controll font sizes). All are fascinating and promise to bring new appreciation: Baldwin https://youtu.be/s0Csxv68jEs?si=G_egb0ScN97tpMtU Bluthner https://youtu.be/AhBAU6129Yg?si=_W6O0hopzObEkUYp Bosendorfer https://youtu.be/HDbMumNvUVQ?si=Qb-_tpkB_ho6A9F8 Kawai https://youtu.be/JiPFEqHogQY?si=W9Q8965CcdPSKOqo Steinway https://youtu.be/6rAhps4AkT8?si=BNMVpiJ9XYxPVjMJ Yamaha |