First piano to have 88 notes?
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First piano to have 88 notes?
Post by slovenian6474 »
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Re: First piano to have 88 keys?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
slovenian6474 wrote:I'm curious when the first piano was made that had 88 keys. I'm particularly curious if it was made prior to 1800. If you have a link or something to where it is written that would be excellent!
About 1880 see
http://www.uk-piano.org/history/compass.html
When I contacted quite a lot of makers they had no idea when 88 notes was added to their pianos Still waiting for a reply from quite a few 2002 is when I first contacted them
I would say it was Steinway's who was the first c1880
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Post by Barrie Heaton »
I was told Chickerings started to used 88 notes on their pianos in c1850s I have asked on pianotec I was also informed that Steinway's was the first to ship to the UK with 88 in c1880 but no data to back it up and Steinway don't seem to know.Tom Tuner wrote:You can check in David Wainwright's book,Broadwood by request. to see how and when they expanded the keyboard. Nothing before 1800 ran to more than six octaves at most.
In this hemisphere any piano made after 1885 would have 88 keys. However, let me do a bit of further checking on this.
Tom Tuner
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88 notes
Post by Bill Kibby »
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88 notes
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Post by Barrie Heaton »
found this
http://www.halifaxcourier.co.uk/flashba ... id=3006818
They seem to claim he was the first to make a piano in the UK , Zumpy was making them before that but they were both trained by Silbermann
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1700 till approximately 1765 - 5 octaves
1765 " " 1794 - 5 octaves and a 4th
1794 " " 1804 - 6 octaves
1804 " " 1824 - 6 octaves and a 4th
1824 " " 1880 - 7 octaves
1880 " " present day & octaves and a 3rd
I take it this refers to common practice as I have a reference to a grand piano made in Philadelphia in 1810 with a compass of 7 and-a-half octaves.
In regard to supernumerary strings to avoid "end-of-the-bridge" effects, on at least an experimental basis Yamaha added a couple of courses of (non-speaking) strings to the bottom of the treble bridge.
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Post by Barrie Heaton »
Is it in a Book TomTom Tuner wrote:In
I have a reference to a grand piano made in Philadelphia in 1810 with a compass of 7 and-a-half octaves.
Tom Tuner [/u]
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88 notes
Post by Bill Kibby »
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Yes, Bill, the note on the Loud Bros. grand was from Dolge, P & TM, Vol. 1. No citation, Alfred probably knew the Loud Bros. in person.
According to Larry Fine in The Piano Book, the Steinway D went to 88 notes in 1865. Hmm, amazing if true. None of the smaller grands went 88 note until 20 years later. Which accords with my experience of older Steinways.
Tom Tuner
Contradicting Alfred Dolge, in the History of the American Pianoforte. Daniel Spillane asserts that the Loud Bros. 90-note piano was built in 1825.
In general, it appears that the 88-note keyboard did not become a regular production item until 1885 when it was generally adopted. Apart from their concert grands Steinway was still making 85-note pianos through the mid-1880's as I know from my own observations.
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88 notes
Post by Bill Kibby »
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Increases in keyboard range seem to have increased by 1/2 octave jumps for the most part. Unless you are referring to 'short octaves' in the bass or divided sharps or somesuch.
Tom Tuner
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88 notes
Post by Bill Kibby »
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A reason overdampers never made it here was that until late in the 1800's nearly all upright actions were imported from France. When domestic production got started after the long overdue demise of the square they were still labeled "French Repeating Action". The relatively few action makers turned out substatually the same product for all. Other than an occasional lost-motion compensator or a rare sostenuto there was no such thing as a "premium" or "economy" action. Quite otherwise for grand actions however.
Tom Tuner
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Octaves
Post by Bill Kibby »
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My last words on the topic: I will stick with Loud Bros. 1824 grand as the first piano with at least 88 notesThis was a dead-end as far as piano history or development goes. If you down-load (free) Spillane's book, History of the American Pianoforte. from Google you can read an amusing account of it, p.113 (p.138 in Google's pagination). Presumably Steinway's concert grands were the first production pianos with 88 notes in 1865 (Good's date seems to be in error).
Tom Tuner
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Tom Tuner
P.S. Let me know if it doesn't work I may be able to e-mail it as a compressed file which is not very large. Reading it on line is a bit more convenient as there is a "finder" which is handier than an index. T.T.
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