If you can't afford a Steiway, which are the next best?
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Comparisons
Post by Bill Kibby »
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Re: If you can't afford a Steiway, which are the next best?
Post by Barrie Heaton »
Susan Wilson wrote: This may be personal choice but are Bechstiens, Bluthners, good purchases?
Thanks
Susan
Very good, especially Bluthners. However, they are all in the same price range of a Steinway what is your price range.
This is a bargain
Blüthner Style IVA 5'5" / 166cm Mahogany Satin Finish
£13,995.00
* New Soundboard
* New Wrest Plank
* Roller Action
* Ivory Keys
http://www.bluthner.co.uk/bluthner/usedpianos.html
Barrie,
Web Master UK Piano Page
good question
After steinway and Fazioli, the German pianos seem to have the best reputation.
The great difficulty is getting your hands on some of these instruments - (eg. no August Forster in the UK of that size) but I tried nearly all, and found the Grotrian 6 foot 4 to have a beautiful tone and touch - personal taste of course!
Good luck richard
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Steinway...the king of pianos ?
Post by Bruce Hardy »
Re: Steinway...the king of pianos ?
Please come over to England and rescue us from a few more. I can immediately think of two that are going free to a good home.Bruce Hardy wrote: I now teach with a Broadwood 1895 and an Erard 1875, both over eight feet in length and both straight strung. I gave the Steinway to my daughter who loves it. To me it is a matter of tone vs volume, sound vs space.
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piano choice
Post by Bruce Hardy »
ps...would love to hear more about the 'free to a good home'
Still, I won't be trading in my Yamaha yet thanks!
As for the freebies, I have two or three Broadwood s/strungs and a Kirkman of similar construction that I wish would disappear from my tuning round. I'll let you know if my pleadings to their owners pays off.
Shipping is at your expense!
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Re: Steinway...the king of pianos ?
Post by Melodytune »
Its very interesting to read and hear of our customers' opinions of what pianos they like and dislike and this is a perfect example of someone who clearly wasn't happy with their Steinway piano.Bruce Hardy wrote:This is my first posting to the page and am anxious to share my experience with choice of piano. I purchased and rebuilt a Steinway in 1980 and was thrilled with it, but as my skill as a pianist grew, became increasingly unhappy with the loud metallic shrillness, even after voicing. Everyone else thought I was crazy, but I knew there had to be something more. When in a museum I played an eight foot Broadwood of 1890 vintage I knew I had come home. I now teach with a Broadwood 1895 and an Erard 1875, both over eight feet in length and both straight strung. I gave the Steinway to my daughter who loves it. To me it is a matter of tone vs volume, sound vs space.
I also have a couple of old Broadwood straight strung pianos I wouldn't mind getting rid of, but equallly I have a couple of lovely grands one of which I've recommended for refurbishment.
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Steinway
Post by Bruce Hardy »
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Post by Gill the Piano »
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Post by Gill the Piano »
"Manufacturers of English pianos are beginning to feel the effects of the foreign competition which assails them at all points; Mr.Bord flooding the country with his cheap pianettes,while the great house of Steinway leaves no stone unturned in order to gain a footing for their mighty 'grands'...
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sound quality vs volume
Post by Bruce Hardy »
At the bottom of pg. 228 is a quote by Karl Geringer: 'The tone on the over-strung piano has not, however, the limpidity of the older instruments.'
I think it is agreed that overstringing facilitates a great volume of sound, but what about quality. Is it just my imagination, or does anyone else find a purity and clarity of sound in straight stringing? Those of you in the UK have an advantage of comparison over me as there are so many more older instruments there. Bear in mind, that we have to compare over-stringing with a straight strung which is in top notch condition.
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Post by Gill the Piano »
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Post by Melodytune »
From experience while I live (or love - in some cases) the tone produced by an old straight strung grand in good condition for its depth and clarity, I could rarely say the same for upright pianos. I do have a number of straight strung uprights on my rounds which are adequate, some are fine pianos in my opinion.
There are few piano specialists who will restore a straight strung piano unless its something like a Bechstein where there's a good chance that they can recover the cost.
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string length
Post by Bruce Hardy »
The broadwood has FOUR strings to each note in the top two treble sections. This is the only piano I have seen with 'quadchords'. That doesn't sound right to me but if two strings form a bi-chord, and three a tri-chord, why not? I was just relieved I had more than one tuning wedge with me at the time, or i'd have been a little buggered!
I tune one of those monstrosities too! The extra string's benefit is completely outweighed by the fact that there's more surface area for the fat little hammer to strike, and the sound is weaker than if there were trichords!
Absolute rubbish.
I wonder what Broadwood's designers were on at times.
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quadchord
Post by Bruce Hardy »
Many thanks
Bruce
Action from recollection is an early double escapement but is definitely fitted with with the Broadwood system of comb and long centrepin for each section (so you'd want to get rid of that, right?). The quadrachords are mercifully limited to the top two sections, and as you'd expect, the string diameters are much reduced from those of a standard trichord.
The system is ridiculously flawed. The hammers are significantly wider than normal and their impact is spread over a greater surface area across four thinner, shorter strings so they sound completely puny. They're also rubbish to tune. If you're seriously that interested I'll see if the current owners will sell theirs, but I'm sure you'll be disappointed unless you're primarily a Broadwood collector or enthusiast.
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Broadwood
Post by Bruce Hardy »
Straight Strung vs Overstrung
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