Pleyel pianos are not only amongst the world's finest instruments but are also beautiful to look at. The maker has always been avant-garde in style and placed great focus on ensuring that the case styling of a Pleyel is design-led and contemporary.
Working lunches and rest breaks You should leave out any lunch breaks where you don't have to do any work. You should also leave out any lunch...
Read More »The one thing I do have is good ears. I don't mean perfect pitch, but ears for picking things up. I developed my ear through piano theory, but I...
Read More »Technically, a Master pianist is the highest level of pianist, exceeded only by the title of Grandmaster (which is something of an isolated case)....
Read More »The I chord is built on the first note of the key. The IV chord is built on the fourth note of the key. And, the V chord is built on the fifth note...
Read More »Wolff and Lyon presided over what has been termed the ‘golden age’ of Pleyel (an epoch that ended with the US stock market crash of 1929). They shared qualities of entrepreneurship and between them introduced many excellent innovations. Wolff experimented with scale design and hammer placement, introducing overstringing to the Pleyel concert grand piano by 1869 (some six decades before Erard yielded to overstringing in its concert pianos). Wolff also invented such novelties as the pedal piano, which was performed on by Saint-Saëns (some 150 years later, the pedal piano has lately enjoyed a renaissance among makers such as Borgato and Fazioli). In 1858, Pleyel delivered a pedal piano to César Franck, who wrote in a letter to Wolff: ‘It surpasses my expectations. The sound is as full […] as possible’. And in 1873, Wolff invented and patented a transposing keyboard. Gustave Lyon was arguably an even greater inventor than Wolff. He patented a proprietary double repetition action in 1893 which was used widely in the Pleyel grand in the following decades. Pianists often comment on the speed of the Pleyel double repetition action, although it is rather different in ‘feel’ from the modern roller action that is today the only choice of action on the market. For this reason Grand Passion Pianos usually retrofits a Renner action to golden age Pleyel piano unless a pianist specifically wishes to retain the original Pleyel double repetition action. In 1896, Lyon invented and filed a patent for perhaps Pleyel’s most remarkable invention of all – the famous double grand piano with a keyboard at either end of a single case, containing a shared soundboard but two actions and two sets of strings. These double pianos, or ‘duoclaves,’ were very successful in design – not only were two pianos contained within a single case, but the shared soundboard and quantum of strings provided great resonance, particularly in the bass register. Lyon’s inquiring mind also led him to analyse pianos by Pleyel’s main rivals so that the Pleyel piano could be benchmarked against the very finest pianos of other makers. In 1894, the editor of New York’s Musical Courier witnessed on a trip to the Pleyel workshop that pianos by Bechstein, Chickering, Knabe, Steinway and Weber were being studied and investigated to allow the benchmarking of Pleyel pianos against the highest standards of its competitors.
A piano's value comes almost solely from its function as a musical instrument. (The exception usually being very ornate art case pianos.) A one-...
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Read More »C major is the simplest as it contains no sharps or flats. In relation to the piano, this scale is played on white keys only, which makes the scale...
Read More »You can download the flowkey app for free and immediately gain free access to selected songs and course content. For full access to all songs and...
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