Piano shopping...
-
wrote on 14 Dec 2021, 13:44 last edited by
So you are furiously playing the kazoo?
-
Thanks! I'm not sure whether congratulations are appropriate, but I figured that life is too short for suboptimal pianos
My family will regret this. They'll soon have to endure more of my strumming it in the living room.
wrote on 14 Dec 2021, 14:18 last edited by@klaus said in Piano shopping...:
... life is too short for suboptimal pianos
This.
People tend to regret the things they did not do, the things they did not buy, the quality they did not get. You made the good choice.
-
wrote on 14 Dec 2021, 16:16 last edited by
Very nice piano Klaus! I've hardly played any Euro uprights since dealers here have a harder time selling them compared to Yamahas and Kawais. I have played Schimmels which are just OK. In which city are Grotrian's produced?
-
Very nice piano Klaus! I've hardly played any Euro uprights since dealers here have a harder time selling them compared to Yamahas and Kawais. I have played Schimmels which are just OK. In which city are Grotrian's produced?
wrote on 14 Dec 2021, 20:32 last edited by@sd-tav said in Piano shopping...:
Very nice piano Klaus! I've hardly played any Euro uprights since dealers here have a harder time selling them compared to Yamahas and Kawais. I have played Schimmels which are just OK. In which city are Grotrian's produced?
Schimmel has two different lines of upright pianos. The cheaper line is "just OK", as you say. The "Konzert" line is significantly better. Not on the same level as Bechstein/Grotrian/Bösendorfer, but really nice.
Grotrian's are produced in Braunschweig in Lower Saxony.
-
@sd-tav said in Piano shopping...:
Very nice piano Klaus! I've hardly played any Euro uprights since dealers here have a harder time selling them compared to Yamahas and Kawais. I have played Schimmels which are just OK. In which city are Grotrian's produced?
Schimmel has two different lines of upright pianos. The cheaper line is "just OK", as you say. The "Konzert" line is significantly better. Not on the same level as Bechstein/Grotrian/Bösendorfer, but really nice.
Grotrian's are produced in Braunschweig in Lower Saxony.
-
wrote on 16 Dec 2021, 22:04 last edited by
Here's an interesting shopping experience:
When I tried the Grotrian, I liked it a lot initially, but I was irritated by a range of about 2 octaves in the treble. They sounded too subdued and lacked brilliance. I told the sales person (who turned out to be the owner) that I was in love with everything but these 2 octaves. He also tested the piano and agreed with me. He asked me whether I have 30min of time. He took his box of tools and began working on the hammers. First, he made a few tries with a single hammer and asked me a couple of times whether it already has the tone I'm looking for. When I agreed, he worked on all the other hammers and voiced them in the same way. When he finished and I could play again, I knew : This is it.
That's the difference between a sales weasel and a proper piano technician.
-
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 00:42 last edited by
That's great.
-
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 04:28 last edited by
-
OK, the dealer managed to bridge another 1K of the gap, and I pulled the trigger.
This is the baby.
-
Here's an interesting shopping experience:
When I tried the Grotrian, I liked it a lot initially, but I was irritated by a range of about 2 octaves in the treble. They sounded too subdued and lacked brilliance. I told the sales person (who turned out to be the owner) that I was in love with everything but these 2 octaves. He also tested the piano and agreed with me. He asked me whether I have 30min of time. He took his box of tools and began working on the hammers. First, he made a few tries with a single hammer and asked me a couple of times whether it already has the tone I'm looking for. When I agreed, he worked on all the other hammers and voiced them in the same way. When he finished and I could play again, I knew : This is it.
That's the difference between a sales weasel and a proper piano technician.
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 05:45 last edited by@klaus said in Piano shopping...:
Here's an interesting shopping experience:
When I tried the Grotrian, I liked it a lot initially, but I was irritated by a range of about 2 octaves in the treble. They sounded too subdued and lacked brilliance. I told the sales person (who turned out to be the owner) that I was in love with everything but these 2 octaves. He also tested the piano and agreed with me. He asked me whether I have 30min of time. He took his box of tools and began working on the hammers. First, he made a few tries with a single hammer and asked me a couple of times whether it already has the tone I'm looking for. When I agreed, he worked on all the other hammers and voiced them in the same way. When he finished and I could play again, I knew : This is it.
That's the difference between a sales weasel and a proper piano technician.
Nice..
-
Here's an interesting shopping experience:
When I tried the Grotrian, I liked it a lot initially, but I was irritated by a range of about 2 octaves in the treble. They sounded too subdued and lacked brilliance. I told the sales person (who turned out to be the owner) that I was in love with everything but these 2 octaves. He also tested the piano and agreed with me. He asked me whether I have 30min of time. He took his box of tools and began working on the hammers. First, he made a few tries with a single hammer and asked me a couple of times whether it already has the tone I'm looking for. When I agreed, he worked on all the other hammers and voiced them in the same way. When he finished and I could play again, I knew : This is it.
That's the difference between a sales weasel and a proper piano technician.
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 05:52 last edited by@klaus said in Piano shopping...:
Here's an interesting shopping experience:
When I tried the Grotrian, I liked it a lot initially, but I was irritated by a range of about 2 octaves in the treble. They sounded too subdued and lacked brilliance. I told the sales person (who turned out to be the owner) that I was in love with everything but these 2 octaves. He also tested the piano and agreed with me. He asked me whether I have 30min of time. He took his box of tools and began working on the hammers. First, he made a few tries with a single hammer and asked me a couple of times whether it already has the tone I'm looking for. When I agreed, he worked on all the other hammers and voiced them in the same way. When he finished and I could play again, I knew : This is it.
That's the difference between a sales weasel and a proper piano technician.
Buuuut, if he was a musician or an instructor he would have reminded you that every time you practiced on an upright you were damaging your technic as the action would require you to overcompensate for the single escapement which blows your repetition AND your dynamic control, and that you would be better off with a Sejung or Dongbei 4’8” grand than the world’s best upright in terms of the touch, which ultimately drives your progress…
Sorry, went sales weasel on you!
-
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 06:02 last edited by
If one has the space, there is the consideration to get a grand piano instead, of course. Say, a Yamaha C2X, which is in the same price range. It would have a bigger sound and all the advantages of a grand piano, but it wouldn't sound as clean and delicate.
-
If one has the space, there is the consideration to get a grand piano instead, of course. Say, a Yamaha C2X, which is in the same price range. It would have a bigger sound and all the advantages of a grand piano, but it wouldn't sound as clean and delicate.
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 06:11 last edited by@klaus said in Piano shopping...:
If one has the space, there is the consideration to get a grand piano instead, of course. Say, a Yamaha C2X, which is in the same price range. It would have a bigger sound and all the advantages of a grand piano, but it wouldn't sound as clean and delicate.
The balance is tone vs. touch. Kluurs (I think) touched on the trouble the higher end European pianos have against Yamaha and Kawai in the US, but I don’t think that’s quite accurate. I think their problem is competing against the Yamaha and Kawai baby grands…
Heck, I bet Yamaha sold more of their N3X Avant Grand hybrifld piano than all of the Schimmel, Grotrisn, Bechstein, et al uprights combined..,
-
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 06:19 last edited by
Over here, German high end uprights are pretty common, whereas baby grands don’t get much love. You can buy them, of course, but my impression is that these pianos are bought by people who want a piece of furniture and not a musical instrument.
-
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 06:23 last edited by
What about the hybrid instruments like the Yamaha N1X which has a conventional Yamaha action in a cabinet not too different from a studio upright? I came close to buying one this year - with the thought that I could use the headphone capabilities. It's also nice having an instrument that never goes out of tune.
-
wrote on 17 Dec 2021, 09:32 last edited by
It’s true, but for me personally even the best digital pianos don’t come close to the experience of an acoustic one.
If I would have use for a silent mode I’d have bought an acoustic piano with silent system.
Luckily we live in a house where I can use an acoustic piano basically 24/7.
-
wrote on 12 Feb 2022, 16:26 last edited by
Finally it arrived.
A first attempt at banging the shit out of it. The non-butchered version of it is Schumann's "Aufschwung".
https://drive.google.com/file/d/104VVFdK-CF34NNm71cDWDElW89vojctO/view?usp=sharing
-
Finally it arrived.
A first attempt at banging the shit out of it. The non-butchered version of it is Schumann's "Aufschwung".
https://drive.google.com/file/d/104VVFdK-CF34NNm71cDWDElW89vojctO/view?usp=sharing
wrote on 12 Feb 2022, 16:50 last edited by@klaus said in Piano shopping...:
Finally it arrived.
A first attempt at banging the shit out of it. The non-butchered version of it is Schumann's "Aufschwung".
https://drive.google.com/file/d/104VVFdK-CF34NNm71cDWDElW89vojctO/view?usp=sharing
Sounds great!
-
wrote on 12 Feb 2022, 17:16 last edited by kluurs
Nice! I've always liked Fantasiestücke though I've not learned all of the pieces. I have arthritis in my thumbs, and Schumann seems to beat them up more than most other composers.