Player piano
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The player piano is a type of piano that plays music automatically without the need for a human pianist. Instead, the keys are struck by mechanical, pneumatic or electrical means. The player piano was most popular in the first half of the 20th century, roughly at the same time as the acoustic phonograph.
Contents |
[edit] History of the player piano
This musical instrument was not invented by any one person, since its many distinguishing features were developed over a long period of time, principally during the second half of the 19th century. An early example was the Pianista, developed by Henri Fourneaux in 1863, though ultimately the best known was the Pianola, originally created by Edwin Scott Votey in 1895 at his home workshop in Detroit, Michigan. It was Votey's invention that initiated mass production of the instrument, which went finally into production in 1898.[1] John MacTammany, an American Civil War veteran, also claimed much credit in the invention and development of the instrument, having patented several devices that were important to the development of the player piano from 1881 onwards.
[edit] Types of player pianos
The most commonly found older player pianos are pneumatic, powered by a vacuum which is created via foot-powered bellows or electric motors. There are two main types: one fully automatic which faithfully reproduces a pianist's interpretation of the music, and one which lacks the nuance of live performance. Nowadays, these are usually known as the reproducing piano and the pianola respectively, though there are also instruments that cross this exact division. Originally, the Pianola (with a capital 'P') was a registered tradename of the Aeolian Company, but became a generic name associated with the player piano. Many companies marketed the player piano with different names, most commonly with the suffix OLA or with the word TONE incorporated into it, but Pianola was the name that stuck.
The most familiar type of pneumatic player piano looks like a normal upright piano, but has a mechanism controlled by a paper music roll contained within the cabinet of the piano itself. However, the original pneumatic players were constructed in a separate cabinet, which was placed in front of the keyboard of an ordinary piano. This unit was positioned in such a way that a series of felt-covered wooden or metal "fingers" were located above each key of the piano and struck the corresponding note as indicated by the perforations in the music roll; most include one or more moving "feet" to control the piano's pedals as well. These early instruments came to be known as cabinet players or vorsetzers. From around 1908, the roll mechanisms were also built into grand pianos.
Ampico (American Piano Company), Welte-Mignon, and Duo-Art (Aeolian Company) are a few of the popular brands of (now antique) reproducing piano mechanisms. Each uses a different encoding method for the paper music roll and different internal systems to control the piano during playback. These mechanisms were retro-fitted into many different piano brands (Steinway, Marshall and Wendall, Kimball, etc.)
Player pianos were sometimes manufactured with additional combinations of organ pipes and percussion instruments built into them. This kind of instrument was called an Orchestrion, built since about 1840. One of the leading companies in this business were the German-American company M. Welte & Sons, the later producers of the Welte-Mignon reproducing pianos, and the Wurlitzer Company, founded by German immigrants from Bavaria. These massive devices were some of the most complicated mechanical musical instruments ever built, with the exception of a few organs.
Nickelodeons are coin-operated player pianos which were normally located in public establishments. Much more elaborate coin-operated versions include additional sound-effects like the Orchestrion. They were eventually replaced by jukeboxes in the early 20th century, though restored or replicated Nickelodeons and Orchestrions are sometimes found today in public establishments as novelty items.
[edit] Player mechanism
The common pneumatic mechanism generally uses many tracker tubes behind the music roll. A state of vacuum in a tube is destroyed when air enters through a perforation in the music roll. The increased air pressure opens a valve which allows pneumatic force, through a mechanism such as a bellows or piston, to activate a key. Some players use a double valve so as to better control the movement. When the perforation moves past the tracker tube, a bleed hole restores the vacuum state in the tube. These operations take place quickly enough that a player can execute a trill much more rapidly than can be played with the human finger. A cabinet player presses a mechanical finger on a piano keyboard, while a piano with an internal player uses internal mechanical linkages to move a key. Players may also alter the sound of the piano with a sustaining pedal lever and a soft or accent lever.
A fully pneumatic system is driven by a foot-operated bellows mechanism which creates a vacuum in a reservoir system, similar to that used in a foot-operated organ. Some models use an electric motor to create the vacuum or to move the music roll. A rewind lever rewinds the roll with the music playing mechanism disabled.
[edit] Music rolls
Music rolls for pneumatic player pianos, often known as piano rolls, consist of continuous sheets of paper, about 11 1/4 inches wide and generally no more than 100 feet in length, rolled on to a protective spool, rather like a large cotton reel. The paper is perforated with numerous small holes, which control the pattern of the notes to be played as the roll moves across a tracker-bar. On reproducing rolls, additional holes control the volume level, accents, pedals, etc., to faithfully recreate the original performance.
Music rolls were not very popular in Europe, except for some German instruments, and book music was the most commonly used medium for large instruments.
[edit] Preservation and restoration
Efforts are underway to restore and archive player piano music rolls in the form of MIDI sequences. This is being accomplished by optically scanning the player piano rolls, then converting the resulting image file into MIDI using specialized software. An excellent side-effect of this procedure is that modern player pianos use MIDI control and sometimes even include media readers (floppy or CD drives, etc.), and thus these sequences can be readily played on modern pianos with no further modifications to the MIDI sequence.
[edit] Modern player pianos
Later developments of the reproducing piano include the use of magnetic tape and floppy disks, rather than piano rolls, to record and play back the music; and, in the case of one instrument made by Bösendorfer, computer assisted playback.
Almost all modern player pianos use MIDI to interface with computer equipment. Most modern player pianos come with an electronic device that can record and playback MIDI files on floppy disks and/or CD-ROMs, and a MIDI interface that enables computers to drive the piano directly for more advanced operations. Live performance or computer generated music can be recorded in MIDI file format for accurate reproduction later on such instruments. MIDI files containing converted antique piano-rolls can be purchased on the Internet.
As of 2006, several player piano conversion kits are available (PianoDisc, Pianomation, etc.), allowing the owners of normal pianos to convert them into computer controlled instruments. The conversion process usually involves cutting open the bottom of the piano to install mechanical parts under the keyboard.
[edit] Player pianos versus electric pianos
A player piano is neither an electric piano, electronic piano, nor a digital piano. The distinction between these instruments lies in the way sounds are produced. A player piano is an acoustic piano where the sound is produced mechanically by moving keys which cause hammers to strike the piano strings.
[edit] References
- Reblitz, Arthur A. Player Piano Servicing and Rebuilding. ISBN 0-911572-40-6 Lanham, Maryland: Vestal Press, 1985.
- Reblitz, Arthur A. The Golden Age of Automatic Musical Instruments. ISBN 0-9705951-0-7 Woodsville, New Hampshire: Mechanical Music Press, 2001.
- http://www.mechanicalmusicpress.com
- White, William Braid. Regulation and Repair of Piano and Player Mechanism together with Tuning as Science and Art. New York: Edward Lyman Bill, 1909.
[edit] See also
- Barrel piano
- Conlon Nancarrow, composer of dozens of "Studies for Player Piano"
- Disklavier
- George Antheil, who famously used 16 synchronized player pianos in his Ballet Mechanique
- Mechanical organ
- Punched tape
[edit] External links
- The Player Piano Group - the UK's leading player piano & related instrument society
- The Player Piano Group at YouTube
- Welte-Mignon, Portal for Reproducing Pianos
- The Pianola Institute London
- Themodist.com - extensive player piano and player organ historic info site
- Pianola.co.nz - Listen to MIDI files created by scanning player piano rolls.
- Player pianos in a photo archive
- Archival Preservation of Player Piano Music Rolls - offers many scanned player piano rolls for free download in MIDI format
- The Mechanical Music Digest, a forum (with searchable archives) on musical instruments that play themselves
- Automatic Musical Instruments Collectors' Association - An excellent world wide association linking together like minded people sharing a common interest in turn-of-the-century musical instruments that play by themselves in some manner.
- Video of an Aeolian Pianola player piano.