Carl Bechstein

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Carl Bechstein (June 1, 1826 to March 6, 1900) was the maker of C. Bechstein pianos and the founder of C. Bechstein Pianofortefabrik.[1]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Carl Bechstein
Carl Bechstein

He was born on Jun 1, 1826, in Gotha, Germany.

Young Carl Bechstein studied and worked in France and England as a piano craftsman, before he became an individual piano maker. His first pianos were made for other companies.[2] From 1844 to 1848 he worked in Dresden for a local piano maker, then moved to Berlin and worked at Klavierfabrik Perau in Behrenstraße 56. In 1849 he worked as a hired contractor for piano maker in Paris. Back in Berlin he worked again for Klavierfabrik Perau in 1852-53.

[edit] C. Bechstein piano factory

C. Bechstein piano factory was founded on 1 October 1853 by Carl Bechstein in Berlin, Germany.[3]

Carl Bechstein set out to manufacture a piano able to withstand the great demands imposed on the instrument by the virtuosi of the time, such as Franz Liszt. In 1857, Hans von Bülow (Liszt's son-in-law) gave the first public performance on a Bechstein grand piano by performing Liszt's Piano Sonata in B minor in Berlin.[3]

By 1870, with the endorsements by Franz Liszt and Hans von Bülow, Bechstein pianos became a staple at many concert halls, as well as in private mansions. By that time three pianomakers became established as the industry leaders across the world: Bechstein, Blüthner and Steinway & Sons.[4][5]

[edit] A successful piano maker

In 1880 the second piano factory was opened in Berlin, and the third factory was opened in 1897 in Berlin Kreuzberg. The years from the 1870s through 1914 brought Bechstein their most dramatic increase in sales.

In 1885 Bechstein first supplied a piano to Queen Victoria.[6] A gilded art-case piano was first delivered to the Buckingham Palace, then several more Bechstein pianos were delivered to the Windsor Castle and to other royal residences.[7][8] By January 1886 they were among the piano manufacturers holding a Royal Warrant as a supplier to the Queen.[9] Many other mansions and salons in London were following the royal example. Several British embassies across the world acquired Bechstein pianos to replace lesser pianos. Also in 1885, Bechstein opened a branch in London, that eventually grew to become their largest showroom and dealership in Europe, and then, a few years later, opened showrooms in Paris, and in St. Petersburg.

Bechstein was the official piano maker for the csars of Russia, the royal families of Spain, Italy, Sweden, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Denmark, and other royalty and aristocracy.[8]

By 1890 branches were opened in Paris, Saint Petersburg and London, where the company spent £100,000 to build Bechstein Hall[10], adjacent to its London showroom at 36-40 Wigmore Street. It opened on 31 May 1901. Between 1901 and 1914, C. Bechstein was the largest piano dealership in London.[11][12] At that time, Bechstein was the official piano maker for the tsars of Russia, the royal families of Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, Norway, Austria and Denmark, and other royalty and aristocracy.[8]

The signature of Carl Bechstein
The signature of Carl Bechstein

The list of royal clients of Bechstein may be found on the soundboard of vintage Bechstein pianos made before the Second World War. The list is part of the original Bechstein trademark logo, it can be seen under the strings in the center of a piano's soundboard.[13][8]

Carl Bechstein died in Berlin on March 6, 1900,[1] and the Bechstein company continued operations under the management of his sons. Between 1900 and 1914 C. Bechstein was one of the leading piano makers in the world with 1100 craftsmen and workers, making five thousand pianos per year.[6]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Bernd Rühle: Carl Bechstein (1826-1900) Über Leben und Lebenswerk eines grossen Klavierbauers...[1]
  2. ^ Piano. Barnes & Noble, 1995.
  3. ^ a b "Bechstein", Grove Music Online, 2007. Accessed June 2, 2007.
  4. ^ Page 60, The Piano. The New Grove musical instruments series. W.W. Norton & Company Inc. 1988. ISBN 0-393-30518x
  5. ^ Encyclopedia of the Piano (Music - Reference) (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) 521 pages, 1996. ISBN-10: 0815325827 (Warning: This book weights 2 pounds)
  6. ^ a b Bechstein. Tradition. Timeline for year 1885[2]
  7. ^ C. Bechstein 1896 trademark[3]
  8. ^ a b c d Liste von Empfängern Bechsteinscher Flügel finden sich Majestäten und Fürstlichkeiten aus vielen Ländern: insgesamt 62 Persönlichkeiten aus Deutschland (darunter auch der Herzog von Sachsen- Coburg-Gotha, der Heimat Bechsteins), Englang, Rußland und Schweden. In London, Paris und St. Petersburg entstanden Auslieferungszentren, in London gab es -wie in Berlin- sogar einen Bechstein-Konzertsaal ( Bechstein-Hall, heute Wigmore-Hall). Lieferungen erfolgten in insgesamt 153 inner- und außereuropäische Länder und Städte; Bechstein durfte sich Hoflieferant für 16 Herrscherhäuser in Deutschland, England, Italien, Spanien, Rumänien, Schweden und Norwegen nennen. Bernd Rühle: Carl Bechstein (1826-1900) Über Leben und Lebenswerk eines grossen Klavierbauers...[4]
  9. ^ London Gazette: no. 25546, page 66, 5 January 1886. Retrieved on 2008-03-11.
  10. ^ Wigmore Hall, a brief history[5]
  11. ^ Pages 20-57, 60, The Piano. The New Grove musical instruments series. W.W. Norton & Company Inc. 1988. ISBN 0-393-30518x
  12. ^ Encyclopedia of the Piano (Music - Reference) (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) 521 pages, 1996. ISBN-10: 0815325827
  13. ^ C. Bechstein 1896 trademark[6]

[edit] Further reading

Hagen W. Lippe-Weißenfeld: Das Klavier als Mittel politischer Distinktion im Zusammenhang mit der Entwicklung des Klavierbaus in London und Berlin an den Beispielen Broadwood und Bechstein. The piano as medium for political distinction in connection with the development of piano manufacturing in London and Berlin based on the examples of Broadwood and Bechstein. Dissertation Berlin 2006. Online-Version


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