Piano roll
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A piano roll is the music storage medium used to operate the player piano, pianola or a reproducing piano.
The piano roll was the first medium which could be produced and copied industrially and made it possible to provide the customer fast and easy with actual music.
A piano roll is a roll of paper with perforations (holes) punched in it. The position and length of the perforation determines the note played on the piano. The piano roll moves over a device known as the 'tracker bar', which first had 58 holes, was expanded to 65 and then was upgraded to 88 holes (generally, one for each piano key). When a perforation passes over the hole, the note sounds.
Piano rolls have been in continuous mass production since around 1896.[1] Though they are still being made today, MIDI files represent a modern way in which musical performance data can be stored. MIDI files accomplish digitally and electronically what piano rolls do mechanically. Software for editing a performance stored as MIDI data often has a feature to show the music in a piano roll representation.
The first paper rolls were used by Welte & Sons in their Orchestrions since 1883.[2] After hundreds of companies of this booming business produced piano rolls different in size and perforation, in 1909 the American producers of piano rolls and mechanical pianos as well agreed to a standard in the Buffalo Convention.
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[edit] Pianolas
Pianola was a trademark of The Aeolian Corporation of New York in the 1890s. It soon became a generic name for self-playing pianos (see "player piano"). Many other firms produced player pianos, but only the trade name "Phonola", used by Germany's Hupfeld company, competed in popular parlance, and that only in Western Europe. The Pianola was first introduced as a "push-up player" or "vorsetzer". This was a desk-sized machine which was pushed in front of an ordinary piano, playing the keys with wooden levers. Suction is provided by two foot pedals, operating cloth-covered wooden exhauster bellows. Expression (volume changes) could be achieved by varying the force and speed in the foot pedaling. Similarly, because the music rolls are perforated at a constant tempo, all the fluctuations of phrasing and rubato must be introduced by means of a tempo lever, usually operated by the right hand, to control the speed of the paper roll. There are often other hand levers for controlling the pedals of the actual piano. Aeolian introduced pianos incorporating their player mechanism in the later 1890s, and continued making player pianos until the 1980s.
[edit] Arranged, Hand Played and Reproducing Rolls
Arranged rolls are produced simply by cutting holes in the paper with a knife and ruler, using the sheet music or other arrangement as a guide. This results in somewhat mechanical sounding rolls.
Hand played rolls are made using some form of recording device that marks the paper as a pianist plays. The marked paper is then used as a guide when the holes are cut. Extra notes may be added and errors deleted after the recording process. This method was in use as early as 1904 by the Welte company in Germany with their reproducing piano Welte-Mignon, who recorded such famous pianists as Camille Saint-Saëns, Richard Strauss, Alexander Scriabin and George Gershwin. The Welte company made an invaluable historical record of the playing of famous performers who did not make sound recordings. In around 1911 hand played rolls for reproducing pianos started production in the USA, and have provided certain types of hand played recordings which can also play back the dynamics as performed by the pianist. Actually, for example the Welte-Mignon could only play two different velocities at a time, (lower and higher part of the keyboard, with the border between those two freely movable), but there were certain tricks like playing a note a minute amount earlier to give it its own velocity.
[edit] Compositions for Pianola and Reproducing Piano
Besides these two clearly differentiated types of music roll, there were others that bridged the gap between the two instruments. Hand-played rolls reproduce the note values of a live pianist, but with no automatic dynamic control, and this allows pianola owners to recreate the performances of experts, rather than having to work too hard themselves.
However, since rolls for the pianola were not generally recorded by hand, there is also the possibility to create music that is impossible for humans to play, or, more correctly, music that was not conceived in terms of performance by hand, whether inhumanly complex or not. Over one hundred composers wrote music specially for the player piano during the course of the 20th century, notably Conlon Nancarrow, Igor Stravinsky, Alfredo Casella and Paul Hindemith.
The Duo-Art, Ampico and Welte-Mignon brands were known as "reproducing" piano rolls, as they could accurately reproduce the touch and dynamics of the artist as well as the notes struck, when played back on capable pianos.
Duo-Art featured artists such as Ignace Jan Paderewski, George Gershwin,Maurice Ravel, Percy Grainger, Leopold Godowsky and Ferruccio Busoni. The Ampico brand's featured artists included Sergei Rachmaninoff, Leo Ornstein, and Marguerite Volavy. For Welte-Mignon there played artists like Gustav Mahler, Claude Debussy, Alexander Scriabin
There were hundreds of companies worldwide producing rolls during the peak period of their popularity (1900–1927). Some other non-reproducing rolls makers of live performances are listed below together with their most memorable recording artistes.
- QRS Company — James P Johnson, Fats Waller, Zez Confrey, J. Lawrence Cook, Pete Wendling and Victor Arden
- US Music Roll Company; Lee Sims, Robert Billings
- Imperial — Charley Straight, Roy Bargy
- Vocalstyle — Jelly Roll Morton, Walter Esberger/Davison
- Capitol/Columbia; Jimmy Blythe, Clarence Johnson
[edit] Reproducing Pianos
Rolls for the reproducing piano were generally made from the recorded performances of famous musicians. Typically, a pianist would sit at a specially designed recording piano, and the pitch and duration of any notes played would be either marked or perforated on a blank roll, together with the duration of the sustaining and soft pedal.
Reproducing pianos can also re-create the dynamics of a pianist's performance by means of specially encoded control perforations placed towards the edges of a music roll, but this coding was never recorded automatically. Different companies had different ways of notating dynamics, some technically advanced (though not necessarily more effective), some secret, and some dependent entirely on a recording producer's handwritten notes, but in all cases these dynamic hieroglyphics had to be skillfully converted into the specialized perforated codes needed by the different types of instrument.
Recorded rolls play at a specific, marked speed, where for example, 70 signifies 7 feet of paper travel in one minute, at the start of the roll. On all pneumatic player pianos, the paper is pulled on to a take-up spool, and as more paper winds on, so the effective diameter of the spool increases, and with it the paper speed. Player piano engineers were well aware of this, as can be seen from many patents of the time, but since reproducing piano recordings were generally made with a similar take-up spool drive, the tempo of the recorded performance is faithfully reproduced, despite the gradually increasing paper speed.
The playing of many pianists and composers are preserved on reproducing piano roll. Gustav Mahler, Edvard Grieg, Claude Debussy, Scott Joplin, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin and George Gershwin are amongst the composers who have had their performances recorded in this way.
[edit] References
- Elaine Obenchain: The complete catalog of Ampico Reproducing Piano rolls. New York: American Piano Co., ca.. 1977. ISBN 0-9601172-1-0; (out of print).
- Charles Davis Smith: Duo-Art piano music: a complete classified catalog of music recorded for the Duo-Art reproducing piano compiled and annotated by Charles Davis Smith. Monrovia, California, ca. 1987; (out of print).
- Charles David Smith and Richard James Howe: The Welte-Mignon, its music and musicians; complete catalogue of Welte-Mignon reproducing piano recordings 1905 - 1932, historical overview of companies and individuals, biographical essays on the recording artists and composers. Vestal, NY: Vestal Press, 1994. ISBN 1-879511-17-7; (out of print).
- Gerhard Dangel und Hans-W. Schmitz: Welte-Mignon-Reproduktionen / Welte-Mignon Reproductions. Gesamtkatalog der Aufnahmen für das Welte-Mignon Reproduktions-Piano 1905-1932 / Complete Library Of Recordings For The Welte-Mignon Reproducing Piano 1905-1932. Stuttgart 2006. ISBN 3-00-017110-X
- Barbara Bryner: The piano roll: a valuable recording medium of the twentieth century. Dept. of Music, University of Utah, 2002. OCLC 50482085
[edit] Sources
- ^ www.pianola.org
- ^ US-Patent 287.599, Emil Welte, New York, 30. October 1883 [1]
[edit] See also
- Book music
- Music roll is the generic term for similar rolls used to operate fairground organs (or band organs), calliopes, hand-cranked organs, orchestrions and other types of automatically played pipe organ or mechanical organ.
[edit] External links
- The Player Piano Group : the main UK society
- The Pianola Forum - online discussion group
- QRS Piano Rolls
- Themodist com - extensive player piano, piano roll and player organ information site
- Julian Dyer Piano Rolls - new Duo-Art 100% accurate music rolls
- Pianola.co.nz - Listen to MIDI files created by scanning player piano rolls
- Information about Welte-Mignon
- Warren Trachtman's Piano Roll Scanning Information Page
- L. D. Henderson tells a modern roll-arranger's story.
- Maesto - Recuts of music- and piano-rolls
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