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A Really Neat Piano

Wednesday, September 18, 2024 by Mary O'Connor | piano

What's so neat about the Wing and Sons Piano?  Check out the five (yes, 5!) pedals.  Most pianos have 3, or sometimes 2 pedals.

Established in 1868, the Wing & Son Piano Company quickly became a masterclass in innovative marketing! Originally launched as Doan, Wing & Cushing, the company manufactured the usual square grand and upright pianos like many of its competitors. But in 1873, when Frank L. Wing took the reins and incorporated the business as Wing & Son Piano Company, things started to change – and fast!


Frank L. Wing believed that a piano should be more than just an instrument; it should bring the richness of an entire orchestra into the home. To fulfill this vision, Wing & Son introduced an exciting innovation: the 5-pedal mechanism. Unlike standard pianos, these pedals could imitate the sounds of various string instruments, including the mandolin, guitar, zither, harp, and banjo. This feature gave their pianos an edge, allowing players to explore new musical depths. The pedals, labeled Mandolin, Orchestra, Expression, Soft, and Forte, made these instruments a hit with musicians who wanted more than just a standard piano sound.


But it wasn’t just the piano’s features that made Wing & Son stand out—it was Frank Wing's marketing genius. Rather than relying on expensive showrooms or high-pressure sales tactics, Wing & Son took a unique approach. They published beautifully illustrated catalogs titled “The Book of Complete Information About Pianos.” These catalogs were designed to educate the average person on how pianos were made, demystifying the manufacturing process. Once the reader felt like a piano expert, the catalogs skillfully highlighted why Wing & Son pianos were superior. This soft-sell strategy worked wonders!


By selling directly from these lavish catalogs, Wing & Son eliminated the need for showrooms, keeping their prices competitive. They also offered free trials and flexible financing, making their pianos accessible to a broader audience—especially in rural areas, where the nearest piano showroom was often miles away.


Unfortunately, like many businesses, Wing & Son couldn’t withstand the economic downturn of the Great Depression, and by 1931, the company seemed to have faded away. But for decades, Wing & Son was at the forefront of both piano innovation and clever marketing, proving that a little creativity can go a long way in making a business sing.



Super Mario Bros Piano

Tuesday, September 17, 2024 by Mary O'Connor | OCMS

super-mario

Pianist and composer Sonya Belousova celebrated 30 years of Super Mario Bros. with an epic piano medley on the world's coolest piano.

YouTube channel Player Piano had Belousova play the tribute to the late Nintendo president Satoru Iwata on a piano styled after a classic Nintendo Entertainment System. While the medley is good, it’s the amazingly detailed piano that stands out.

The bench looks like a Nintendo controller, while the piano itself is modeled after the console. It comes complete with power and reset buttons as well as connection cords. The flip top door can cover the keys, which Belousova appropriately takes the time to blow on at the end!



From http://www.dailydot.com/geek/nintendo-super-mario-bros-player-piano/

You Think Playing the Piano is Hard?

Monday, September 16, 2024 by Mary O'Connor | OCMS

Try to find an American Fotoplayer!

fotoplayer

The American Fotoplayer is a type of photoplayer developed by the American Fotoplayer Company between the years of 1912 and 1925. The Fotoplayer is a type of player piano specifically developed to provide music and sound effects for silent movies.

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The appeal of the Fotoplayer to theatre owners was the fact that it took no musical skill to operate. The Fotoplayer would play the piano and pipe organ mechanically using an electric motor, an air pump, and piano rolls while the user of the Fotoplayer would follow the onscreen action while pulling cords, pushing buttons, and pressing pedals to produce relatable sounds to what was occurring onscreen. These actions could create sounds such as a steamboat whistle, a bird chirp, wind, thunder, a telephone bell, as well as many others. On Fotoplayers specifically, most effects were created using leather cords with wooden handles on the ends which the effects were directly connected to. For example, the steamboat whistle sound effect was created using a household bellows with a whistle at the end. Pulling the cord compressed the bellows, delivering a gust of air into the whistle. Creating a drum roll on the other hand was a bit more complicated. A clockwork device was needed to time the strikes of the drum which required constant winding.

Adapted from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_American_Fotoplayer