I saw Oscar Peterson live, Indianapolis, ‘64-66; the lid was up and when he was rockin’ the whole chassis was vibrating visibly from my view 40 feet away! Wow!
The list price of a model 290 is now $306.999. They are now owned by Yamaha, but still made in Austria. The player system would add up to another $100,000. So the sale price is a reasonable bargain!
@@garypotter1985 Please give me your address! I once advertised, "Buy three, get one free". I have to think twice about doing that with the Bösendorfer.
2 comments 1. The additional notes are there because the artist requesting the piano was also an organist; he wanted to play organ literature, full pedal board, on his piano! 2. ¡Look at the placement of the pedal lyre compared to middle C! On old models, the lyre is centered between the front legs. This is disorienting to the pianist accustomed to the lyre under middle C. New models have the lyre under middle C: function overrules visual symmetry.
Filmed using a cell phone. It could be turned 90 deg for landscape mode but that would require additional video processing and most cellphone photographers don't bother.
since I started to tune the piano by myself, I am not sure if it makes sence to add more tones. The last low tones are so difficult to hear. Even more the the high octave. Stewarts and Sons and also a French piano maker have pianos with 103 tones... not a great win.
White spruce is picea glauca from North America. It has a relatively low modulus of elasticity. Bösendorfer, and most other European piano manufacturers, use picea abies, a species widely available from the alpine region of some European countries, Scandinavia, and Russia. It has a slighter higher modulus of elasticity.
Beautiful piano
I saw Oscar Peterson live, Indianapolis, ‘64-66; the lid was up and when he was rockin’ the whole chassis was vibrating visibly from my view 40 feet away!
Wow!
The list price of a model 290 is now $306.999. They are now owned by Yamaha, but still made in Austria. The player system would add up to another $100,000. So the sale price is a reasonable bargain!
I will have 3 please 😂😂
@@garypotter1985 Please give me your address! I once advertised, "Buy three, get one free". I have to think twice about doing that with the Bösendorfer.
Beautiful ❤️ 😍 🤩 👌 Thank you 😍 Subscribed! New friend ❤️
Why on earth wouldn't you play it?
I do play it often. I have had other videos where I am playing it.
the let it be piano
Let’s hear some music!
9 extra keys, not 7. Busoni requested the additional range for certain piano transcriptions of Bach organ pieces, not "variations."
Agreed
how much one of those things cost??
If you have to ask, you can't afford it.
New today $307,000.00 though you might get a few small coins change.
2 comments
1. The additional notes are there because the artist requesting the piano was also an organist; he wanted to play organ literature, full pedal board, on his piano!
2. ¡Look at the placement of the pedal lyre compared to middle C! On old models, the lyre is centered between the front legs. This is disorienting to the pianist accustomed to the lyre under middle C. New models have the lyre under middle C: function overrules visual symmetry.
Thanks for your input. That composer was Busoni asking the company to achieve the deep pitches the longest pipes of an organ produce.
Come on man, play that puppy.
Filming a piano this big in portrait mode is the dumbest thing imaginable .......
Filmed using a cell phone. It could be turned 90 deg for landscape mode but that would require additional video processing and most cellphone photographers don't bother.
since I started to tune the piano by myself, I am not sure if it makes sence to add more tones. The last low tones are so difficult to hear. Even more the the high octave. Stewarts and Sons and also a French piano maker have pianos with 103 tones... not a great win.
White spruce is picea glauca from North America. It has a relatively low modulus of elasticity.
Bösendorfer, and most other European piano manufacturers, use picea abies, a species widely available from the alpine region of some European countries, Scandinavia, and Russia. It has a slighter higher modulus of elasticity.