Bestand:Pianolist 1912.png
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Werbung fuer den Pianola der Aeolian Company, aus: The Connoisseur, London, April 1912. Advertisement for the Pianola of the Aeolian Company.
artist : J. Harris
Updated Thre'e'logy book on piano rolls will come out soon:
powe lls.com/book/2-97814 9 0717722 94.60.76.224 05:59, 11 March 2024 (UTC)
More on Vorsetzer/Solenoid Player in Updated Threelogy Book:
Electrical Vorsetzer (true roboto) stood in front of the piano with a horizontal row of felted fingers
adjusted just above the keyboard, it looked like a mini piano with no keyboard. Push ups were a pain in the neck when it came to adjusting them to different pianos. Each piano is slightly different. The piano size, carpeting, flooring introduces another factor for height. Special test roll for adjustment were used in the pianola. The fingers on the push ups were supposed to be about 1/64 of the inch (millimeter) away from the keytop on the piano. Adjustment had to be made every time a Push Up was pushed up to a new piano. The closer the fingers were positioned the better sound it gave but that's not always the case, exact sound can never be 100% reproduced because of different pianos, room ambiance, temperature, acoustics, etc. Original Pianola Push Up was pneumatic system, it had to be skillfully operated by artistic humans A solenoid player:
It is not a pneumatic instrument as is with the Duo-Art featuring Pianola control levers (for Push Up systems). There were levers for different functions; operator's attention was crucial or song's timing would be off key. Solenoid is an electrical machine, it has a coil of wire around an iron core. It becomes an electrified magnet when current passes through the coil. The Pianola or Player-Piano is "interactive" with the Push Up system, whereas the solenoid player (pianola, rolls were on the inside as of 1902 but did not become popular until 1905, first Vorsetzer was invented in 1902) simply depresses keys. This was a semi-automatic Push Up pianola. Pianola is no more mechanical than the most skillful player, it is not automated per se. It's a mechanical piano operated piano that uses a roll of perforated paper to activate piano keys. Pianola always had more than one definition. The pianola was originally a 58-note instrument. It reached its peak of popularity at the time when the Wells stories and Slowacki's superb poems, stories were re-published. Then the 65 note scale had become commonplace and the emphasis was upon classical music and some jazz/foxtrot but personally interpreted. Wooden and metal fingers with felt tips pressed down the piano keys, once the instrument had been rolled up to and adjusted for the height of the keyboard (automatic vorsetzer was yet to come). Inside Pianola was invented in 1903, aka Inner Player by Welte Corp. It was an Inner Player Pianola or what we call a Player-Piano today, a mechanism contained inside the piano cabinet. Pianola is also called self playing piano. Pianola term is generic now. Welte was a brand of reproducing player (for organs) mechanism developed by Welte and Sohn (Son) in Germany in 1887 (albeit primitive one). Other examples of what we have today is Auto Pneumatic Action Company aka Licensee but it's so unreliable. The Original Piano Player was invented in Germany in 1902, as distinguished from PLAYER PIANO (Pianola), which came a few years later. 185.203.136.243 06:44, 11 March 2024 (UTC)
Het tweedimensionale kunstwerk afgebeeld op deze afbeelding valt in het publiek domein omdat:
Reproducties van het werk kunnen ook worden beschouwd als publiek domein omdat ze geen oorspronkelijk karakter hebben. Dit geldt voor reproducties gemaakt in de Verenigde Staten (zie Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corp.), Duitsland en veel andere landen. {{PD-Art}} template without license parameter: please specify why the underlying work is public domain in both the source country and the United States
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huidige versie | 10 mrt 2006 08:43 | 800 × 1.125 (451 kB) | Gerhard51 | Werbung fuer den Pianola-Vorsetzer der Aeolian Company, aus: The Connoisseur, London, April 1912. Advertisement for the Pianola-Vorsetzer of the Aeolian Company. |
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