Music Trade Review

Issue: 1916 Vol. 62 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
8
REVIEW
POWER CONSUMPTION—(Continued from page 7).
much higher possible motor speed when required,
extremely rapid re-roll speed and other advan-
tages too numerous to mention, among which,
however, must be included the relatively enor-
mous advantage of having instant speech at the
maximum from any lower level.
Apart from these considerations, however,
which are more or less academic from the view-
point of the present article, the curves are ac-
curate and immensely valuable for all of us.
The recording instrument used in the tests is
the Esterline Co.'s graphic wattmeter. The paper
strip on which each curve is drawn consists, as
will be seen, of four horizontal parallel lines,
with vertical lines at regular intervals cutting the
horizontals. Each of the equal spaces enclosed
by the verticals represents a time interval of one
minute and the strip travels in one minute the
length of one of these, which is actually 1M>
inches. The illustrations given herewith are, of
course, considerably reduced. Thus, as will be
seen, most of the curves represent about ten min-
utes of playing.
Each of the spaces between two of the hori-
zontal lines represents 125 watts and, as will be
observed by examining the beginnings of the
curves, the motor uses about 1,188 watts to main-
tain the speed of the blower for forty-four inches
water column vacuum before the roll begins to
move or the pneumatics to speak. The curves
show, in fact, that to maintain a vacuum in the
chests and channels of a player, without any play-
ing going on, in itself absorbs more than half the
available power.
gradual increase in load due to the increasing
weight of the take-up spool as the roll winds up.
Similar comparisons may be made in the case
of curves N and P. It ought to be mentioned that
a still better method of comparison would be to
photograph two of these companion curves on
two glass plates such as are used in making lan-
tern slides, and then fasten one exactly over the
other so that both at once can be shown by a
projecting lantern. This immensely enlarges the
curves, making them easy to follow and furnish-
ing a remarkably valuable comparison of power
consumption fluctuations.
Incidentally it may be noted that the re-roll
peaks are very high and their duration time very
short. This is due to the fact that the motor in
the player-piano, which has furnished the means
for these experiments, is set to run at the very
high speed, when re-rolled, of 450 feet per minute.
The facts thus revealed, namely, the dispropor-
tionate drag of the roll-driving motor and the
consumption of power in maintaining a vacuum
in the chests and channels, show concretely some
defects in player design of which the existence
has long been suspected. It is well that unim-
peachable evidence should be produced to show
how much remains to be done before we can say
that anything approaching an ultimate design has
been accomplished.
We shall be happy to give further information
on these matters to any inquirer who will address
the Plaver Section editor.
PLAYOTONE AND BEHR BROS. SALES.
Hext Music Co. of Denver Doing a Very Active
Business.
H. E. Watson, representing the Mutual Oil Co.,
ol Kansas City, in the Wray, Col., district, recently
purchased a Hardman, Peck & Co. Playotone from
the Hext Music Co., of Denver. The same firm
also sold two Behr Bros, pianos last week, one to
Miss Fay Vandeveer, of the Harvard Hotel, and
the other to Mrs. H. Hutchinson, a Denver mu-
SOLVED-
The Tracking Problem!
A SECOND ANNOUNCEMENT OF A GREAT DISCOVERY!
What the Curves Represent.
Attention is now directed to the curves. The
double curve "I" may be studied to advantage.
Here is shown, on the right, the wattage for play-
ing Schubert's "Who Is Sylvia?" and on the left
the consumption when running the roll over the
tracker bar silently at tempo 70. The average
tempo of the piece is less than seventy, and so
the right hand curve, which, of course, varies as
the time occupied, is longer than the left hand
one. It will at once be seen (1) that the mainte-
nance of a vacuum is the great task, (2) that the
motor drag alone is responsible for more than
one-half of the power consumption, (3) and that
the speaking of the pneumatics does not produce
anywhere very sharp peaks and therefore no-
where any very great increases proportionately in
power consumed; that is, in air displaced. The
piece is a song arrangement, has an elaborate ac-
companiment with a singing melody cut in fairly
long perforations and maintains about the same
level of dynamic intensity from end to end, the
average tone strength being mezzo-piano or piano.
The facts thus disclosed are still more remark-
ably set forth in comparison of the curves "J" and
"K." The second of these shows the power con-
sumption in playing Liszt's second rhapsody,
where sudden changes of dynamic level are many
and where the general strain on the vacuum sys-
tem is great from end to end. Compare this
curve (K) with the one above it ( J ) , which
shows the power consumption in running the same
roll over the tracker bar silently at tempo 70. A
still better comparison can be had as follows : Cut
out these two curves from the illustration, mount
each separately on cardboard and hang them both
on pins, so that they are exactly in line with each
other, in front of a camera. If now they are
hung up on two parallel pins going through the
top corners of each card, and with the two cards
exactly on a level, a photo may be taken of the
first card, and when the shutter is closed the first
may be removed and the second photographed on
the same film. Then there will appear a com-
posite photo showing the one curve superimposed
on the other. This will show clearly what can be
seen less accurately by visual comparison of the
two curves side by side; namely, that the motor
is the greatest power waster in the whole player
mechanism. It is easy to see at once that the
motor-alone-curve maintains nearly as high an
average level as does the other. Fluctuations in
the motor-alone-curve correspond to fluctuations
in motor speed, of course, together with the
Such an assertion has been made more than once in various
quarters; so we shall not object if our statement is accepted with
reserve. Yet it is true.
Schulz Dealers are now being made acquainted with a new, efficient,
simple method for abolishing forever all tracking troubles, irre-
spective of the condition of the music roll.
The means whereby this method has been made possible consist of
what is called the
M. Schulz Company
Roll Centering Device
(Patented)
The depression of one lever at the moment the roll is ready to start
over the tracker-bar serves, in this wonderful system, permanently
to center the music roll between the chucks and on the tracker-bar,
in such a way that no difficulty in registration can occur when once
this has been done.
No Pneumatics
Absolute Certainty
No Perforations or Flanges
Absolute Simplicity
No Complication
Absolute Rightness
Schulz Dealers Have the Biggest Talking Point
in the Player Business Today. Get in Touch
With this Wonderful Development
Get full particulars from us: Send for Free Booklet entitled, "Correct
Tracking of the Music Roll—a Problem and How it Was Solved."
M. SCHULZ COMPANY
GENERAL OFFICES
711 Milwaukee Ave., Chicago
CHICAGO
SOUTHERN WHOLESALE BRANCH
730 Candler Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Being a Discussion of the Functions of the Damper Pedal and Its Impor-
tance in the Correct Rendition of Player Music—The Development of
Tone Color Through the Proper Use of the Pedal Interestingly Explained.
We do not know who first applied the term,
"the soul of the piano," to what is usually but
wrongly called the "loud" pedal of the piano.
Yet the description is most apt, for all that makes
piano playing lovely would be almost impos-
sible if the pianist could not have the power
of prolonging the tones which he evokes. It is,
in fact, the damper pedal which changes the piano
from a mere glittering scatterer of tinkling bril-
liancy into a noble singer, the breadth and quality
of whose tones rival those of the violin or the
human voice. Yet it is sadly true that very few
people who play the piano, and still fewer player-
pianists, have any particular idea either of what
the damper pedal is for or how to use it.
Speaking as we are primarily for player-pianists,
let us say that in the player-piano mechanism the
functions of the right hand piano pedal are dupli-
cated by a hand lever or a pneumatic push button,
so that when playing with music roll one can do
exactly what the manual pianist does when he,
presses the right hand pedal of the piano. Let us
also remark that many music rolls and player-
pianos are provided with automatic devices where-
-by the damper pedal device is operated independ-
ently of the player-pianist, and so assures correct
results. Seeing, however, that not all player-
pianos or rolls are equipped in this way and that
anyhow it is much more musically effective to
know how to do these things for oneself, we are
taking the liberty of giving some explanation of
the functions of the sustaining or damper pedal
device, confident that many player-pianists are
anxious to find out whatever they can; in fact,
all that can be learned about the art of making
the piano sing and producing a fine tone from it.
The sounds we evoke from the piano are gene-
rated by the vibration of the strings, which are
struck by hammers. Each string is of such dimen-
sions that when stretched at a certain tension it
will vibrate, on being struck, just so many times
per second. Each of these given fixed frequencies
generates one sound of a given and fixed order.
We call these sounds after the first seven letters
of the alphabet, from A to G, inclusive. To each
other all these sounds bear certain musical rela-
tions, so that it is possible to combine some of
them with others and obtain from the junction
agreeable results.
These we call consonant
sounds. Other combinations again are incapable
of producing an agreeable effect, and these we call
dissonances. In addition to all these sounds there
are others between them, which we call sharps and
flats of the former, according as any of them is
above or below one of the others.
Now, as we said before, some of the combina-
tions which may be made among these various
sounds are agreeable, and others are not so. If
we sit down at the piano keyboard and run our
fingers over the keys, one by one, we merely get
a series of detached tones. If, however, we hold
one key down while another is struck we find that
the two tones run into each other more or less, al-
though they die away quite quickly. Nevertheless,
it is easy to produce very disagreeable effects this
way, and so we have to be careful while playing
not to allow this intermingling among tones ex-
cept when the combination is consonant.
It will be noted that as soon as we raise our
finger from a key the sound immediately and
abruptly ceases. This is because there is what is
called a "damper" in connection with the string,
which drops down and stifles the vibrations as
soon as the finger pressure on the key is relaxed.
The damper is a pad of soft felt. When the
finger touches the key this pad is raised from the
string, redescending when the contact ceases.
Let us go a step further and, while we are play-
ing, press down the right hand pedal on the piano.
This raises a rod which lifts all the dampers
from the strings and holds them away as long as
the foot pressure continues. As soon as we have
done this an entirely new character is imparted
to the sound of the piano. Every tone runs into
the next, there is a confused blurring and jangling,
and individual sounds are lost in a mixture of in-
coherent noise. But let us suppose an» artist is
sitting at the piano. We notice that he continually
uses the pedal, raising and depressing it at short
intervals. And we see that when he does this he
makes the tone sing just as if it were being drawn
from the strings of a violin. Noble, broad, sus-
tained tones follow each other in majestic succes-
sion and the noisy piano is transformed.
Now, both of these experiences, the pleasant
and the unpleasant alike, were generated by what
is fundamentally the same physical cause of sensa-
tion ; namely, by that property of the piano's
string bridges and sound board in virtue whereof
they transmit the vibrations arising in any given
string or strings and impress them upon all other
strings which have partial tones coincident with
any belonging to the string actually sounded by
the impact of the piano hammers. But, of course,
if the dampers are pressed against all the strings
save those which are actually being struck it fol-
lows that there will be no such physical effect as
we have described. On the other hand, as soon
as we depress the damper pedal, or operate the
corresponding device on the player-piano action,
the dampers rise and the physical process we have
described takes place.
Now this physical process, described in other
terms, is simply that if we sound one tone on the
piano while at the same time raising the dampers
every other tone which possesses common partial
tones with the first will be agitated, the intensity
of the disturbance being dependent partly on the
nearness of the relation which the secondarily
agitated tone bears to that which was generated
by the piano hammer in the first place; that is, by
the number of the partials common to both.
So, if we strike the key known as middle C and
simultaneously depress the damper pedal on the
piano, then every other C string will begin to
vibrate and will mingle its sounds with that of
the originally sounded C. The same process,
though with less intensity, will take place in all
the E's and G's throughout the piano, and less
strongly still in the F s , A's and B flats.
Now, naturally, the reinforcement of a single
tone by such means tends to impart not only a
greater richness of coloring, but greater duration.
Hence if we keep the dampers raised after strik-
ing one chord, and then proceed to strike another,
it is clear that the two sets of chords will be
jangling against one another, not only in their
primary elements, but in all their sympathetically
related secondary tones. Therefore, unless the
two chords be almost exactly similar, it follows
that many discordant sounds must be generated
and sound together, owing to the fact that some
tone in one chord will surely be antagonistic to
some tone in the other chord, and consequently
the secondary sympathetically related tones of
these two will jar very much against one another
and will strengthen any dissonance originally felt.
So, then, it is plain that the damper pedal may
constitute as much a weakness as a strength. In
the bungling employment of the pedal, which we
imagined ourselves to be making just now, we
have a case of ignorance and misunderstanding
such as, unfortunately, is far too common. But
the artist knows how to use the tools provided for
him and so is able to take advantage of the
capacity of the damper pedal for producing a
singing effect while avoiding the jangling which
we have described as the result of unskilled
effort. How, then, does the musician get these
effects which we so much admire? By knowing
the nature of each chord he is playing and avoid-
ing the mistake of running them together when
they are not harmonically related. This, of course,
he is able to guard against by releasing the pedal
when there is danger of running chords into each
other with bad effect and taking it again only
when the reverberation has been checked; that
is, when the change of harmony has been safely
made. Anyone can tell when two successive
chords sound well together. Even if one cannot
play a single note on the keyboard, or even read it
on paper, one can at least hold over the sustaining
lever or depress the button and run the music roll
so as to play two consecutive chords with the
dampers raised. Then the good or bad effect
can be judged. A little practice will enable one
to judge discriminatingly in a very short time.
Single tones can be sustained, and one can often
impart quite a bit of color to a piece by judiciously
sustaining the tones in the melody while cutting
off the accompaniment sharply with the tempo
lever and quickly letting the dampers off and on.
It is all a matter of primary understanding.
But before that understanding can be had it is
just as necessary to know what the damper pedal
is not as to know what it is. And so let the
player-pianist free himself from the notion that
this device is intended to make the piano "sound
louder."
WRIGHT METAL PLAYER ACTION
ADDRESS
ALL CORRESPONDENCE
TO
George H. Beverly
Solm
Distributor
Easily 160% in advance of any action ever offered. Simple—Responsive—Dwable
—Beautiful. Contains the Wright "Ideal" bellows.
Being made of metal (the logical material for player actions) it cannot be affected
by dampness or any climatic conditions. Its exclusive features save many dollars
in repair work and make many sales in competition.
Factories
KNABE BUILDING
417 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
M. S. WRIGHT CO.
WOKUIBt, MAM.

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