Music Trade Review

Issue: 1927 Vol. 85 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
TECHNICAL^SUPPLY DEPARTMENT
William BraidWhite,7^/ftf/Editor
Some of the Future Developments That
May Be Expected in the Modern Piano
Excerpt From the Forthcoming "Acoustical and Mechanical Principles of Pianoforte
Construction," by William Braid White, Technical Editor of The Review
T
H E following paragraphs have been taken
from the concluding chapter of a forth-
coming volume upon "The Acoustical and
Mechanical Principles of Pianoforte Construc-
tion." The chapter deals with the future of
the pianoforte and the excerpts given here dis-
cuss specifically the possibility of certain de-
velopments in actions, quarter tone divisions
of the octave, improved keyboards, pedal
boards, etc.
"Greater amplincatory powers for the sound
board or its equivalent, a more flexible action,
more scientific development of steel wire draw-
ing and more accurate adjustment of wire to
the work of the hammer and key, with possibly
a considerable development in the direction of
new shapes and new sizes are among the pos-
sibilities of the future towards which we may
with some confidence look.
The Action of the Future
"Leaving aside the difficult question of im-
proving amplification and the manufacture and
application of steel wire, the action presents
novel possibilities of the most fascinating kind.
The principle of percussion has indeed been
worked out to a considerable degree of ac-
curacy—but it would be wrong to suppose that
no improvement can be made without destroy-
ing this principle, '"or even modifying it seri-
ously. The need of the immediate future is
undoubtedly for a more accurate investigation
of the relations of the moving parts each to
the other, to the end of reducing friction and
facilitating the attainment of more rapid repeti-
tion. The percussion principle probably repre-
sents the best system for exciting the string,
when we consider this, not in the light of the
abstract desirability of a more sustained sound
or of power to swell and diminish at will—
but rather upon the fair assumption that the
characteristic voice of the pianoforte is far too
valuable a tool of musical expression for us
to wish to tamper with it. The percussion tone
has definite and characteristic musical virtues
which no other instrument possesses. Improve-
ment, then, should be directed towards making
the action more nearly perfect mechanically,
which can best be done by more careful study
of the relations of the moving parts. Along
with this should, and may, go an investigation
of the behavior of strings and of amplifying
devices, as discussed above. But the action
alone, in its mechanical details, can be markedly
improved. Its principal present defect is ex-
cessive friction between parts and poor adjust-
ment of leverage relations. All this can be
remedied and long ago would have been the
cause of anxious investigation if there had ever
existed among users of the instruments any
body of expert critical opinion. Lack of such a
critical public opinion has been one of the
principal causes of the technical stagnation
which has characterized the industry.
"Those who can recall the musical activities
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Bridle Straps
5814-37 Ik A of the late nineteenth century will remember
the Janko keyboard, which for a time attracted
much attention and seemed destined to revolu-
tionize the technic of pianoforte playing. Its
essential feature lay in the provision of three
finger positions for each key, in place of one,
and in the disposition of these in such a manner
as to produce a six-row keyboard. Tenths,
twelfths and even wider intervals can readily
be reached on this board, while the octave can
be taken with no greater difficulty than now
aHends the spanning of a sixth. There are
many other conveniences in the Janko inven-
tion, but unfortunately the vested interest of
the teachers of pianoforte playing and of the
publishers of fingered sheet music was from the
first against it, and it made no headway at
all. The manifold defects of the accepted
keyboard have been often enough exposed, nor
should we forget that the present division into
seven white and five black keys to each octave
dates from a day long before the introduction
of equal temperament, and is now entirely
illogical, having no longer any intonational
significance. The stage indeed is set for a
keyboard built upon the basis of the equal-
tempered intonation; that is, on the under-
standing that the twelve tempered sounds in
each octave are equidistant peers, no one hav-
ing any advantage over any other.
Emanual Mo6r
"Meanwhile Emanual Moor has come forward
with his two-banked keyboard, which has al-
ready enjoyed success to some extent in Europe
and may yet spread all over the world. In
bringing forth this improvement, for that is
what it is, Moor has gone back to the harpsi-
chord, the makers of which were accustomed
to build two-banked instruments, usually indeed
with a separate set of strings and actions for
each. Moor, however, uses his upper keyboard
merely to operate one octave higher than the
keyboard below. The two boards are built in
the usual manner, with ordinary white and
black keys. The lower keyboard is, in fact, the
conventional piano manual. The upper one,
placed above and behind it, is also built in
the conventional way, but, by means of a lever
system applied to the action, each of its keys
plays upon the hammer one octave higher than
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THE M. L. CAMPBELL COMPANY
1008 West Eighth Street
Kansas City, Mo.
TUNERS' TRADE SOLICITED
Also—Felts »nd
Cloths, Furnished
la Any Quantity
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William Braid White
Associate, American Society of Mechanical
Engineers; Chairman, Wood Industries
Division, A. S. M. E.; Member, American
Physical Society; Member, National Piano
Technicians' Association.
Consulting Engineer to
the Piano Industry
Tonally and Mechanically Correct Scales
Tonal and Technical Surreys of Product
Tonal Betterment Work in Factories
Reference* to manufacturers «f unquestioned
position In Industry
For particulars,
address
209 South State Street, CHICAGO
Piano Tuners
George W. BraunsdorE, Inc.
Direct Mmnufmcturfi of
does the key immediately below it on the lower
board. A coupler is also provided whereby the
upper board may be coupled to the lower. The
musician finds in this board many valuable
additions to his technical powers. He can span
an octave with two adjacent fingers and can
build up many otherwise unattainable chord
combinations easily and conveniently.
"The Moor keyboard has been received with
enthusiasm by pianists who have had an op-
portunity to play upon it and it may well have
a future. Certainly it increases the technical
powers of the pianoforte to a marked extent,
without demanding an entirely new fingering.
Pedal Boards
"Pedals for the purpose of increasing com-
mand over the bass region of the pianoforte
have from time to time been added, but no
pianoforte maker has seriously studied the pos-
sibilities of the subject. The appearance and
'succes d'estime' which the Moor keyboard
has already earned should cause pianoforte
manufacturers to pay more attention to the
possibilities of a pedal keyboard. Liszt had
one built for him years ago. Some organists
to-day are using pedal attachments to piano-
fortes, by means of which the bass can be
played organ style, as well as manually. A
combination of the Moor double manual with
a satisfactory pedal board would produce a
pianoforte almost capable of rivaling the tech-
nical virtuosity of the player mechanism.
Quarter-Tones and Third-Tones
"With what has been said above as to tech-
nical improvements, we must by no means
overlook the demand, which will certainly soon
be heard, for a pianoforte capable of giving
the intervals of a quarter-tone or third-tone
scale. Here we enter a region as yet un-
charted, but which holds for the explorer
very much that is interesting and even fascinat-
ing.
"The scales used in Indian, Chinese, Japanese
and Arabian music are quite unlike our own,
to such an extent indeed that it is quite im-
possible to render such music accurately by
means of Occidental musical instruments. The
duodecimal equal division of the octave, which
has been for so long the universal basis of
western music, is contradicted by eastern
scales, which include intervals closer together
and Technicians
are In demand. The trad* n««da tuners, regu-
lator* and repairmen. Practical 8h*p School.
Send for Catalog M
Y. M. C. A. Piano Technicians School
1421 Arch St.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
33
The Music Trade Review
OCTOBER 15, 1927
The Technical and Supply Department — (Continued from page 32)
than the twelfth part of an octave. Much
speculation has at one time or another been
indulged in as to the possibility of adapting
these very small intervals to the western equal-
tempered scale. Among others, the late Fer-
ruccio Busoni, in a pamphlet written some
twenty years ago, set forth the possibilities of
a scale in which the octave should be divided
into eighteen instead of twelve divisions, and
of late one or more composers have dallied
with the idea of a twenty-four-note octave,
that is to say, with what are called, rather
inaccurately, 'quarter-tones.' A string quartet
has recently been written, and performed, in
which the scale is so divided, and some ques-
tions have been asked in the musical world
about the possibility of building a quarter-tone
piano. Obviously, this would be a complicated
job, but a practical way of reaching the desired
end has been found by the eminent German
house of Grotrian, which exhibited in London
during the year 1926 an ingenious combination
of two grand pianofortes, one of which is tuned
exactly one-twenty-fourth part of an equal-
tempered octave-space sharp of the other. A
combination keyboard, joining the two instru-
ments together, renders the quarter-tone in-
tonation, available.
"The possibilities of these extensions, or
rather deeper organizations of the equal-tem-
pered scale, are from the strictly musical point
of view possibly vast, but the question of
adapting the pianoforte to them is a practical
question which can only be regarded with
some misgiving by the acoustic engineer. That
an instrument could be designed and built
carrying two sets of strings, two actions and
two keyboards, with tuning to match^ is of
course obvious enough. Whether it could be
done at any price that anyone would care to
pay is another matter. Probably the solution
offered by Messrs. Grotrian is for the time
being the most practical.
Just Intonation
"One is naturally led by such a possibility to
considering the parallel possibility of designing
a pianoforte which may be tuned in just in-
tonation instead of in the equal temperament.
Attempts have been made to achieve this, and
Hagaman in 1903 at Cincinnati designed and
built an upright to give this effect. It consisted
essentially in the ordinary scale tuned in equal
temperament, but provided with a set of mov-
able bridges actuated by pedals, whereby the
necessary adjustments might be made in pitch
so as to adapt the sounds of any tonality being
used at the moment to the just relations. The
attempt to produce a keyboard suitable for
just intonation as applied to the organ rather
than the piano, has been made more than once,
as may be discovered by studying the appen-
dices to Ellis' translation of Helmholtz. The
possibility of development here must hang upon
the future attitude of musicians towards the
equal temperament. There is no present sign
of weariness with the rough thirds and sixths
of the tempered scale.
Correspondence
is solicited and should be addressed to William
Braid White, 5149 Agatite avenue, Chicago.
FAUST SCHOOL
OF TUNING
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Tuners
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Our new illustrated catalogue of Piano and
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please let us know.
OTTO R. TREFZ, JR.
1305-7-9 No. 27th St.
Phila., Pa.
The Ampico Tr aveling School in New Orleans
American Steel & Wire Co. Inaugurates
Program of Research in Piano Tone
Large Sum Appropriated for Exhaustive Research Work to Improve Tonal Qualities
of Piano Wire—Results at Service of All Manufacturers
/^HICAGO, ILL., October 8.—The American
Steel & Wire ' Co., manufacturer of piano
wire, is carrying on exhaustive research work
to improve the tonal qualities of wire. The
company's faith in the future of the industry
and the fundamental need for good music de-
termined the establishment of a technical re-
search bureau where all questions of improve-
ment and questions relating to piano wire could
be worked out with a view to making improve-
ments which will bring the piano back into the
affections of the people.
In this connection the company has made ar-
rangements with Wm. Braid White, consulting
acoustic engineer, in addition to carrying on ex-
perimental and research work, to offer a service
to industry without any obligation, in aiding
manufacturers in regard to any problems relat-
ing to tone and construction.
It is announced that there is now being car-
ried on with the aid of special apparatus and
acoustical instruments scientific work that has
never before been attempted with the purpose
of aiding manufacturers to make their pianos
more scientifically correct, because the com-
pany believes that the piano industry has got
to sell tone primarily together with case de-
sign, finish and other features of the piano.
"There is a certain hypnotism in tone when
it is right," said B. B. Ayres, of the American
Steel & Wire Co., and chairman of publicity of
the Chicago Piano & Organ Association, in an
interview with The Review representative. "The
auditory nerves seem to soak it up and con-
vey a gladsome, soothing something to the
brain. And the brain, appreciating it, evolves
mental pictures of brooks, still waters, glens,
towering mountain-peaks and similar creations.
That is what a correct piano tone does to me.
Then I think of a vast public that is anxious
to have their brajns set to creating these pic-
tures and would be glad to pay money for them.
"Not every piano does it. The more expen-
sive, the Rolls-Roycians of the craft do it, but
they reach only the comparative few. If that
same magic tone could be offered to the great
potential mass of buyers we would have the
country ablaze. And what a profit there would
be to the manufacturers, the tuners, the teach-
ers, the publishers—and, greatest of all, to the
public itself.
"I claim that the potentiality of music in the
United States is enormous. We have scratched
the surface and even gone down further, but
yet have not sounded the depths. That still
awaits us. The harvest of profit awaits the
manufacturers, the tuners, the teachers and the
publishers—the harvest of mental profit awaits
the mass public to an even greater degree, and
that way lies an important item in the success
of a united nation.
"And now comes the great objective—the at-
tainment of that quality of tone in pianos that
will embody the magic creative effect and cause
piano playing to sweep the country with a great
enthusiasm. Composers can labor, piano con-
tests can be planned like we had in Chicago last
season, tuners c^n tune, teachers can throw
their best into their work, and schools implant
technic of the divine art and all together lead
the mass of people right up to the fountain, but
if the quality of enthrallment is not there it is
pretty much in vain. I would cite the enormous
labor the schools are expending on voice cul-
ture, and yet where the student has not the
magic tonal quality the labor is lost and no
artist is produced.
"Let us face this situation by bending our
energies to the fundamental of tone quality in
the mass of pianos. This company is spending
huge sums in trying to work salvation in this
direction and is willing to do more, having faith
in the ultimate."
Wolf Music Go. to Move
YOUNGSTOWN, O., October 10.—The Wolf Music
Co., for many years located at 314 West Wood
street, announces it will move to larger quar-
ters, where new departments will be added and
the business expanded generally. This concern
for some years has featured musical merchan-
dise, but plans to get into the talking machine
and piano business eventually.
Walter Green has purchased the interest of
Frank Ives in the music and jewelry shop of
Green & Ies, 720 Kansas avenue, Topeka.
Kan., and will operate in the future as Green'*
Music Shop.

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