Company
Information
Piano World
Enterprises
1126 Milton
Rd. Alton IL
62002
Cell: 314-772-6676
shop:
618-474-4844
answered 10-6 Mon
-Sat.
Toll-Free:
800-589-5824
EMAIL
US
History of the
Company
by Doug L.
Bullock
I began
tuning other peoples' pianos at the age of thirteen, tuning a
church full of pianos for free because my church could not
afford to have it done. I attended Baylor University to receive
a Bachelor of Music degree in music history and literature.
While there my major instrument was Pipe
Organ with Dr. Joyce Jones, who was, and still is, a renown
concert organist as well as a composer/arranger of organ music
for church services.
I assisted the piano
technician, Danny Boone, with regulation and restoration of the
Music School pianos. I also began assisting the Baylor organ
technician with his tuning and maintenance of the numerous
Baylor instruments. In my last year there, the technician was
stricken with illness for several months, at which time I was
required to take over all organ maintenance. This also included
the complete moving and installation of a practice room
instrument of 5 ranks. After that time, as long as I was there,
Dr. Jones was known to ask me to do special voicing and other
technical odd-jobs that she could not get the regular
technician to bother with. At the time I left Baylor, I had
been a professional piano technician for around ten years, and
so, I continued and became a full time tuner. However, jobs
having to do with organs began turning up, so finally in 1980,
I took the name of Dallas Pipe Organ Service, and added it to
my own name which I used as a piano tuner. In the intervening
years, I have tuned and serviced well over 400 pipe organs and
several thousand pianos, player pianos, harpsichords and other
historic instruments. I have experience with making some
instruments work very well without a
rebuild..Even instruments that had not worked in over a
decade. Many of my instruments have been completely rebuilt. My
instruments are scattered through thirty states. Dallas
Pipe Organ Service is now a part of Piano World
Enterprises
Pianos and Player
pianos
As a pre-school child I was taken
by my parents to a house that had a red painted player piano, I
thought it was very interesting and enjoyed the music. When I
began piano lessons in third grade I found I had an intense
desire to hear and play the music I heard on records by
"Slugger Ryan." I devoured my piano instruction and tried to
pick out tunes on my own, which got better and better. When I
attended the local fair, I found a display booth by a local
store that rebuilt and sold player pianos. I was there every
day after school listening to that fair booth playing those
player pianos. I began pestering my parents for a player piano.
They said no and they thought that was the end of it. ...In
their dreams.
I got
pretty good at playing the piano and discovered that I was
seldom happy with the sound of the pianos I played. I found out
that they all needed tuning. I then pestered my father for a
tuning hammer. When I was 12 he got me one, and handed it to
me. I began tuning the piano without any instruction. I thought
it sounded better after I finished, though I doubt it actually
did. I still was not happy with it so we had a real tuner come
and tune it. I watched him closely and learned much that day. I
later found a local piano re-builder who got me the rest of the
tools and a Strobotuner and showed me what else I needed to
know. I spent several years learning how to do it right. By
then the parents were tired of hearing that I wanted a player
piano, and we finally got one. The Princeton Simplex upright
was electrified with an Electrolux vacuum cleaner and played
well. I, however, wanted to pedal it, so I had to
disconnect the Electrolux and then I pedaled away. I had to
pedal furiously since it was not in that good of a shape and it
leaked like a sieve.
It was not long before the
parents were being pressed for supplies and book. My poor
Mother, was positive that the piano would never play again when
she saw the player mechanism scattered all over the house. My
beloved train table was soon devoid of electric trains and
covered in player mechanism. However, they all became converts
to my way of thinking when the piano appeared one day back in
one piece and playing very well and with only normal pedaling
needed for music. I then began to rebuild players for friends
and later customers all through high school. The first 25
dollar reed organ for rebuild appeared at that time, as
well.
By the time I reached
college I was tuning and rebuilding for real money. At Baylor
University School of Music, I met Danny L. Boone, the in-house
piano technician. Actually I credit myself with getting him his
job, because I got his two predecessors fired by constantly
complaining to the dean about their shabby work or lack
thereof. I had never been happy with my tunings to the
Strobotuner, so he taught me tuning to the C-bar. I sold the
strobe soon thereafter. While there I also learned his
particular brand of grand regulation, which I continue to
practice. I found a few years ago he actually wrote a book on
grand regulating and now I find that it is THE book on grand
regulating available at all piano suppliers ("Regulating Grand
Piano Touch and Tone"). Regulating is a complex art
that is seldom practiced except by the fussiest of technicians.
Read the book and you will know why.
Pipe
Organs
I have installed and
regularly maintained neo-baroque, classical, concert, as well
as orchestral and theatre organs. I have learned to not
impose my own personal tonal prejudices onto an instrument, but
rather to find out what the builder had in mind and try to use
that as the standard for each organ. I have been able to
satisfy many top musicians with my tuning, voicing, and
technical capabilities. Because of contractual obligations, I
continue to regularly service several Texas organs when I make
a return trip there every six months.
Views
I have friends in the
business who refuse to service any organ that is not of
mechanical action (tracker), or one that is not of classical
voicing, or not of neo-baroque voicing, or not of low enough
wind pressure, or even not of high enough wind
pressure.
In the Theatre Organ field
some people think it can't possibly be any good if it is not
built by Wurlitzer.
In the
piano field some feel the last word is Steinway and nothing
else will do. This is because people are influenced by 100
years of media hype and may close their eyes (and ears) to what
they do not know about. I feel that all organs and pianos
have their own personality. Each of the styles of organ
building have one or more styles of music that they play best.
All styles of organ are necessary to be able to play the past
several hundred years of organ literature. The same is
applicable for fortepianos, from Mozart's era to the square
grand to the modern grand with a double escapement action. My
job as a service person and re-builder of an earlier instrument
is to work with what the builder built and preserve the best
qualities of the instrument. Only rarely would I discard the
weakest link. Instead, I try to build it up and improve
it. In the rarest of cases, the way the builder
engineered something, it just cannot work right. Only then
does it get re-engineered or replaced.
Doug L.
Bullock Founder Piano World Enterprises
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