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History of the Self Playing piano
and its influence on
life
The
documented idea of the player piano goes back several hundred
years before there was a piano, to the time of Dom. Bedos de
Celles (1709-1779), who wrote the definitive treatise on pipe
organ building. His books had a chapter on automatic playing of
pipe organs. At the same time, there were virginals,
clavichords, and harpsichords being played by the same idea of
a planchette, (a flat board) or a barrel similar to that in a
music box. Each of these systems had metal pins driven into the
wooden barrel or planchette, which mechanically moved past a
device which activated the notes as the pins went
by.
In the
late 1800's these barrel pianos became quite large, some
reaching over 8 feet tall and wider and deeper than a modern
upright piano. These later ones all played from a barrel which
often reached 4-6 feet in length and 10-20" in diameter. One
company (Welte) built barrel organs called Orchestrions that
had barrels so large it took 2-3 men to change barrels. It was
very expensive to purchase additional barrels/tunes for such
instruments. The barrel-played instruments had 5-12 tunes on
one barrel.
From
barrels to paper roll
Different
tunes were played by shifting over about 1/8" to engage another
row of pins. Welte is reputed to have designed a pneumatic
system similar to the earlier Spinning Jenny loom system. This
new system allowed Welte to replace the barrel and barrel
readers with a pneumatic system that read the holes in paper
rolls. This allowed Welte to sell thousands of rolls where they
may have only sold hundreds of barrels. Welte offered to update
the barrel readers to roll operation for free in order to
encourage roll purchases. The barrel operated Orchestrions are
very rare now because of this free offer.
About the
same time several companies began selling their own versions of
music machines that played from rolls. These usually came in
the form of a cabinet with a spool box and pedals on one side
and felt covered fingers on the other side. These "piano
players" pushed up to any keyboard and played it as long as you
pedaled the unit. The first commercially successful device was
the Pianola. The next most successful was the Melville Clark
Apolloette which had a spring-wound roll motor and the Wilcox
and White--some of theirs played reed organ along with the
piano. In 1906-7 Melville Clark/Apollo began to put the
pneumatic mechanism into the piano case and called it the
"Inner player". This began the race to make a player system
available in every brand of piano built.
The
player piano reached its top year of production and sales in
1925 when more players sold than regular (silent) pianos.
Production tapered off from there and after the 1929 stock
market crash, sales hit all time lows. In the depression era
followed by World War II, player piano manufacturers closed,
sold out, or merged. While there were hundreds of piano and
player piano companies prior to 1929, by the time the second
world war began, there were only a few surviving piano
companies. It is believed that all player piano production
ceased in 1941. In the late 40's Hardman Duo became the first
player piano to go back into production. By that time, all the
patents owned by many player builders before the shakeout were
now owned by one or two. There were several other brands that
went back into player piano production throughout the 50's,
60's, 70's, and 80's. These included Hardman, AEolian, Kimball,
Baldwin, Universal, and Classic. At this time the only
pneumatic player piano being built is built by Story &
Clark owned by QRS Music Rolls.
What
evolved from the Pneumatic Player
piano?
Several
player piano builders had other sidelines that ended up saving
the company during the times when piano sales were nearly
nonexistent.
Regina,
who first made music boxes and later player pianos, redesigned
the bellows to the player pianos they made and from it produced
the first in-home vacuum cleaner, which was hand pumped. This
began the whole vacuum cleaner industry. Today you might find a
Regina electric broom in your own closet.
The
Simplex company made one of the best built player piano
systems, but later put that pneumatic equipment to work to
synchronize clocks throughout large factories and schools as
well as to punch workers' time cards. Today they build
computerized time clocks and fire alarm systems for school,
factory, and business use.
The Link
piano factory built many fine pianos, pipe organs, and
nickelodeons. Mr. Link's son was interested in airplanes, so he
took some parts found in the piano factory and built himself an
airplane cockpit with a seat and made the whole thing move from
the control of a piano roll. This gave him the simulated
feeling of really being in an airplane. This also gave birth to
the Link Airplane Simulator which is credited with allowing the
US to train enough Air Force pilots to win two World Wars.
Modern computerized Link Simulators can still be found at any
Airline training facility.
So, you
can truthfully say the player piano won two world wars, makes
our housework easier, and gets us into and out of work and
school on time. Odd how a little known, often forgotten
entertainment device changed our world as we know
it.
Doug L. Bullock, June 18, 2009
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