Jump to content

I love sitting at my Steinway piano - no knobs, no buttons, no latency - and no music unless I make it...


Sal Sorice

Recommended Posts

I'm noticing how much less I play my piano, study, compose, etc. lately.

All the distractions - plugin chasing, DAW optimizing, tweaking, patching, watching tutorials (which is sometimes good if you find the right ones in the haystack), etc.

I'm tempted to just step away from it for a while, sit at my Steinway and play/compose, try and write songs (with a pencil and paper oh my!), study music theory again (maybe the Bach Chorales?), modes, chord structure, etc.

It would probably make me a better musician - and a more sane person...

Anyone else feel this way?

Edited by Sal Sorice
typo
  • Like 8
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I personally find sitting in front of a computer the antithesis of playing music, especially with guitar where I prefer to stand (and look at anything other than a computer screen). Several years ago I got a wireless transceiver so I could walk freely around the house or even outside to play, and my only major "FX" purchase in the last few years has been for hardware (HELIX Floor), which I typically only connect to modify programs. I have very little interest in updates (unless substantial) or a DAW becoming a "cheesy video game." Time is the most precious commodity and the one you will never recover, so sitting on my butt doing (relatively) nothing is way low on my priority list. A real instrument is something you can just grab or sit down with, tune if needed, and use... there is a lot of freedom in that, especially when you just want to play.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

DEAL:   A nearby college that closed up shop a few months ago has a whole bunch of Steinways for sale.

Quote

The college’s closure signals a sweeping transition. Among the assets slated for sale are an array of musical instruments, including a collection of Steinway pianos that held a special place at St. Rose. Dr. Young Kim, a former piano professor at the college, personally selected many of these pianos, envisioning a Steinway-only program to support students’ musical development.

“It’s heartbreaking for me and many people,” Dr. Kim shared. “But I wish those pianos can find a nice home.” The most meaningful to her is the concert grand Steinway, which was housed in the college’s recital hall. “I played so many concerts on that piano,” Kim reflected. Her attachment goes beyond mere function—it’s a connection to years of performances and memories.

A Steinway artist, Dr. Kim dedicated her work to the Steinway brand, bringing a high standard of musical excellence to St. Rose. “Our goal was to become all Steinway,” she noted. Some of the pianos, now priced around $70,000, are still relatively young in terms of their lifespan and musical potential. Steinways are known to last between 80 to 100 years, yet the college’s pianos are only between 10 to 20 years old, making their sale a unique opportunity.

Paul Jennings, from Artist Pianos, is coordinating the sale of the instruments and acknowledged the exceptional pricing. “A new Steinway can cost around $140,000. So these late-model pianos, priced at $70,000, are young in Steinway terms and offered at liquidation prices.”

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, user 905133 said:

DEAL:   A nearby college that closed up shop a few months ago has a whole bunch of Steinways for sale.

 

Any pianists should definitely check it out if they are in the market. There might be some gems for sale at good prices.

I got my 1998 Steinway Model B through my great piano teacher. He knew the Steinway Reps in NJ and they let him know that they were cycling out their Steinways from the New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC) - I think they did that every 7 years or so - this was in 2005. They only put their best Steinways in venues like that, so he told me it was worth checking out.

I had been traipsing all over NJ and NY looking for a grand piano - dragging my wonderful wife with me. Played some great pianos.

But as soon as I sat down at that Model B I was sold. My teacher and I went to the Victoria Theater at NJPAC (where the piano lived). I listened to him play through some amazing stuff by Chopin, Beethoven, etc. I then sheepishly and nervously played some pieces (hey - I can plausibly say I played at NJPAC!).

Did the paperwork that day - and have enjoyed that piano ever since.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The computer can be frustrating; one thing I do to minimize that is never add anything new to it or mess with it's settings, so it always works the same.

But still I sometimes just sit and play at this old '70s Kimball (shown here just after I hauled it home after picking it up free from TrashNothing some years back).  It wasn't tuned well even before I got it, and the trip didn't help, so I've done a basic tuning (which took months, including learning how), and so now it just has "character".  ;) 

image.png.acdbb10eefafca09a8e3160cf5c6f77a.png

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I started playing guitar around 1966 and much later on I got my first computer in 2005 ...

sheesh you think I would know what I'm doing by now .

After almost 20 years of playing pocket pool with my computer and all it's associated musical bloat gear . I have come to the conclusion that I was happier  & I got more enjoyment  out of playing  my guitar when I decided to go with a less is more approach .

Now , I keep it real simple......I'm a new man & I have learned my lesson the hard way .

My  Muse is real fickle . When she gets a whiff of a new plug , an updated  D A W with a new learning curve or guitar tracks I just recorded with  take numbers above two or three  She knows it only a matter of time before my project has triple digit recorded take numbers ...

She don't want to stick around and play second fiddle .....She's gone ...She will do  her version of a Hasta la vista Tele Gump disappearing act leaving my musical session at triple digit no speed limit  Autobahn  speeds .

On the other side of the coin , when I'm centered and not distracted by all the unimportant stuff I seem to waste my time  focusing  on , My Muse  likes it best when I serenade her with a simple arrangement of a tune on a stripped down guitar like this new one I just got .

She Likes to hear the truth in my playing . She knows a good thing when she hears it 😉

k6v5nk4.jpeg

To this day I still get most of my Musical enjoyment out of keeping it real simple while playing my guitar with absolutely no forced technological distractions . The truth be told all I really  need is a guitar , a guitar pick  or my fingers  , a strap , a cable to plug my guitar into an amp , + a neck mounted guitar tuner .

When I want to  learn how to play over something  new and learn it I will add a music stand with a lead sheet / song chart .

all the best ,

Kenny

Edited by kennywtelejazz
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/15/2024 at 3:29 PM, Amberwolf said:

The computer can be frustrating; one thing I do to minimize that is never add anything new to it or mess with it's settings, so it always works the same.

But still I sometimes just sit and play at this old '70s Kimball (shown here just after I hauled it home after picking it up free from TrashNothing some years back).  It wasn't tuned well even before I got it, and the trip didn't help, so I've done a basic tuning (which took months, including learning how), and so now it just has "character".  ;) 

image.png.acdbb10eefafca09a8e3160cf5c6f77a.png

This appears to be the exact same model I grew up with!

Oh, how I abused that thing.  When I was 19 I decided to turn it into a tack piano, painstakingly inserting brass tacks into each hammer. Then I attached large paper clips to the felt bar that comes down between the hammer and strings when you press the "soft" pedal. My idea was that I could switch between normal and tack via the pedal. That didn't work well, and the soft pedal never sounded right afterward. Coincidentally, my mother stopped playing piano around that time (it was her piano). My 19-year-old brain could not comprehend that it might be because I'd destroyed her instrument.

And I can relate to learning to tune a piano - I thought it would be easy: just tune it like a guitar, going around the circle of fifths. Um, nope.  By the time you come back around it's out of tune. I also learned that every time you move a piano you have to retune it. Because the piano was lightweight (relatively speaking) and could be moved by just two people, I had the idea of dragging it on stage. This was in the early 70's; there was no credible electronic equivalent to an acoustic piano back then. Well, I figured out why the only bands that used real pianos on stage were the ones wealthy enough to afford having them professionally moved and tuned for each performance. Having a portable "real" piano would be my holy grail for 30 years, when I got my Yamaha MO8.

Totally agree with the premise of this thread. Sitting down at my piano is like a writer sitting at a typewriter with a blank sheet of paper. No inspiration from some cool-sounding sample library or synth, it's about creating something from scratch every time.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, bitflipper said:

Oh, how I abused that thing.  When I was 19 I decided to turn it into a tack piano, painstakingly inserting brass tacks into each hammer. Then I attached large paper clips to the felt bar that comes down between the hammer and strings when you press the "soft" pedal. My idea was that I could switch between normal and tack via the pedal. That didn't work well, and the soft pedal never sounded right afterward. Coincidentally, my mother stopped playing piano around that time (it was her piano). My 19-year-old brain could not comprehend that it might be because I'd destroyed her instrument.

The only mod I've considered is to install a pair of switches on each key (probably on the hammer-drive mechanics as they're easier to access) and run them to a module (arduino, etc, or even the guts of an old midi keyboard) in place of the keyboard.  (pairs of switches are used to get the timing between them, which is used to calculate the velocity)

Then I can get MIDI out from it and record what I play (preferably to an always-recording buffer inside the device so I don't have to deal with anything other than turning it on), and then edit out my many mistakes and use a synth piano to export a file I can upload a listenable version to my bandcamp page.

 

 Something like the Moog/Buchla Pianobar, but DIY and affordable ;)  ( https://www.midiboutique.com/ carries DIY parts to do much of this kind of thing, but is far too expensive for me). 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...