Emailing: 03SEAR

Robin Olson DCrpt@comcast.net
Sun, 03 Aug 2003 10:32:13 -0400


     A correction to Debra Simon's quote about the most pianos in one 
place since the 1939 worlds fair.She must have meant in New York.I 
think the Smithsonian Institiute and PBS had more than 21 pianos in 
their Piano Grand performance in honor of Piano 300.Also Kimball 
sponsored a multiple piano event for the super bowl in 1985.
     
    Just wanted to set things straight.   Robin Olson RPT  



----- Original Message -----
From: John Ross <jrpiano@win.eastlink.ca>
Date: Sunday, August 3, 2003 7:56 am
Subject: Emailing: 03SEAR

> 21 Rare Pianos Sought for Feat of Grand Intent
>       
> 
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
> -------
> 
>      August 3, 2003
>      21 Rare Pianos Sought for Feat of Grand Intent
>      By JAMES BARRON
> 
>           
>      ujatri K. Reisinger, who sells pianos for a living, has been 
> working the phone, trying to borrow a few. Actually, more than a 
> few: 21 grands, for a total of 1,848 keys. And all built by a 
> relatively obscure Italian manufacturer that makes only 100 
> instruments a year.
> 
>      Mr. Reisinger, an owner of Klavierhaus, a piano shop on West 
> 58th Street between Broadway and Seventh Avenue, is looking for 
> the pianos that will star in a concert during the opening week of 
> the 15th season of the Winter Garden at the World Financial Center.
> 
>      The pianos he is looking for are not Steinways, not Mason & 
> Hamlins, not Baldwins, but Faziolis. So far, he said, he is two-
> thirds of the the way toward meeting his goal.
> 
>      Faziolis are shiny, expensive instruments made according to 
> the designs of Paolo Fazioli, a concert pianist who went into 
> engineering before he discovered his life's work: trying to 
> reinvent the modern piano. 
> 
>      The most talked-about of his company's six models is the 
> F308, at least one of which will be among the 21 pianos Mr. 
> Reisinger is rounding up. At 10 feet 2 inches and $140,000, it is 
> 14 1/4 inches longer and almost $50,000 more expensive than a 
> Steinway concert grand.
> 
>      It has an extra pedal, for very, very soft playing. Whether 
> it is needed for one piece that will be played on Sept. 25 - the 
> world premiere of "Threnodia for 21," a piece by Daniele Lombardi, 
> an avant-garde Italian composer, and dedicated to the victims of 
> the Sept. 11 attacks - remains to be seen. 
> 
>      Also on the program is the first performance in this country 
> of Mr. Lombardi's Sinfonia Nos. 1 and 2 for 21 Pianos.
> 
>      In some passages of "Threnodia," Mr. Reisinger said, the 
> pianists are to stand up, reach into the pianos and strum the 
> strings. In other passages, they are to pound the keyboards. It 
> will be something to see - and that, Mr. Reisinger said, is just 
> what Mr. Lombardi had in mind.
> 
>      "He created a work that's important three-dimensionally, 
> with the movement of the conductor and the movement of the 
> artists," Mr. Reisinger said. "It is a sculpture in the making, 
> right on the spot."
> 
>      Before there can be sculpture, or music, there must be 21 
> pianos. Mr. Reisinger, who sells Faziolis along with Steinways and 
> other pianos that he and his technicians have rebuilt, decided to 
> round up 21 Faziolis - something he has wanted to do since meeting 
> Mr. Lombardi in 1997 - and approached the World Financial Center 
> about the holding the event. 
> 
>      "When I told Paolo, he said it's impossible," Mr. Reisinger 
> said. "He's never seen 21 Faziolis together in his life." But he 
> will, assuming Mr. Reisinger succeeds: Mr. Fazioli has promised 
> not only to attend the concert, but also to autograph each piano 
> that is used.
> 
>      Mr. Reisinger has been calling other Fazioli dealers in this 
> country and in Europe. As of last week, he said that he had 
> commitments for three Faziolis from Boston, four from Virginia and 
> four from Utah, maybe five.
> 
>      Rick Baldassin, a Fazioli dealer in North Salt Lake, said 
> the number depended on whether his wife, Cindy, would let him send 
> the 7-foot-6 Fazioli in their living room along with four from 
> their showroom.
> 
>      "I'm inclined to believe that she's O.K. with it," Mr. 
> Baldassin said. "You can imagine. It's one thing to send the 
> children from the store. It's another thing when you're sending 
> the one from your house, but why not?"
> 
>      Debra Simon, the executive director of the World Financial 
> Center's arts and events program, said the 21 pianos would be the 
> largest collection of pianos played at the same time in one place 
> since the 1939 World's Fair. And those pianos were uprights, not 
> grands.
>      Mr. Lombardi knows what it is like to have more than one 
> Fazioli on hand. Mr. Reisinger said Mr. Lombardi once asked Mr. 
> Fazioli to send him two. Mr. Fazioli did so, Mr. Reisinger said, 
> but only after asking this question: "Can't you compose something 
> for 3 or 4 pianos instead of 21?"
> 
> 
> 
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