Kahane piano breakdown

Farrell mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com
Mon, 28 May 2001 17:42:22 -0400


Pull tender off jack, place drop of medium viscosity CA glue on tender tip,
insert and be sure glue is spread around, then a quick shot of kicker - be
sure glue does not migrate to birdseye or elsewhere. Medium viscosity is
easy to control. Back in business in two minutes plus what it takes you to
get the action in and out of piano.

Terry Farrell

----- Original Message -----
From: "James McCormac" <jmccorm@tfb.com>
To: <pianotech@ptg.org>
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2001 1:33 PM
Subject: Kahane piano breakdown


> The AP report of the piano breakdown during a concert of the Los Angeles
> Chamber Orchestra was mystifying. It is scary how we rely on journalism,
be
> it print or broadcast, for information that guides our perceptions on a
wide
> range of issues, but when they report on something we know well, they get
it
> all botched up.
> A staff writer for the L.A. Times interviewed the technician and reported
> the following:
> A 9-foot Hamburg Steinway broke down while Jeffrey Kahane was conducting
> from the keyboard a performance of the Beethoven Triple Concerto. From the
> wings and to the rescue came Brian P. Alexander, a partner in Pro Piano,
> described as an international firm that rents high-end pianos. The culprit
> was a broken jack. To quote the article: "The whippen, a tiny platform
that
> holds the key-striking levers, was broken -- specifically the repetition
> jack, which allow notes to repeat."
> I suspect that the jack tender glue joint failed. How the AP arrived at
> their version is anybody's guess.
> The article does not say what he did to get the concert back and running
as
> quickly as possible. What would you do -- assuming the jack tender was at
> fault? Or, given the description of the problem from the article, what do
> you think happened and how would you have done a quick fix?
>
> Jim McCormac, RPT
> Fallbrook, CA
>



This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC