<div> <font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">We have two Fandrich U-121s at the school where I work and another at home. Del's box + an early iteration of Darrel's action = something very special indeed.<br>
<br>
Alan Eder<br>
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-----Original Message-----<br>
From: Dean May <deanmay@pianorebuilders.com><br>
To: 'Pianotech List' <pianotech@ptg.org><br>
Sent: Sat, 1 Mar 2008 3:35 pm<br>
Subject: RE: Speaking of Fandrich Pianos<br>
<br>
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<pre style="font-size: 9pt;"><tt>I've had occasion to play a Fandrich once. It is truly an amazing piano.<br>
<br>
Dean<br>
<br>
Dean May cell 812.239.3359 <br>
<br>
PianoRebuilders.com 812.235.5272 <br>
<br>
Terre Haute IN 47802<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
-----Original Message-----<br>
From: <a href="mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org">pianotech-bounces@ptg.org</a> [<a href="mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org?">mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org</a>] On Behalf<br>
Of John Delacour<br>
Sent: Saturday, March 01, 2008 6:09 PM<br>
To: Pianotech List<br>
Subject: Re: Speaking of Fandrich Pianos<br>
<br>
At 12:15 -0600 29/2/08, Alan Barnard wrote:<br>
<br>
>If you have not seen this, do so!<br>
>It's interesting, instructive, and positive.<br>
> <br>
><<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-d5fc6eKWqA&feature=related%3Ehttp://www.yout" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-d5fc6eKWqA&feature=related>http://www.yout</a><br>
ube.com/watch?v=-d5fc6eKWqA&feature=related<br>
<br>
Yes, it's interesting, and it would be good to hear a proper <br>
recording of the piano.<br>
<br>
By coincidence I took delivery last week of a Kirkman "Vertical Iron <br>
Grand" from 1891, which is just an inch taller than another I bought <br>
last year and very similar in design. What is striking about these <br>
pianos, and especially the taller one (which has a 45 mm bridge) is <br>
the clarity and power, and precisely that lack of "muddiness" that is <br>
characteristic of so many overstrung uprights. Both these pianos are <br>
vertically strung, and a Lipp oblique-strung I also have is equally <br>
impressive. The Lipp overstrung is also one of very few overstrung <br>
uprights that could be mistaken for a grand.<br>
<br>
The worst enemy of tone in an upright is the top door, especially <br>
nowadays -- I could hardly bear the weight of the top door I took off <br>
a Wendl and Lung the other day! But overstringing does nothing at <br>
all for clarity of tone. Unfortunately it's impossible to get good <br>
tone right down to the bottom on an upright of acceptable height. <br>
Grands is another matter.<br>
<br>
What I mean by clarity is hard to describe, but it is a quality not <br>
only of an individual note but of the whole piano that enables each <br>
register of the instrument to sound as it were separately like the <br>
voices in a cantata without getting all mixed up like the sound of a <br>
Tannoy at a rally, and this quality above all others constitutes the <br>
tone of a good piano for me.<br>
<br>
Another interesting and beautiful feature of these Kirkmans is the <br>
effect of the loud pedal, which again is hard to describe fully. I <br>
have found this effect before ony on certain models of Lipp and <br>
Brinsmead. The lifting of the dampers causes an immediate "blooming" <br>
and enrichment of the tone of the notes held down, and besides that, <br>
even with the dampers lifted, the clarity and definition of notes is <br>
not completely lost as it is in most pianos.<br>
<br>
I also have a Brinsmead vertical from about 1880 which has something <br>
resembling Del's "impedance bar" as well as one or two other <br>
curiosities, but not at all the same. It's a long time since I heard <br>
this piano, since it's unstrung, and I don't remember its being very <br>
exciting like the Lipp and the Kirkmans, but we shall see one day. <br>
One thing I am pretty sure of, and that is that a tall bridge is very <br>
significant. Both the overstrung and the oblique-strung Lipp and the <br>
smaller Kirkman have bridges 40 mm tall and the latest Kirkman, as I <br>
have said, has a full 45 mm. like two Kirkman grands I have. There <br>
is nothing "old-fashioned" about the tone of any of them -- on the <br>
contrary they would put most modern uprights to shame. If Del has <br>
discovered a way to produce the sort of quality I look for in an <br>
upright piano, and it seems perhaps he has, then it's definitely good <br>
news.<br>
<br>
If only people were more fussy about piano tone and response! <br>
Unfortunately most people have always been satisfied with very <br>
mediocre pianos and been prepared to pay good money for mediocre or <br>
plain lousy pianos from a few well-marketed names.<br>
<br>
JD<br>
<br>
<br>
</tt></pre>
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