One of the questions Robert Perry asked was:
> 2. Was there ever a recording piano (i.e., a player that was used
> to record rolls) that could be mistaken for a normal player piano
> without close inspection?
Except that they were in a recording studio, this was surely true
of all the recording pianos used by the big companies, to judge from
photographs. The recording artist had come to give a recital and
that's how it should be.
The only recording piano I've ever seen in action certainly met this
requirement. This was a Steinway Model B pedal-electric Duo-Art grand
in the middle of the Autoplayer shop in Slough, England, in the middle
1970s. It was even used to demonstrate (and come to that, edit new)
Duo-Art rolls. Only a discreet multi-core cable betrayed its additional
role.
Speed-registering electrical contacts had been added to the piano
action and pedals. Jazz recitals were held by celebrities at weekends
and the proceeds issued on roll maybe 2 to 6 weeks later, depending on
how well the computer was working and how many jaded old uprights were
in for repair.
The Duo-Art rolls produced by Autoplayer always seemed to me somewhat
tame, but I am sure this was thanks to constraints on editing time
rather than any default in the piano, which even then played Duo-Art
rolls well.
On the closure of the shop following the death of its proprietor Paul
Young in a road accident, the piano was bought by Peter Davis of the
London Player-Piano Group and completely rebuilt, the contacts being
removed. It remains his star instrument and the rebuild was such that
it is now certainly the easiest pedal-electric grand I've met on which
to pedal ordinary rolls.
Dan Wilson, London
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