Hello, it's me, once more, with newbie question. :-) I want a player piano :
* It should _not_ be a modern make, but one with air-pipes and
paper-rolls. :-)
* It should not be an "expression-reproducing piano". I play piano
myself (albeit very ... medium), so I don't need just another piano
player at home. I want _Mechanical_ music, not mechanical _Music_.
* It should already work. (But I think I am a quite good metal- and
wood-worker, and I love to repair broken cameras of unknown make -- they
really work afterwards -- so I can definitely tinker around when there
are some (minor) problems. I would read Mr. Reblitz's book before that,
of course.)
* It should not be to expensive. (What _is_ expensive? I have no
idea about prices or, for that matter, how to evaluate the quality.)
* It should somehow, at the end, be in Germany. (But I have quite
a few relatives and friends, and even a bank account, on the U.S.
West Coast ...)
A "Vorsetzer" (what is this in English?) would also be okay, for my
current $200 out-of-tune piano (which should be replaced anyway ...).
[ It's a "push-up player", unless it is a reproducing system like
[ Welte-Mignon, then we use the German word "Vorsetzer". -- Robbie
Here in Germany, I know only of one company that sometimes sells
"machines", but I don't want to talk to them without first having a
little knowledge about "the market". (I like to call mechanical music
instruments "machines". That's more important to me than that they make
music -- I can do that myself.)
Thanks for any and all advice!
Harald M. Mueller
[ I think you seek a coin piano ("nickelodeon") or orchestrion, Harald.
[ A player piano has no pipes -- only a piano -- and most piano rolls
[ attempt to sound "human" instead of "mechanical". The 10-tune music
[ rolls for the coin piano play at constant volume (more or less) and
[ so the musical arrangement sounds more mechanical. Of course, since
[ coin pianos and orchestrions are rare, a common player piano is less
[ expensive. There are some wonderful museums nearby you, in Germany
[ and Austria and France and Switzerland, where you can see and hear
[ restored coin pianos and orchestrions made in Europe and USA. See
[ Musica mecanica, http://www.cnam.fr/museum/.musica_mechanica/ for
[ a list of museums. Then you will know what your heart _really_
[ desires! :) -- Robbie
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