I was playing some recently acquired rolls this evening when I ran
across one on which the suggested playback tempo was 45. My first
thought was that the roll would probably have a rather boring,
straight-forward sort of performance on it. To my surprise, the
performance was one of the most _musical_ performances I've ever
encountered on a roll!
My assumption has always been that rolls would have to be cut to play
"faster" if the performance included a lot of subtle things, such as
chords not being struck all at exactly the same time. The performance
on this roll, even at the suggested speed, was quite like _I_ would
play the piano (which is not necessarily all that good) in that when
playing a chord, I am not likely to have hit all the notes at _exactly_
the same time.
At first, I thought maybe it was an indication that my piano was not
working very well, but when I took a straight-edge to the roll, it
was obvious that the differences were intentionally cut into the roll.
I should also mention that this was not a slow, lethargic piece, but
rather a waltz (done at the correct tempo for dancing).
So, this brings me to my question: What, if anything, was taken into
consideration by manufacturers when deciding on what speed to 'cut' the
roll? Perhaps I am once again reading too much into things or looking
for things that are not there, so forgive me if this is another of my
'stupid' questions.
John W. Miller
[ These factors are considered in the choice of the music roll
[ speed ("Tempo") across the tracker bar:
[
[ 1. Repetition rate (operations per second of the same channel)
[ 2. Cost and weight of the paper roll
[ 3. Musical quantization (perf steps per beat)
[ 4. Speed of adjacent tunes in a medley roll
[ 5. Limitations of the player mechanism and roll transport
[
[ After a short period of experimenting, the music roll industry
[ settled on 12 perf steps per beat and speed approximately 8 feet
[ per minute ("Tempo 80") for 9/inch piano rolls as the best
[ compromise for typical pop tunes. But a skilled noteur can create
[ fine music using as few as 4 or 5 perforator steps per beat,
[ as in the low paper velocity roll that you describe.
[
[ By their nature, instruments operated by a pinned barrel --
[ including flute clocks and street pianos -- must compromise between
[ playing time (one revolution of the barrel) and repetition speed.
[ The noteurs who arranged music for barrel instruments discovered
[ lots of musical 'tricks' to cram music into a slowly moving data
[ storage medium.
[
[ -- Robbie
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