Okay, Get out the hankies. More on the Lauter Humana --
As a child of ten in Jersey City, in the 'fifties I had always wanted
to play the piano. Unfortunate my family couldn't afford one at the
time -- in fact, they couldn't afford one at any time.
A neighbor across the street was getting rid of a piano. It was on
the second floor of a two-family home and the only way to extract the
piano was to hoist it down. They were willing to give it away for the
hoisting. I had saved some holiday money and pleaded with my folks to
let me get the piano. So, for the princely sum of $12.50 I bought the
piano. I watched as the piano was precariously swung out of the window
and slowly lowered to the ground.
It was moved across the street but would not fit into the house.
I was devastated! It stayed under a tarp in our yard until we
contacted a local piano shop in Bayonne to come and look at the piano.
It was indeed a Lauter Humana.
In order to fit the piano in the house, the piano man said he could
"modernize" it. That would run $250.00, a fortune. He heard me
picking out songs on the piano in the yard and said he would be willing
to accept a slow payout for the work. Well, off it went to be stripped
of the player, toe blocks cut off and replaced with fancy legs, cut
down and a nice mirror installed. The action was overhauled and the
piano was refinished. It looked absolutely beautiful!
I had no inklings of player pianos at all. I just wanted a piano.
After it was finally ensconced in our living room I started taking
lessons. I think what makes me marvel at pianos and players, in
addition to the music is the mechanics of the whole thing. I would
take the front off and marvel at the action. One day, for no reason
at all I decided to take the action out. That was easy enough.
Putting it back was another story. At 12 or 14 I didn't have the
strength to properly reinstall the action and I broke a dozen
abstracts.
The kind piano man, took the action and _me_ back to his shop to
repair it. I was mesmerized with all the pianos. A few years later
I became associated with that store and it was there I started my
career as a tech. Went on also to a career as a pianist, salesman,
business owner, etc., all involved with pianos and all of which
I still do today.
Aside from the New Jersey connection I share with John, my Lauter
Humana sitting proudly in my living room has a real special place in
my heart. It is a 1917 model, the same year as the original piano
I first had <Sniff!>, and it plays marvelously!
In a world where technological wonders abound, why do we love these
old relics of the past? For me it's a never diminishing fascination
with the mechanical. Not the silent whirs of computers and modern
stuff, but the Rube Goldberg aspect of these wonderful instruments.
I love being able to fix them! I guess passion is a good thing.
Arthur Marino
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