What is your favorite piano brand?

What is your favorite piano brand?

161 replies

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    • Robert_Appleton
    • 7 mths ago
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    Of course the comments made by so many of you are very interesting. I work in electronic music and jazz. I now use a Casio Privia CX S7000 digital piano. A remarkable instrument which can span the scope of classical and electronic music from Chopin to Herbie Hancock and electronic music better I believe than any digital keyboard before it. 

     

    Regards

      • Robert_Appleton
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Dominic Cheli Thanks Dominic. I'm interested in AI and the possibilities for multimodality. The relationship between Chopin and Bill Evans can be heard in a comparison betwen Prelude in E minor and Blue in Green. I've been working with that.

    • Gail_Thiele
    • 6 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    My humble opinion.. and old 1913 BB Mason Hamlin

      • Angela_Fogg
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Gail Thiele I’ve never played a Mason Hamlin, what are they like?

      • Gail_Thiele
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Angela Fogg They have a rich deep brown sound with non-shrill but round high notes.

      • Gail_Thiele
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Angela Fogg Angela Fogg The action on mine is not a light fluffy action but a very strong action. I feel I cn go deep into the keys.

      • Angela_Fogg
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Gail Thiele sounds enticing Gail, I’ll certainly try one if I get the chance!

      • Mark_Alexander
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Gail Thiele The action on  M&H pianos is going to differ hugely depending on year and other factors.  The action on mine (a 1994) was pretty heavy, and tiring on fast things like the Schubert Impromptus in A flat and E flat.  Then some of the hammers in the upper bass came loose and I had a technician replace all the hammers in the piano with lighter ones on carbon fiber shanks.  Now the action is lighter and not tiring.

      • Gail_Thiele
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Mark Alexander My M&H is a 1913 concert grand. Action is heavy which i love. Can produce a lovely ringing singing tone  and the bass notes resonate in your mid section like that of a cello.

    • Fernanda_machado
    • 6 mths ago
    • Reported - view

    Yamaha and Steinway.
    At home, my husband and I have only Yamahas, but the Steinway is in our plans.
    I've tried several brands lately (Kawai, Shigeru Kawai, Bösendorfer, ...), but none of them have won my heart yet. I'd love to try a Fazioli one day.

      • Angela_Fogg
      • 6 mths ago
      • Reported - view

      Fernanda Machado - PianoClass The only Fazioli I’ve played was in a diploma exam. Initially I was excited to play it and I booked a pre exam session to get used to it. It was such hard work, particularly the pedals. It took so much effort that every time I pedalled I was pushed back in the stool and I spent the entire time trying to shuffle forward towards the keyboard whilst the peddling pushed me back and away from the keyboard. I’m sure it wasn’t meant to be like that and was incorrectly set up. After the exam I complained and was told it had a reputation for being a monster. Hmm. However, a Steinway would be wonderful!

    • Maria_F
    • 2 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Either Seiler or Bösendorfer. I have a Seiler 132 SMR (magnetic action to increase repetition speed). 

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