April 01, 2007

1909 Model O Steinway Piano

Restored Steinway Model 0 1909

Steinway 1909 Model O, Restored March 2007

My mother passed away in July 2006.  Her Steinway grand piano was a prized possession.  Her parents bought the piano for her in the 1940's when she was in college. They lived in Queens, New York and it is hard to imagine how they fit the piano, two adults and three kids into the one floor of the house that they lived in.  Her brother and sister recall that they took out a loan to buy the piano.  My mother was an accomplished pianist and organist, and obtained a Master's degree in Sacred Music from Union Theological Seminary. 

When my mother moved to Oregon, it took a while for the piano to follow.  However, in the late 1950's there was an exchange of the Steinway grand for the spinet my mother had acquired.  The story is that the same truck driver took the Steinway out to Oregon and brought the spinet back to New York City to my grandmother's house.  Eventually, my parents decided to move to Prescott, Arizona, and of course, the Steinway came along, moving through several changes of housing.  Sadly, as my mother's health deteriorated, she played it less and less, but it stood in a position of honor in her living room.  In the last few months of her life, others came and played it for her (and for themselves, as it is a fine instrument).

My mother fussed about what was going to happen to the piano, and talked about donating it to a local organization.  However, The Sapling and I knew we wanted to bring it back to our home in New Hampshire.  It turns out that while my mother thought it was a 1925 Steinway, the piano is actually a 1909 Model O.  All Steinways have serial numbers, and from the serial number it is possible to determine the date of manufacture and the specific type of piano.  I wrote to Steinway to see what they knew about it, and they told me that the piano had been sent to a retailer in Syracuse, New York, and then sold to an individual, which didn't have a city attached to the address.  They had no other information.

Steinway 1909 Piano Ready for Restoration - Keys with Serial Number

Steinway 1909 Model O Keyboard with Serial Number before restoration

So, we moved it back to New Hampshire, and took it to Peter Mohr at New England Classic Piano Restorations in Manchester NH.  We were happy that we did not need to replace the soundboard, and that Peter was able to repair it.  The restoration work took about 5 months, including a complete refinishing.  Interestingly, the piano may look better than it did when it emerged from the factory almost 100 years ago.  Peter showed us how the harp (the metal part of the insides that the strings are attached to) was not very well finished.  Apparently, Steinway was rushing out the Model O's and didn't apply quite as high a degree of finish to some parts.  This also explains the difficulty we had in finding the serial number, which is normally inked in a pretty prominent location.  The restored harp and new strings are shown below.

Restored Steinway Insides

Steinway 1909 Model 0 Restored Harp, Soundboard and Stringing

December 10, 2006

Basque Music

Last night we were treated to an unusual concert of choral and orchestral Basque music at the Putney School.  In addition, there was a folk dance just before intermission, and the audience got to sing along at the end!  The music is complicated in rhythm and harmonics, and lush, rich and dynamic.  The group did a very credible job. This is certainly a type of music that is not played or sung much in the United States, so it was a very interesting evening.

Composers included J.C. Arriaga, who evidently was born exactly 50 years after Mozart, Jesus Guridi, and Lorenzo Ondarra.  Amazon has recordings for Arriaga and Guridi.

Some general background and links (not all of which work) on Basque music can be found at Buber's Basque Page: Music.  There I found the tune and words for one of the Christmas songs that was done last night - "Hator, Hator" or "Ator, Ator".

A link from Buber's takes one to a fascinating group, Xarnege, that plays the music that merges the music of Gascony and the Basque Country (click on the door to get into the web site).  To get a flavor for their music go to the MP3 tab.  I tried out the  song titled  Sorlekuaren minez which starts out with voice and a drone of some sort, and then ends with a perky dance tune.  Their CD is titled Gaueko lan musika - Musica de contrabanda (Pyrene-2004).

Of a completely different nature is another link of Buber's to recordings that an American made in 1940 of songs sung by Basques living in California.  These are now held by the Library of Congress and can be listened to on the internet. A search in Amazon for Basque music shows that there are also Alan Lomax recordings in Basque Country from the early 1950's - one is for Navarre and the another is for Biscay and Guipozca.

April 21, 2006

Dresden Dolls Headline in Boston

The Sapling is a huge fan of The Dresden Dolls, who are headlining in Boston tonight at the Orpheum Theater. Unfortunately, he's not going to be able to see them.  In any case, there is a nice write-up in The Boston Globe today, including a bit of them interviewing themselves.  Very cute. Unfortunately the online version is missing the picture!  Amazon has their new CD, Yes Virginia.

January 10, 2006

Phantom of the Opera longest running Broadway show

NPR has a great report this morning on The Phantom of the Opera's record-breaking run on Broadway.  They have interviews with Andrew Lloyd Webber, and with cast members who have been with the show for years and years.  The audio should be up at 10am this morning. 

December 23, 2005

Christmas Music

I agree with Hugh MacLeod at GapingVoid, that Christmas is not Christmas without the Kings College Choir Carol Service.  As my children and husband know, I love Christmas music, breaking it out right after Thanksgiving, and not putting it away until New Years.  I heard the Benjamin Britten Ceremony of Carols the other day, which is a wonderful piece of music. (See these notes  and a version recorded by Hyperion at Westminster Cathedral, London.)  On Tuesday, WGBH in Boston played a version sung by the Indianapolis Children's Choir in America.  Finally, I don't think that the holidays are complete without a playing of Handel's Messiah and Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker.

November 02, 2005

Bach Didn't Write the Toccata and Fugue in D Minor????

Oh my, this is quite a shock to the system, courtesy of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.