_DJ_ wrote:I just returned from the first of this season's lunch-time recitals at the Royal Opera and was struck by the condition of the Steinway B being used, and similarly found myself pining for our Pianoteq stable. The "character flaws" of the instrument in this instance (most notably the shabby condition of the dampers and the "pinching" effect of the note-cutoff they produced) were more distracting than not and I found myself wishing I had a slider control with which to dial its age condition back some...! .....
Hallelujah! I recall a very similar concert experience while watching pianist Stephen Kovacevich playing music of Beethoven and Schubert on a Steinway Model D in Symphony Center, Chicago, Illinois, USA. Seated in second row center, my listening position was essentially hearing the piano's sound emanate from the bottom of the instrument. This particular piano had a horribly loud mechanical squeak when the Una Corda pedal was depressed and released.
During the intermission, as Mr. Kovacevich's piano technician adjusted the tuning on stage, I relayed to the technician just how loudly the Una Corda pedal was squeaking. He shrugged his shoulders, indicating there was nothing he could do before the second half of the concert. I asked if a different piano might be brought onstage; the answer was an adamant 'No!'
Needless to say, the rest of Mr. Kovacevich's piano concert was not enjoyed, as this annoying pedal squeak seemed to ruin the experience for me.
Reeling from this concert with an inferior Steinway D, I have never attended another live piano concert from this disadvantaged listening position. Oh, if there had only been a slider to reduce the mechanical squeak in this acoustic Model D!
Cheers,
Joe