A technician that was too good for his market? Ummm..ok..it sounds to me more like his prices were not competitive for the services that his customers wanted and that he didn't get much buy-in from his customers to the idea that his other procedures should be done just because he had the "skill" and "time" to do them.tubaguy9 wrote: I think most of that is purely reputation they had from around the 20's...I personally work with a piano repairman who literally got better than the area market wanted. Skill=more knowledge of what can be done=more time able to be involved=more money to be charged. People did not want to pay him what he really was worth for his piano skills...
Modern Steinway pianos are crap? Right...tubaguy9 wrote: anyways, he finds the modern Steinway's are crap, and are over-hyped, simply due to reputation.
Look, I work for a "major" symphony orchestra. I present the finest and most famous pianists in the world with my orchestra. None of these people were playing Steinway pianos in the 1920s (the reference date you mentioned), but let me tell you...these people could be playing any piano they wanted and are playing Steinways today by choice...not because the Steinway pianos built 90 years ago were good. Only once in 25 years has a pianist requested a piano other than a Steinway (a Yamaha, actually).
Hamburg Steinway pianos are exceptionally fine pianos and play and sound significantly different than American Steinways. I imagine that you've never seen/heard/played one...right? Your statement about the availability of Hamburg Steinways in the US is not true. Just because they don't show up when you google Steinway pianos doesn't mean you can't get them. These are not the kind of pianos that you find at your local "piano warehouse." There are many more in the United States than you think and are always a handful of them available on the used market each year. Additionally, there are plenty of Steinway piano dealers that would be happy to import a Hamburg Steinway for you (they can order from either factory). I get calls, emails, and letters all time time from people/dealers/brokers with Hamburg Steinways they want to sell me...they're out there and available to people in the US. No BS.tubaguy9 wrote:The ones from Hamburg Germany, apparently are very good, but unable to be purchased here in the US.
Fazioli? Sure they're exotic, expensive, and "flashy" with all of their embelishments. Yes, they claim to build the largest piano in the world, but really? The best piano currently made? Based on what? If I wheeled a Fazioli out as my artist piano, I'm absolutely 100% sure that I'd have quite a few artists refuse to play it. How many people in the world have even seen a Fazioli, much less played one?tubaguy9 wrote: His thought on best piano? Sure, Bösendorfer is great, but as far as best one in what he's seen, a Fazioli is the best piano currently made...From what has been said, a Petrof would be a better one and it's less expensive than a Steinway...
Petrof? Better than a Steinway and less expensive? Yes, most are less expensive than "comparable" Steinway models, but few would throw the blanket staement out there that they are "better." Petrof's are a bit difficult to come by in the US, so the fact that your piano tech suggests these hints that perhaps he is a Petrof dealer or is affiliated with a shop that is. Again, I would have artists refuse to perform if I offered them a Petrof over a Steinway.
Seriously, in the professional realm, it's Steinway followed distantly by Bosendorfer and then by Yamaha based on what soloists demand. Beyond that it is a long list of "also rans" that woud likely place Petrof and Fazioli near the bottom.









