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#1
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The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with
the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. |
#2
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"Carey Carlan" wrote in message
. 191... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Can you get a Strad for less than $2Mill? dtk |
#3
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"Carey Carlan" wrote in message
. 191... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Can you get a Strad for less than $2Mill? dtk |
#4
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In article ,
Carey Carlan wrote: The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. You should see what fiddles cost. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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In article ,
Carey Carlan wrote: The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. You should see what fiddles cost. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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![]() "Carey Carlan" wrote in message . 191... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Hundreds of kilos of exotic aged stored wood. Skill and quality in manufacturing. Huge transport and delivery and storage costs. Naa. Now the crappy old mass-produced strat I saw the other day for $40,000 was way too much money. geoff |
#7
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![]() "Carey Carlan" wrote in message . 191... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Hundreds of kilos of exotic aged stored wood. Skill and quality in manufacturing. Huge transport and delivery and storage costs. Naa. Now the crappy old mass-produced strat I saw the other day for $40,000 was way too much money. geoff |
#8
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 00:08:57 GMT, Carey Carlan
wrote: The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Ddid you know that Bösendorfer is manufacturing loudspeaker enclosures, I (guess the same wood and lacquers) too? --Now I'm really curious as to how they are sounding. Edi Zubovic, Crikvenica, Croatia |
#9
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 00:08:57 GMT, Carey Carlan
wrote: The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Ddid you know that Bösendorfer is manufacturing loudspeaker enclosures, I (guess the same wood and lacquers) too? --Now I'm really curious as to how they are sounding. Edi Zubovic, Crikvenica, Croatia |
#10
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![]() "Edi Zubovic" edi.zubovic[rem wrote in message Ddid you know that Bösendorfer is manufacturing loudspeaker enclosures, I (guess the same wood and lacquers) too? --Now I'm really curious as to how they are sounding. Not too good iif they are using tonewoods. The idea of a tonewood is to resonate to and radiate musics frequencies. The idea of a speaker cabinet is generally to be as unresonant and unradiant as possible. geoff |
#11
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![]() "Edi Zubovic" edi.zubovic[rem wrote in message Ddid you know that Bösendorfer is manufacturing loudspeaker enclosures, I (guess the same wood and lacquers) too? --Now I'm really curious as to how they are sounding. Not too good iif they are using tonewoods. The idea of a tonewood is to resonate to and radiate musics frequencies. The idea of a speaker cabinet is generally to be as unresonant and unradiant as possible. geoff |
#12
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 23:10:50 +1300, "Geoff Wood"
-nospam wrote: "Edi Zubovic" edi.zubovic[rem wrote in message Ddid you know that Bösendorfer is manufacturing loudspeaker enclosures, I (guess the same wood and lacquers) too? --Now I'm really curious as to how they are sounding. Not too good iif they are using tonewoods. The idea of a tonewood is to resonate to and radiate musics frequencies. The idea of a speaker cabinet is generally to be as unresonant and unradiant as possible. geoff Hmm, that's I thought about too, when posting this... but at their pages, http://www.boesendorfer.com/_english_version/index.html Bösendorfer claims that they are in fact using the wood for horn and plate resonators, the philosophy being of that when excited strings pass their mechanic and acoustic vibrations to the steel frame and wooden enclosure of a piano, the drivers built on resonating plates do the samein a loudspeaker enclosure, making the whole baffles active sound producing units -- quite interesting and worth of evaluating by hearing. I still believe that a loudspeaker shouldn't act as a musical instrument, but indeed the opposite. But there are special constructions too. Edi Zubovic, Crikvenica, Croatia |
#13
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 23:10:50 +1300, "Geoff Wood"
-nospam wrote: "Edi Zubovic" edi.zubovic[rem wrote in message Ddid you know that Bösendorfer is manufacturing loudspeaker enclosures, I (guess the same wood and lacquers) too? --Now I'm really curious as to how they are sounding. Not too good iif they are using tonewoods. The idea of a tonewood is to resonate to and radiate musics frequencies. The idea of a speaker cabinet is generally to be as unresonant and unradiant as possible. geoff Hmm, that's I thought about too, when posting this... but at their pages, http://www.boesendorfer.com/_english_version/index.html Bösendorfer claims that they are in fact using the wood for horn and plate resonators, the philosophy being of that when excited strings pass their mechanic and acoustic vibrations to the steel frame and wooden enclosure of a piano, the drivers built on resonating plates do the samein a loudspeaker enclosure, making the whole baffles active sound producing units -- quite interesting and worth of evaluating by hearing. I still believe that a loudspeaker shouldn't act as a musical instrument, but indeed the opposite. But there are special constructions too. Edi Zubovic, Crikvenica, Croatia |
#14
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#16
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i dont think bosendorfer makes an 11' model. the model 290 imperial
grand is their top of the line and it is 9'6" or something. 97 keys. i've been working with a model 225 7'4" half concert grand that has 92 keys. i think it is about $125k. dont know how much the imperial grand is, but i would guess it is near $200k. |
#17
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i dont think bosendorfer makes an 11' model. the model 290 imperial
grand is their top of the line and it is 9'6" or something. 97 keys. i've been working with a model 225 7'4" half concert grand that has 92 keys. i think it is about $125k. dont know how much the imperial grand is, but i would guess it is near $200k. |
#18
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"Carey Carlan" wrote in message
. 191... You should see what fiddles cost. --scott Touche. My new Italian violin and bow combine for about 18K. I see a piano as more a mechanical device, but I guess when you start repeating the mechs 88 times (or 100 times for the one with the extra octave) it might make it. Still, the Yamaha upright my parents bought for me in 1967 cost only $800. That's still a long way to 110K. Yeah, and I can get you a fiddle for $50, plus shipping. Peace, Paul |
#19
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"Carey Carlan" wrote in message
. 191... You should see what fiddles cost. --scott Touche. My new Italian violin and bow combine for about 18K. I see a piano as more a mechanical device, but I guess when you start repeating the mechs 88 times (or 100 times for the one with the extra octave) it might make it. Still, the Yamaha upright my parents bought for me in 1967 cost only $800. That's still a long way to 110K. Yeah, and I can get you a fiddle for $50, plus shipping. Peace, Paul |
#20
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The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with
the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. BRBR Hell, you can pay that much for a Tort violin bow that needs straightening. If that's what helps an artist do what he or she does well, it's worth whatever it costs. Scott Fraser |
#21
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The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with
the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. BRBR Hell, you can pay that much for a Tort violin bow that needs straightening. If that's what helps an artist do what he or she does well, it's worth whatever it costs. Scott Fraser |
#22
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Carey Carlan wrote in message .191...
The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. I once read a quote that went something like "you can tell when it's a Bosendorfer at a recital because during the intermission people will be up front staring at it like it's a martian spaceship." The keyboard player in my band (very talented guy, ex-music major, been playing jazz/rock/classical for 38 years....he started when he was 8) checked a couple out. He wasn't in the market but they had some in a couple of local shops. He said it was pretty nice, great feel and all but didn't float his boat. He said the tone was suprisingly dark but that could have been the room. Then again you don't want a bright piano for classical work anyway. You have to keep in mind that products like these are produced in very small numbers, with lots of human labor involved, and these are craftsmen, not some lunkheads. A good friend of mine does custom staircases, it's not uncommon for him to do one that costs $50k, so a piano for $100k, especially one built in Europe in small numbers is not that outrageous when you think about it. What would be very interesting is to see what kinds of people buy these things....well other than Tori Amos. Analogeezer |
#23
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Analogeezer wrote:
Carey Carlan wrote in message .191... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. I once read a quote that went something like "you can tell when it's a Bosendorfer at a recital because during the intermission people will be up front staring at it like it's a martian spaceship." The keyboard player in my band (very talented guy, ex-music major, been playing jazz/rock/classical for 38 years....he started when he was 8) checked a couple out. He wasn't in the market but they had some in a couple of local shops. He said it was pretty nice, great feel and all but didn't float his boat. He said the tone was suprisingly dark but that could have been the room. Hey, some of us *like* the way Bosendorfen sound. |
#24
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He said the tone was suprisingly dark but that could have been
the room. BRBR Odd. Every Bosendorfer I've worked with has been very bright, although bright in a very different way than bright Yamahas. I have to say the sound doesn't knock me out, not that it's bad, just not my preference in piano tone. Scott Fraser |
#25
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![]() "ScotFraser" wrote in message ... He said the tone was suprisingly dark but that could have been the room. BRBR Odd. Every Bosendorfer I've worked with has been very bright, although bright in a very different way than bright Yamahas. I have to say the sound doesn't knock me out, not that it's bad, just not my preference in piano tone. Scott Fraser I like Freddie Mercury's (oh yeah, RIP Freddie) phrase "Bechstein Debauchery" I prefer Bechsteins. That's only because that's what I have in my studio. geoff PS No, not a 9ft grand, but an old 1905 upright ;-( |
#26
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I prefer Bechsteins. That's only because that's what I have in my studio.
BRBR I believe I have never seen an actual Bechstein in North America. Rarer than hen's teeth. Scott Fraser |
#27
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In the right room. People often buy pianos based on what they sound like at
the dealer's location, but it has nothing to do with what it would sound like at your location. -- Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio "Kurt Albershardt" wrote in message ... Analogeezer wrote: Carey Carlan wrote in message .191... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. I once read a quote that went something like "you can tell when it's a Bosendorfer at a recital because during the intermission people will be up front staring at it like it's a martian spaceship." The keyboard player in my band (very talented guy, ex-music major, been playing jazz/rock/classical for 38 years....he started when he was 8) checked a couple out. He wasn't in the market but they had some in a couple of local shops. He said it was pretty nice, great feel and all but didn't float his boat. He said the tone was suprisingly dark but that could have been the room. Hey, some of us *like* the way Bosendorfen sound. |
#28
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Carey Carlan wrote:
"dt king" wrote: "Carey Carlan" wrote... The 9' Bösendorfer I recorded today retails for $110,000. The 11' with the extra lower octave of keys is tens of thousands more. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but that's WAY too much money for a piano. Can you get a Strad for less than $2Mill? Not a fair comparison. Strads aren't still in production. But if they were they would cost more than that piano, assuming Strad could still deliver the goods. -- ha |
#29
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The Bosendorfer is hands down my favorite piano and I would certainly
buy one if I were in that income bracket. |
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