Retail Piano Sales (all locations)
Last Updated: June 13, 2013
Our renowned sales organization offers opportunities for retailing the world’s finest piano, with excellent earning potential and full and comprehensive benefits. Our most successful candidates have a background in retailing luxury goods, building relationships, and a knowledge of pianos and piano literature.
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Boris Giltburg Wins Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition
Copyright: Chris GloagBoris Giltburg emerged as the highly acclaimed winner of the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition 2013 in Brussels on June 1, 2013. At the end of an excellent final round, in which many outstanding performances by the twelve finalists were heard, he eventually received the Prix de la Reine Fabiola.
The other prize winners were Rémi Geniet (2nd), Mateusz Borowiak (3rd), Stanislav Khristenko (4th), Zhang Zuo (5th) and Andrew Tyson (6th). The six unranked laureates are Tatiana Chernichka, David Fung, Roope Gröndahl, Sean Kennard, Sangyoung Kim and Yuntian Liu.
Steinway & Sons congratulates all finalists. To watch the recorded performances, visit www.cmireb.be.
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Retail Sales Managers
Last Updated: June 11, 2013
Managing and directing a retail sales location requires an expert understanding of the local market, thorough product knowledge of the world's finest piano, and the ability to motivate your sales force. If you have these qualities and qualifications, please contact us to discuss sales management opportunities within the Steinway organization.
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Steinway Artist Feature: National Treasures. Judy Collins and the Steinways She Has Loved
Judy Collins, one of the most beloved musical artists of the 20th century, is sitting at the piano in her Upper West Side apartment in New York City, where she has lived for more than 43 years.
The piano is a Steinway, an ebony Model M grand, and she’s owned it since 1964. “I’ve written nearly every song I’ve ever recorded on this piano,” she says. “I play it every day. I played it this morning. And it still sounds good, doesn’t it? Listen.” She tickles her fingers across the keys, and, like a bolt of lightning, the extraordinary energy of two legendary American icons—Judy Collins and Steinway & Sons—comes together.
Yes, Ms. Collins. It sounds good.

The Classical Connection
Though Judy Collins is best known for her enormous contribution to the American folk genre, she began her musical career as a student of classical piano, studying under the famed conductor Antonia Brico, the first woman to conduct a symphony orchestra. At age 13, Collins debuted in Denver as part of a duet performing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 10, and it was not until years later—to the chagrin of Brico—that Collins added the guitar to her quiver and began her notable career as a lyricist and folk artist.
“When I was a kid I practiced classical piano all the time,” she remembers. “The practicing kept me out of the chaos that was sometimes around me. I practiced every day then, and I still do today. In fact, if I don’t practice every day, I don’t feel right. It’s like something chemical is off.” She laughs, remembering a funny moment: “I asked my mother once if she ever had to force me to practice piano, and she said no. But she said she did have to force me to wash my hands.”
Collins has always revered Steinway & Sons pianos. As a young girl in Denver, she practiced in a nearby Steinway showroom and in Brico’s studio, a wondrous place filled with Steinway pianos and art depicting great classical artists. The love Collins has for Steinway runs deep, and she remembers that the first thing she did after moving to New York City in the early 1960s was buy her own Steinway, the same Model M she still has today.
The piano has had its own storied life. It, like all Steinway & Sons pianos, was made at the original factory in Queens, but soon departed for a stint at a private residence in Boston before coming back to its native city and finding a permanent home with Collins. She tells a harrowing story of the time she left her apartment for a weekend performance. When a housekeeper entered on Monday, she discovered a massive water leak in the apartment. “There was steam all through the house,” Collins says. “There was water everywhere. It was running down the lid of the piano. It was a horrible thing to see.”
She examined the Steinway’s ruined paint and waterlogged rim. The famed tuner and tone regulator William Hupfer, who toured with Rachmaninoff for 13 years, came to inspect. “It’s wrecked,” Collins told him, heartbroken. “Take it away.”
“It’s not wrecked,” Hupfer said. He had the Steinway transported to the factory in Astoria, where it was painstakingly restored, down to the last drop of paint. Today, Collins says, you’d never know it had been damaged.
She has owned and loved three Steinway pianos in her lifetime, though now she’s down to two: her favored “axe” the Model M, and a vintage 1928 grand that has also been meticulously restored. “I don’t play that one as much,” she admits. “But it’s such a presence here.” At one time she had three Steinways in the apartment. “Hard to believe,” she says, laughing. “But yes, I suppose I did.”

From Both Sides Now
Many times, journalists have written that Collins “turned away from classical” to begin her folk career, an assertion she refutes. “I never turned away,” she says. “Classical music has always been the foundation of my career.” Her cat, a blue Persian named Rachmaninoff, may be one testament to this. “I suppose if anything I’ve combined both types of music,” she says, adding that the daily classical piano practice always provided her with the rigor and discipline she needed to commit to an energetic songwriting career.
“It’s not true that I turned from piano to pick up guitar. I played—and I still play—folk songs on the piano.” (Watch this 1987 performance of “Both Sides Now” as just one example.)
Judy Collins might come at her craft from the proverbial both sides—folk and classical—but she has a simple, singular reverence in her heart for her first love: the grand piano.
“I go all over the world, meet many people, see different places, play different songs,” she says. “But I’m always, always near a piano.”
Can’t Miss: Watch Judy Collins perform “In the Twilight,” a tribute to her late mother, on WNYC Radio’s Spinning On Air program earlier this year.

About Judy Collins
Judy Collins musical career has spanned more than 50 years. At 13, she made her public debut performing Mozart’s Concerto for Two Pianos, but it was the music of such artists as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, as well as the traditional songs of the folk revival, that sparked Judy’s love of lyrics, and she soon moved toward folk music. Her rendition of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now” on her 1967 album Wildflowers has been entered into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Judy’s version of “Send in the Clowns,” a ballad written by Stephen Sondheim for the Broadway musical “A Little Night Music,” won Song of the Year at the 1975 Grammy Awards. In addition to her own large catalog of recordings, Collins has been instrumental in bringing other singer-songwriters to a wider audience including poet/musician Leonard Cohen and musicians Joni Mitchell and Randy Newman. She is an author, film director, music producer, and social activist. Now in her seventies, she is still writing, performing, and nurturing fresh talent. She plays 80 to100 dates a year around the country. www.judycollins.com
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Steinway Owners’ Magazine: The Van Cliburn at 50
As seen in the Issue One 2013 edition of the Steinway Owners' Magazine.
Photography: Van Cliburn Foundation, IncAfter Van Cliburn defied the odds and made history at the Tchaikovsky Competition in 1958, the founding of a new contest in his native Texas seemed an obvious way to keep the legacy of that moment alive. In 1962 the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition was held for the first time, in Fort Worth. Over the years its top prize has been scooped by such artists as Radu Lupu, Steven De Groote, Alexei Sultanov and Olga Kern.
The Cliburn’s half-century anniversary competition begins on 24 May 2013, with prizes to be announced on 9 June. And these days the event is much more than a piano contest. High-profile competitions such as this can become focal points for the entire community within which they take place. Fort Worth is blessed with some superb facilities, but lacks the cultural advantages of New York or San Francisco – so the Cliburn has become a hub of activity at every level. It is a source of local pride, a draw for those eager to offer sponsorship and hospitality and, above all, a feast of great music making for its audience.
Photography: Van Cliburn Foundation, IncThe competition has grown to encompasses an extensive education project, offering after-school piano lessons to local children and a programme entitled Musical Awakenings to introduce classical music to young audiences, presenting live piano recitals for second, third and fourth grade pupils. It has also introduced an Amateur Piano Competition, established in 1999, aiming to show the joys of music as part of everyday life, as well as to uncover some amazing talent in the more unlikely echelons of non-musical professions.
The Cliburn uses Steinway pianos exclusively and has had a special relationship with the firm for some years. Jenn Gordon, Manager of Concert and Artist Activities at Steinway & Sons in New York, explains how it works. “We try to ensure that all of the competition’s piano needs are met, so the competitors who come for this prestigious event are sure to have wonderful, concert prepped instruments ready for them to play,” she says. “We want to see that every competitor can do their job with the right equipment and the greatest ease – it’s hard enough to take part in a competition without having to worry about the piano!
Altre Media“Steinway provides all technical services: we have technicians on staff who are tuning the pianos regularly, voicing them and working with the competitors on a daily basis to ensure that the piano is just right for them when they’re performing.”
The pianos experience a good deal of wear and tear during such an intense competition. “Having a technician there at all times is essential, to make sure that the instruments are constantly ready to be performed on and to handle the load they go through,” says Gordon. “We send instruments from our Concert and Artist inventory in New York and we have a local dealer in Dallas that’s providing Steinways direct as well. So we’re serving all their needs.”
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The Steinway Chronicle: Institutional News from Steinway & Sons
The Steinway Chronicle presents Institutional news from Steinway & Sons. This publication includes in-depth articles with compelling photographs covering Steinway's Institutional customers. If you haven't read the hard copy of the newsletter, read the online version available at the link below.
- Download the Spring 2013 Edition (PDF 1MB)
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Steinway Owners’ Magazine: Tradition Meets Innovation
As seen in the Issue One 2013 edition of the Steinway Owners' Magazine.
Nostalgia at 1911 Brasserie in the Imperial Hotel, New Delhi, with its latest addition, a Steinway Model S-155Steinway dealers around the world are expert at communicating the unique attributes of a Steinway piano, whether it’s to an opulent establishment looking to maintain its traditional grandeur or a forward-thinking school seeking to engage a new group of young musicians. Francesca Twinn talks to two dealers who’ve recently covered both ends of the spectrum
Christmas at the Imperial Hotel in New Delhi has always been celebrated with gusto, but last Christmas there was something extra special under the tree: a beautiful mahogany Hamburg Steinway Model S-155 baby grand piano.
The piano was bought through Steinway dealer BX Furtado & Sons of Mumbai, whose manager, Oliver Peters, oversaw the sale. “The Imperial is one of the heritage hotels in the heart of India’s capital,” says Peters. “This hotel also boasts one of only two wooden-floored ballrooms in Delhi, the other being the Rashtrapati Bhavan (President’s house). Since years gone by they have always had a grand piano in the lobby. This was the first hotel with an artist playing live music every evening.”
The Steinway Model S, dating from the 1930s, is the perfect fit for the period feel of Nostalgia at 1911 BrasserieThe Model S was bought for the hotel’s brasserie Nostalgia at 1911, which, according to General Manager Vijay Wanchoo, “promises classic evenings for couples, with live music and European cuisine flambéed at the table”.
The sale of this piano began a year-and-a-half back, when the Imperial’s purchase director Sanjay Verghese was asked to buy a grand piano by the hotel’s owners. But it wasn’t plain sailing. “He had a tough time in selecting a good piano with a limited budget,” recalls Peters. “He asked for quotations from Steinway and two other brands and after going through the quotations he realised the price of a Steinway far exceeded his budget.”
Peters spoke to Verghese and explained to him the Steinway philosophy. “After the discussion he understood what Steinway is about: build the best piano possible, simply the best. The high level of traditional craftsmanship, painstaking attention to detail and premium grade materials used to build every piano in Hamburg impressed him.”
Verghese went back to the owners and explained the Steinway philosophy to them, after which they quickly agreed to increase the budget. “The very next day,” says Peters, “Sanjay Verghese confirmed the order with us.”
The Imperial is the first Indian hotel in recent years to buy a brand new Steinway. The baby grand, at 155cm long, was first introduced in the ’30s, and that alone makes it the perfect choice for the Imperial, which was built in 1931. Upon delivery, the owners’ decision to extend the budget was seen to be a wise one. “It’s purely a masterpiece,” says Wanchoo, “which has been acquired for an extraordinary and international live music experience for enthusiasts. The whole idea is to engage the audience with soulful music while they enjoy a romantic evening at Nostalgia.
“Dealing with Furtados has been wonderful and we at the Imperial take pride in what they have contributed to music in this country. They have been extremely professional but with a personal touch; they believe in handholding the client till the last mile.”
Celebrations have also been taking place at Daynes Music of Midvale, Utah, following the marking of its 150th anniversary in 2012. Fourth generation owner Skip Daynes recounts some of the facts and achievements of his family’s business.
The forward-thinking Skip Daynes, current owner of Daynes Music, which has been in business for 150 years and started selling Steinway pianos 140 years ago“Our store started in 1862. My great-grandfather was the founder and his son was appointed the first Tabernacle organist at age 14 and helped install the organ. He was the organist for thirty-three years.”
It was less than a decade later that the longstanding relationship with Steinway & Sons began. “We were appointed a Steinway dealer in 1873. [Co-author of The Official Guide to Steinway Pianos] David Kirkland’s research states that we are the oldest Steinway dealer west of New York State.”
Daynes Music’s longevity can be put down to a forward-thinking attitude that has passed down the generations. “Our company slogan for many years was ‘Everything in Music’. We pioneered radio, TV, stereo, and shipped music all around the world. Nowadays our industry is very specialised,” continues Daynes, who is enthusiastic about the firm evolving as the “new old-school” – embracing technology being key to its continued success.
Daynes has found great success with PNOScan, a method of turning a piano into a digital keyboard. “We have taken this product to the highest level. Daynes is working with international piano competitions, music authors, teachers and cool kids to promote the ability to plug your computer into an acoustic piano and use new programmes that promote Steinway piano sales.
“We have added PNOScan to almost every piano we have sold in the last two years. The word is getting out! Now young teens are bringing in their iPads to plug them into a Steinway.” Daynes gives praise to his Vice President, Kerwin Ipsen, for pioneering this exciting development.
New computer software PNOScan, demonstrated by 150-year-old Steinway dealership Daynes Music of UtahIt’s not just youngsters who are being won over by the new technology. Daynes tells the story about a couple, Ian and Anette, who came in looking for a used Steinway. “We had a very nice B in the warehouse, with carved legs and sides, made in the 1940s. It had one small crack in the soundboard, with the dark mahogany needing refinishing, action parts and strings. Anette called it a ‘funky’ piano.
“Money was no object but Ian said she couldn’t have it! Too big, needed work etc. The next day I talked him into seeing PNOScan. We pulled up ‘Home Concert Extreme’ and a keyboard appeared on the bottom of the laptop screen showing him in red where to put his finger. The orchestra played until he found the next red marked key. ‘We need this on our Steinway,” he said. Anette looked confused. ‘You know,’ he went on, ‘the one in the warehouse... the funky one.’
A SOUND INVESTMENT
A Steinway & Sons piano isn’t just a beautiful instrument, it is also a shrewd investment. Steinways normally sell on for 85 per cent of the price of a new piano. And because they can last for over 100 years if properly cared for, you could find yourself making your money back in time. That’s why it made sense for the Imperial Hotel, New Delhi, to find the extra budget to buy its new Steinway Model S.
It helps to have a bank that understands the value of art and beauty, such as Swiss private bank Lombard Odier, which manages investments for private and institutional clients and pays particular interest to their long- term ambitions and hopes, from owning an outstanding musical instrument to sponsoring music at the highest level.
With the right planning and advice, that new Steinway need not be a pipe dream.
“We refinished, rebuilt and delivered it to them in their beautiful home. It is a treasure for Ian and a centerpiece for Anette.”
Daynes, who helped launch the Gina Bachauer International Piano Competition in 1976 by donating a Steinway piano worth over $50,000 to the winner, is proof that longevity comes from embracing the new, and he is passionate about nurturing young pianists. His latest venture is UPlay, a collaboration with the University of Utah and music software developer ePiano, which takes the form of an online piano lab for elementary schoolchildren. UPlay offers kids who would not normally have the privilege of access to a piano a chance to learn the instrument online.
“Our store is now 150 years old and I am 74. If we do not join our world, we will be left behind,” he says. And then with characteristic determination he proclaims, “We will not be left behind!”
News & Events
Steinway & Sons Record Label releases “A Grand Romance”
The latest Steinway & Sons release evokes a golden era of the piano virtuoso—a sonic splendor with impeccable musicianship from Steinway Artist Jeffrey Biegel
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY (May 7, 2013) – Steinway & Sons Record Label releases pianist Jeffrey Biegel’s new album A Grand Romance on May 7, 2013. This recording celebrates the intimacy of the relationship between pianist and public, from the early romantic blush of the 1830s through the 20th century, with a sampling of miniatures proper to recital hall, salon or parlor: diminutive études and atmospheric morceaux caractéristiques, novelty items and technical dazzlers.
A Grand Romance features musical miniatures penned by accomplished keyboardists and composers such as Moszkowski, Schütt, Bortkiewicz, Paderewski, and Rubinstein, among many others. These works wooed Western audiences into a new era of fiery emotive expression and Jeffrey Biegel takes on these transformative works with seemingly effortless bravura.
Moritz Moszkowski’s Caprice espagnol, Étincelles, and La Jongleuse are presented here, in all of their pictorial glory. Étincelles, or “Sparks,” is a work of perpetual motion, an unbroken swirl of combustibility that nods to its own title. Henselt’s “Si oiseau j’étais, à toi je volerais” revels in a breezy flutter, and his Petit Valse No. 1, written 15 years later is a paradigm of simply elegant salon music. Schulz-Evler’s intricate embellishments on Johann Strauss’s By the Beautiful Danube offer players a chance to dazzle and delight in the luxuriant melodies and luscious sounds.
This album paints across the 19th and early 20th centuries and Biegel provides a Josef Lhévinne style salon performance. He plucks these works carefully and offers them as gifts, perfectly wrapped for our enjoyment.
Jeffrey Biegel’s recent recordings include the 2011 bestselling A Steinway Christmas Album as well as the debut Steinway & Sons label release, Bach On A Steinway. He has also recorded Leroy Anderson’s Concerto in C, Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s Millennium Fantasy and Peanuts Gallery, and a solo Vivaldi disc for Naxos. His recording of the complete piano sonatas of Mozart was released by E1. In 2010, he performed world premieres of Richard Danielpour’s Mirrors for Piano and Orchestra, and William Bolcom’s Prometheus for Piano, Orchestra and Chorus. He has premiered new works and arrangements with the Boston Pops, New York Pops, the American Symphony Orchestra, the Eastern Music Festival Orchestra, as well as the symphony orchestras of Minnesota, Indianapolis, and Harrisburg, among others. Mr. Biegel is currently on the piano faculty at the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
News & Events
The Steinway Action: A Record of its History and Lesson on Design

One Day in 1932 Josef Hofmann, who had already spoken of the Steinway piano's 'extraordinary perfection of action,' came to Steinway Hall and said, 'It isn't quick enough: can't you make it still more sensitive, still more responsive? – “Commentary on the New Steinway Accelerated Action.” Presto-Times, Nov. – Dec. 1934
Commentary on the New Steinway Accelerated Action. Preso-Times Nov.-Dec.1934 Read the Full Article (1 MB)Hofmann's challenge was the impetus to Steinway becoming the most responsive and sensitive of any piano made. Frederick Vietor, grandnephew to C. F. Theodore Steinway, fulfilled Hofmann’s request by creating the Steinway Accelerated Action®; enhancing the Steinway action to respond to the touch instead of being forced into action. Today, the Accelerated Action is found on all American-made Steinway pianos.
Laboratory tests have proven that the keys on a Steinway piano can repeat 13% more quickly than any other piano. The same features that allow for this faster repeat also provide a much more sensitive, responsive keyboard, an aspect that can be appreciated even by beginning pianists.
The Design Elements of the Accelerated Action
"Original illustration from the patent of Oct. 13, 1931. Figure 2 represents a detail view of the balance rail bearing." Read the Full Article (5.6 MB)1) Balanced Rail Bearing
The balance rail bearing, as you can see in the illustration taken from the 1931 patent, is a rounded felt-covered piece of maple, which serves as the fulcrum on which the key pivots. Only Steinway incorporates a rounded surface; other brands have flat rail bearings.
Why is a Rounded Surface Important?
Scenario 1: Imagine a long plank balanced on a flat piano bench. It's easy to place the plank so that it balances. The plank can be moved slightly one way or the other without either end touching the ground.
If you place your hand on one end and press very lightly, the plank might bend a little but the other end will not move. As you gradually press harder, the other end of the plank will eventually move, but only after you have applied considerable pressure.
Scenario 2: Now imagine the same situation but with a round surface on top of the flat bench. In this case the plank moves easily (friction free), and it is somewhat difficult to balance; once balanced, pressure on either end will cause the opposite end to move.
This principle underlies every Steinway action. The benefit is that the Steinway keys move friction free on the rounded balance rails making for the most responsive action possible.
"Original illustration from the patent of Oct. 13, 1931." Read the Full Article (5.6 MB)2) Weighted Keys
The second distinguishing factor in the touch is the weighting of the keys: Larger weights are placed closer to the balance rail bearing, causing the keys to return faster.
So why doesn't every piano manufacturer incorporate these features? In one word: Time. Every key found on Steinway pianos is individually weighed off - a remarkably time consuming process.
Because the Steinway action has a much more sensitive fulcrum than actions of other pianos, all other action-related regulation is also more sensitive. The sensitive fulcrum of a Steinway action increases the complexity of all parts of the action.
Steinway, of course, is happy to put in the extra work, especially when the result is the most responsive piano action in the world. As the founding credo states "Build the best piano possible."
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Steinway Owners’ Magazine: Troubled Waters
As seen in the Issue One 2013 edition of the Steinway Owners' Magazine.

Pianos and water don’t mix. Or they shouldn’t. When they do come together, the effects can be disastrous. Inge Kjemtrup assesses the damage and finds out how you can protect your piano from the demon damp
Last October, Hurricane Sandy left a huge swath of devastation across the Caribbean and on America’s Eastern Seaboard. Houses were torn apart, trees ripped from their roots, streets flooded and parts of the New York subway were submerged in water. One memorable image of Manhattan showed almost all of the lower part of the island in darkness due to electrical outage. The loss of lives and property (the initial estimate for the US alone was $65.6 billion) from this storm is still being evaluated.
Split legs can be replacedBill Youse, Director, Technical Services and Special Projects for Steinway & Sons New York, witnessed some of the effects that a sudden influx of water has on pianos. “We have repaired several Steinways that were damaged by Sandy,” he says. “Most received minor damage and we replaced legs, pedals and pedal lyres. They had been in just a few inches of water and were removed very quickly so the damage was minimal. Two or three will need complete restoration and one was beyond repair.”
The circumstance that made that particular piano irreparable was pretty extreme. “The customer explained that the piano had been ‘hit by a boat that had crashed into and floated through his living room,’” says Youse.
David R Kirkland, Customer Service Administrator for Steinway & Sons New York, cites natural disasters such as Sandy, plumbing mishaps, leaking roofs and fire sprinkler systems as the leading causes of water damage. “Water damage can also occur when water is used by fire-fighters to extinguish a fire,” he adds. “There is also humidity damage, which can occur when a piano is exposed to tropical levels of humidity in excess of 75 per cent RH [relative humidity].”
Corrosion of the strings may be cosmetic and easily removed but if it’s severe there is a danger that the strings could breakWhether a piano can be restored after water damage depends on a number of factors, as Youse explains. “How much water, what type of water (fresh or salt) and where the water came from (above, below, steam or high humidity) can be sometimes just as important has long exposure to water.”
Stabilization is the name of the game. “The effects can take a while to manifest,” says David Widdicombe, Technical Services Manager, Steinway & Sons London. “We generally want the piano to dry naturally and be stabilized, and then we take a decision about what to do. It’s important for pianos to dry out slowly.” Kirkland suggests a drying period of three to six months before an assessment can be made.
Once water gets into the piano it can compromise many components, including metal parts, felt bushings and, most serious of all, the soundboard“We have to preserve our reputation for quality, so we can’t take shortcuts,” says Widdicombe of the Steinway repairs process. This means that even a piano with a few damaged hammers might have to have all its hammers replaced. Happily, with a fine piano like a Steinway, even a seemingly expensive repair may balance out against replacement value.
Once stabilized, a piano must be closely inspected, ideally at the piano workshop rather than in situ, and it will be scrutinized from top to bottom. “The way the keyboard fits to the keybed has to be fairly precise,” Widdicombe says, “and the keybed needs to be flat and not warped.” A compromised keyboard can be replaced, but keybed damage can contribute to a piano being beyond repair.
A warped keybed or soundboard can lead to a piano being beyond repair“Mould and mildew can affect all of the wooden parts and can attack the felt on the hammers, changing their texture and thus the tonal qualities of the piano,” says Youse. “It could change the feel by attacking felt bushings throughout the action and pedal assemblies. Some of the chemicals to treat mould and mildew can cause damage of their own, so the best treatment is usually replacement of the affected parts.”
Minor rust is a cosmetic issue and can often be removed but, says Widdicombe, “bad corrosion can cause breaking strings. If strings are rusty as the result of water dripping, we advise replacement. The condition of the soundboard in this respect is also important.”
Severe corrosion to strings and other metal partsPianos with modern polyester finishes are generally more water resistant, which is helpful against smaller-scale damage like drips from ceilings. But on grand pianos, the finish is almost irrelevant, as the hinge that opens the music stand is not watertight. “We have a piano where that happened – enough water on top of the piano got through and damaged the action,” says Widdicombe. “Funnily enough, the finish was not damaged. It was satin and could be fixed.”
HUMIDITY AND YOUR PIANO
Recommendations from Steinway & Sons
1. Buy a hygrometer for the room where your piano is located. You can buy a decent hygrometer for $30 to $40 at wine shops, hardware stores and technical equipment stores. This will give you an indication of the amount of moisture in the air.
2. Monitor the hygrometer to determine the highs and lows of humidity for your particular piano environment. According to established, institutional guidelines for piano maintenance, a humidity fluctuation range in excess of 30 points on the relative humidity (RH) scale is excessive for the piano. The result would be tuning instability, possible cracking of the soundboard, eventually loose tuning pins and sluggish or loose pivot points in the keys or action of the piano. Forty-five to 50 per cent RH is the optimum range for Steinway pianos.
3. Steinway & Sons recommends the use of climate control measures or a room humidifier as necessary during dry seasons. Whatever measures are used, the essential principle is to maintain as narrow a range of humidity fluctuation as possible and to safeguard the piano from sudden or drastic extremes of humidity fluctuation.
4. Treatment of mould or mildew requires professional attention, possibly restoration or replacement of parts, and relocation of the piano to a more suitable environment.
Steinway piano owners can only do so much to protect against extreme environmental events like Hurricane Sandy, but they can safeguard against humidity fluctuations through the regular use of a hygrometer to monitor relative humidity (see box). If needed, a humidifier or a dehumidifier or air conditioner can be added to control the overall environment in the piano room.
Widdicombe advises buying a room humidifier that has an outlet that goes to the outside rather than a built-in reservoir. He cites the case of a client whose dehumidifier was working just fine to keep the room stable – until he went away on holiday and the reservoir filled up and the dehumidifier stopped working.
Youse has a final warning for any rock stars contemplating pushing their piano into the pool. “We restore pianos from all over the world, so I see many different types of damage from many different types of environmental situations and I have seen many pianos that were beyond recovery,” he says. “Many people may not know this, but when a piano is submerged to the point where it floats (yes, pianos do float, albeit for a very short period of time) they flip over on their tops. Once you see that, the piano is pretty much unsalvageable.”
News & Events
American Pianists Association Names Sean Chen Winner of Its 2013 Classical Fellowship
News & Events
Steinway Featured in Live Webcast of American Pianists Association Competition

LONG ISLAND CITY, NY (April 17, 2013) – This weekend, Steinway & Sons is proud to join music lovers around the world in watching live webcasts of The Gala Finals of the American Pianists Association (APA)’s yearlong competition, the 2013 ProLiance Energy Classical Fellowship Awards.
The gripping final two “Discovery Week” concerts will be held on April 19 and 20 with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at the Hilbert Circle Theater in downtown Indianapolis, IN, and webcast live at www.americanpianists.org/media/live.
After concerto performances on Steinway & Sons grand pianos by the five finalists (Sean Chen, Sara Daneshpour, Claire Huangci, Andrew Staupe, and Eric Zuber) with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Gerard Schwarz, the APA will name the 2013 Christel DeHaan Classical Fellow, which is one of the piano world’s most substantial prizes, valued at more than $100,000. As part of the Fellowship award, the winner will issue a solo recording on the Steinway & Sons record label for distribution by ArkivMusic. Former U.S. Secretary of State and noted amateur pianist Condoleezza Rice is the Honorary Chair of the APA’s Classical Fellowship Awards, and she will welcome the Finalists and the audience via video each evening.
The schedule for streaming webcasts of the American Pianists Association’s Gala Finals is as follows:
Friday, April 19, 2013, 8pm EDT
- Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra/Gerard Schwarz
- Sara Daneshpour – Chopin: Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor
- Claire Huangci – Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major
- Eric Zuber – Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor
Saturday, April 20, 2013, 8pm EDT
- Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra/Gerard Schwarz
- Sean Chen – Bartók: Piano Concerto No. 2 in G major
- Andrew Staupe – Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor
- Naming of winner: 2013 Christel DeHaan Classical Fellow of the American Pianists Association
All performances will be broadcast live at www.americanpianists.org/media/live. They will also be available for on-demand viewing for a limited period following the competition.
“This is absolutely a can’t-miss event for any classical music lover and any admirer of Steinway & Sons pianos,” said Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons – Americas. “With the live webcast, we have the opportunity to see and hear live performances of some of the greatest young classical pianists in the world as they compete for one of music’s most revered fellowships. The competition will be fierce. It promises to be very exciting.”
About the American Pianists Association Fellowship
Recognized by the New York Times for offering “profound early-career assistance” to world-class American classical and jazz pianists, the American Pianists Association has been showcasing the five Finalists for its Classical Fellowship Awards throughout the 2012-13 season. The APA’s Fellowship offers one of the piano world’s most substantial prizes, valued at more than $100,000 – including a $50,000 cash award and two years of career assistance and performances. Performance opportunities during the Fellowship period involve solo recitals, as well as appearances with the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra and the symphony orchestras of Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Phoenix, Santa Fe, and Tucson. Previous winners have been presented at the Kennedy Center, Phillips Collection, Dame Myra Hess Series, and Chopin Foundation of America, as well as various recital series nationwide and on tours overseas. For more information, visit www.americanpianists.org or watch www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcbd-a0Auck&feature=youtu.be
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Steinway Owners’ Magazine: Hidden Britten
As seen in the Issue One 2013 edition of the Steinway Owners' Magazine.

As the world marks the centenary of the birth of Benjamin Britten, some well deserved light will fall on his piano works. Though largely overlooked beside his orchestral and operatic compositions, there are some gems among this relatively tiny aspect of his output, as Jessica Duchen reveals
Below: Britten in 1962 with his partner, the tenor Peter Pears
Photography: Getty Images

Benjamin Britten’s prowess as a pianist has long been overshadowed by his repute as a composer. He is in good company, of course. Over the centuries, many of the finest composers have been equally adept at the keyboard, among them Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. Where Britten differs, though, is that despite his outstanding playing, he wrote remarkably little for the instrument. It’s a typically Brittenesque paradox, perhaps; one that reflects his own inner conflicts; yet it also tells us much about his taste for discovering different musical colors.
Britten’s piano output is tiny: just a handful of solo works composed between 1923 and 1940, two pieces for two pianos, one early Piano Concerto, Diversions, for piano left hand and orchestra, the brief but stirring ‘fanfare’ Young Apollo for piano and orchestra and the short solo Night Piece, commissioned by the first Leeds International Piano Competition in 1963. Otherwise, he usually relegates the instrument, when he uses it at all, to a strangely self-effacing role.
Britten himself was a natural pianist – even if he didn’t always think so. Faced with an unsympathetic teacher at Gresham, the boarding school he attended, he was told that his hopes of becoming a musician were unfounded; fortunately, he took no notice, and was happy to hurry off to the great Harold Samuel for occasional lessons instead. Ultimately the school praised his pianistic gifts, but the Royal College of Music, where his piano teacher was Arthur Benjamin, did not. The institution failed to encourage him towards a pianistic career, beyond wondering how he was going to earn a living. “Lor’, I’m bad at the piano,” the student reflected.
Britten and Pears with their friend and collaborator Imogen Holst in the garden at Aldeburgh in 1955. Holst, the daughter of Gustav Holst, worked at Aldeburgh for twelve yearsPhotography: Getty Images
His sense of frustration over his own playing persisted into his early professional life as a jobbing musician, composing scores for film and radio broadcasts. Perhaps he was being too severe on himself. When he met his lifelong partner, the tenor Peter Pears, in 1937 and began to accompany him, the singer was struck by “an extraordinary connection between his brain and his heart and the tips of his fingers. You could watch Ben holding his hands over the piano preparatory to playing a slow movement, a soft, soft chord, and you could see his fingers alert, alive, really sometimes even quivering with the intensity of what was going to occur.”
Exceptional sensitivity shines out of Britten’s recordings as accompanist to Pears, especially in the music of Schubert. “He used to accompany songs by Schubert,” wrote Imogen Holst, “with such intimate concern that the music sounded as if it were his own.”
Perhaps the key to Britten’s attitude towards the piano was its role as foil to the human voice. In recordings of his playing you can hear the vocal quality of his phrasing, a rounded, expressive touch and an unerring instinct for the right balance of interaction with his musical collaborators; this can be no coincidence. After he met Pears, the instrument seems to have settled into its natural place in his mind and his creativity.
Barry Douglas, one of all too few pianists who have championed Britten’s Piano Concerto, regards him as “a born pianist, as well as a born composer, conductor, collaborator and educator”. Douglas’ teacher, the late Maria Curcio, knew Britten and Pears well and, he recounts, used to stay often at their house in Aldeburgh. “She told me that she was lucky enough to see the interactions between Britten and people like Sviatoslav Richter, as well as watching Britten and Pears rehearsing,” he says, “and she thought he had a completely natural gift for the piano. He was able to have a musical thought and it happened perfectly every time at the instrument – he didn’t have to work at it. His playing sounds beautiful, natural, right, wholesome and sincere. There’s not a drop of egotism in it. It’s all about the music – and that’s rare.”
Britten listens to a point being made by his friend and fan Sviatoslav Richter in 1968Photography: Brian See
Rehearsing his Cello Sonata with Mstislav Rostropovich at Aldeburgh in 1961Photography: Lebrecht Music & Arts
That sincerity would have been appreciated by many of his collaborators, not least Sir Clifford Curzon, with whom Britten sometimes gave performances of his (and others’) works for two pianos. But nerves, unfortunately, are often the downside of sensitivity. Though reasonably confident as a performer at first, Britten seems to have suffered appallingly from nerves later on; something that the harpsichordist and conductor George Malcolm judged might have been the result of him being “an instinctive rather than a scientific pianist”.
It is interesting that later, especially at the Aldeburgh Festival, Britten would appear at the piano as chamber musician or as soloist in a Mozart piano concerto, but rarely alone; his first preference was to join forces with other musicians. And it was in these situations he met his greatest triumphs as a performer – for instance, with the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich at Aldeburgh in the 1960s.
Britten shows his delicate touch during rehearsal of his opera The Rape Of Lucretia at Glyndebourne in 1946Photography: Getty Images
The Piano Concerto, the most substantial and prominent of his works for the instrument, dates from 1938, when Britten was all of 25, and was finished just in time for its first rehearsal at the Proms. The composer was himself the soloist (“The piano part wasn’t as impossible to play as I feared,” he told his publisher). It is much of its era, at times echoing the insouciant brilliance of Ravel, Poulenc or Prokofiev. It opens with a dizzying toccata and proceeds through a waltz, an intermezzo – a late addition in 1945, replacing a recitative and aria – and, to close, a march that sometimes seems a cousin to Prokofiev’s The Love for Three Oranges. Britten described the piece as “simple and direct in form” and he hoped that it would be popular as “a bravura Concerto with orchestral accompaniment”.
Perhaps he was underselling his own gifts. Some of Britten’s friends felt that he had concentrated on brilliance at the expense of originality. And even today the work is not performed nearly as much as it deserves. The intermezzo – a passacaglia – is its most recognizably Brittenesque movement: here, the acidic harmonies and shadowy coloration are clearly from the same world as Peter Grimes, with which this section is contemporaneous.
“The whole piece is halfway between a concerto and a divertissement of four character movements,” suggests the Scottish pianist Steven Osborne, who has performed and recorded the work and will play it a number of times in a variety of countries during this year’s Britten centenary celebrations. “In particular, the nature of the last movement is very difficult to define – I had to work very hard to get a really convincing character into it.”
Reflecting on why the concerto is not programmed more frequently, Douglas suggests, “It has all the elements necessary for a popular piece, but maybe it needs more of the bigger themes, something into which newcomers can get their teeth. Maybe it’s too ironical; because he’s so over-the-top bombastic, especially at the end, somehow people are wondering if this is the real Britten. He’s poking fun all the time: you might wonder if we can take it seriously.” But he adds that the somberness of the passacaglia “underpins the work”, a valuable counterbalance to the irony.
Britten the composer, hard at work at the Old Mill, Snape, in 1946Photography: Getty Images
Peter Pears in the role of Peter Grimes, Britten’s great opera set on the coast of his native Suffolk, which debuted at Sadler’s Wells in 1945Photography: Getty Images
“It’s really fun to play and it’s obviously fun for the audience. People respond very well to it,” says Osborne. “In terms of writing for the piano, though, I’m guessing that perhaps Britten was a little inhibited by his own facility. You can enjoy the physical aspects of the virtuosity, but perhaps it almost made it difficult for him to think musically. I think maybe his imagination was freer when he wasn’t writing for an instrument with which he had such a strong personal connection.
“He didn’t write much dark music for piano, which is interesting: I wonder if there’s something about the piano for him that lay in a particular emotional realm, relatively light and brilliant.”
Britten followed the Concerto with Young Apollo, a ‘fanfare’ for piano and orchestra commissioned by CBC and first performed in Toronto, not long after he and Pears headed to North America in 1938. During their American years he also wrote Scottish Ballad for two pianos and orchestra, a medley of traditional tunes and, in 1940, Diversions, for piano left hand and orchestra. This latter work was for Paul Wittgenstein, the pianist who, having lost his right arm in World War I, also commissioned left hand works from such luminaries as Prokofiev, Ravel, Strauss, Hindemith and Korngold. “Not deep,” Britten said of the work, “but quite pretty.”
But why so little solo piano music, even though his friend Richter would have loved him to write some more? The explanation could derive from Britten’s own complex relationship with the instrument as a player; or it could be the fact that, despite his facility, he simply preferred other timbres. Interviewed in 1962, he explained, “I like the piano very much as a background instrument, but I don’t feel inclined to treat it as a melodic instrument. I find that it’s limited in color. I don’t really like the sound of a modern piano.”
Britten the conductor in 1965, the same year he was awarded the Order of Merit by Queen Elizabeth IIStill, Benjamin Grosvenor, who performed the Britten Concerto at the Proms in 2011 when he was just 19 and has also played it this year at the Barbican, casts intriguing perspective on Britten’s canny use of pianistic color. “He understood the piano and what could be achieved with it – e.g., in the first movement cadenza,” he says, “but also, importantly, how it would sound in context. The full effect of the keyboard writing is only realized when you hear it with the orchestra, and hear the textures that result.”
One last image of Britten at the piano lingers. At the end of World War II he accompanied Yehudi Menuhin on a visit to Bergen-Belsen after the concentration camp’s liberation. The cellist Anita Lasker, a survivor of its horrors, was present at the performance, though did not know at the time who the pianist was. “Somehow one never noticed that there was any accompanying going on at all,” she wrote, “and yet I had to stare at this man like one transfixed as he sat seemingly suspended between chair and keyboard, playing so beautifully.”
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Artist Features
Steinway Pianos and the Artists that Love Them
Steinway Artist Feature articles are regularly published stories about Steinway Artists from all genres of music who have one very important thing in common – a love of Steinway pianos. These articles feature original content that you will only find on the Steinway & Sons website.
The love of our pianos and their musical craft comes through in these intimate profiles of great pianists who put their music and their craft above all else.
Check back regularly for the newest Steinway Artist Feature article or follow us on Facebook or Twitter, where new stories are regularly posted.
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Steinway & Sons Releases Augmented Reality App for iPad and iPhone
For many piano lovers, a Steinway is the instrument of their dreams. Those toying with the idea of fulfilling this dream, but are not quite sure which grand or upright piano would fit best in their home, now have the opportunity to find out in an innovative and effective way.
With the new Steinway Augmented Reality App, you can now display the entire range of Steinway & Sons models in their actual size — seven grand pianos, from a Model S baby grand through a Model D concert grand, and two upright piano models, V-125 and K-132 (K-52 in Americas) — and see which instrument will be the best choice for your home.
The app is quite easy to use. After downloading the free Steinway Augmented Reality App from the App Store, direct the camera of your iPad or iPhone to the desired place and select a grand or upright piano from the on-screen menu. You will be able to see, model by model, which instrument is most visually and spatially suitable. The 3D visualization allows you to rotate and move the piano, viewing it from various perspectives, until the perfect position is found. With the screenshot function, you can easily save your favorite piano positions in your photo archive and share these images with your family and friends. In addition, the authorized Steinway dealer in your area can get a first impression of your home, and your desired instrument, and give you personalized advice from the very beginning.
The new Steinway Augmented Reality App for iPad and iPhone is now available for free in the App Store.
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Steinway & Sons Welcomes Portland, Oregon’s Classic Pianos
Long Island City, NY (April 4, 2013) -- Steinway & Sons is proud to announce the addition of Classic Pianos of Portland to its exclusive family of Steinway-authorized dealers. Classic Pianos, an Oregon original and a fourth-generation family business, is headquartered in Portland’s historic “Brooklyn” neighborhood. The company now joins an elite group of hand-selected dealers who bring the world’s finest pianos to artists, students, and institutions around the globe.
Classic Pianos will handle sales and service of Steinway pianos—from majestic concert grands to traditional uprights. The dealership will also offer Steinway-designed Boston and Essex pianos, ensuring buyers will find the right instrument for every budget and price point.
“For over four generations, our family has sought to provide Oregonians with the finest selection of carefully prepared pianos,” said Maurice (“Moe”) Unis, president and founder of Classic Pianos. “We are thrilled to be appointed as the official Steinway & Sons dealer in Portland, and to become part of a select group of Steinway dealers who represent this legendary piano brand name.”
To honor the new appointment, Classic Pianos has reconfigured its historic, museum-like showrooms and restoration shop facilities. It now dedicates approximately 4,500 square feet within the ambiance of old brick walls, waxed concrete floors, beamed ceilings, and hanging piano artifacts to a Main Entrance Steinway Gallery.
“Classic Pianos embodies the long-standing integrity and American spirit for which Steinway is known,” said Todd Sanders, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Steinway & Sons. “Seeing our beautiful pianos showcased in their stunning historic gallery is quite moving. We’re very pleased to welcome Classic Pianos to our family of dealers.”
About Classic Pianos of Portland:
Located at the east end of the Ross Island Bridge in Portland’s historic “Brooklyn Neighborhood,” Classic Pianos has been described as more of a “campus” than a typical piano store. Its corner lobby, office, and 100-seat Recital Hall was former headquarters for a violin maker. Next door, the Aladdin Theater, a restored vaudeville house that, in the 1920s, played host to the likes of Jack Benny, is now a performing arts center and stage, with adjoining Classic Pianos teaching studios. Across the street is the entrance to five distinct piano rooms, featuring the Main Steinway & Sons Gallery. For more information, please call 503-239-9969 or visit www.classicportland.com.
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Steinway Owners’ Magazine: The Competitive Edge
As seen in the Issue One 2013 edition of the Steinway Owners' Magazine.
As 2013 throws the spotlight once again on some of the world’s most prestigious international piano competitions, Jessica Duchen examines the benefits of these contests for aspiring pianists, and records the testimony of three notable prize winners
Van Cliburn bridges the gap between east and west in 1958, winning the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow against the backdrop of the Cold WarPhotography: Alamy
Winning a prize in an international competition is a milestone virtually expected of most emerging concert pianists. Throughout the past century, competition triumphs have provided stepping stones to fame, with some passing into the realms of legend: Murray Perahia at the 1972 Leeds International Piano Competition, Martha Argerich at the Chopin International Competition in Warsaw, 1965, and Krystian Zimerman, also at Warsaw, ten years later, to name but three. The greatest drama of all took place at the height of the Cold War, when Van Cliburn, a young American pianist, won the 1958 Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow against all political odds. The US welcomed him home as a national hero.
In the past twenty years, though, the role of competitions has undergone a sideways shift. There are now so many that the sheer number of winners is often thought to have ‘devalued the currency’ to some degree. Meanwhile, coverage of classical music in the mainstream media has reduced to such an extent that public awareness of competitions has inevitably lessened too. Yet there’s no doubt that when a buzz spreads about an exciting winner, it can still change that musician’s life. Nor are the benefits limited to the person who takes first prize: from the chance to be heard and noticed to the personal boost of confidence that a prize can bestow, taking part is a potentially invaluable process for any young performer.
Behzod Abduraimov has enjoyed numerous benefits since winning the London International Piano Competition in 2009, including signing a record deal with Decca (below)Photography: Ben Ealovega
Behzod Abduraimov from Uzbekistan was the winner in 2009 of the London International Piano Competition (LIPC). The event kickstarted his career and he has continued to build on the momentum it generated. His recent recital at London’s Southbank Centre sent the audience into ecstasies, the Sunday Times hailing his performance as “pure genius”.
“The atmosphere at the competition was quite intense, with four rounds consisting of solo and concerto works,” remembers Adburaimov, who is now 22. “I think competitions like this always present an opportunity to be heard, and winning one could lead to a successful career.
“I started to take part in international competitions at the age of nine, but LIPC was my first major international competition. It was definitely exciting to play in London and to have a chance to perform with the London Philharmonic in the final round. Obviously I was very happy to be a winner of the LIPC, since it was my first experience participating in such an important event, but I also realise that I was quite lucky to achieve this as well.
Photography: Decca“Following the competition, I was heard by different management agencies and I had the opportunity to sign with Harrison Parrott and subsequently got an exclusive recording contract with Decca. Since then I’ve collaborated with conductors such as Vladimir Ashkenazy, Charles Dutoit and Pinchas Zuckerman. I also released my first disc for Decca. Now I’m looking forward to a number of debuts and recording my second CD.”
Often the crucial matter is not the prize itself, but the platform on which to be noticed. In 1974, Janina Fialkowska, a Canadian pianist and Steinway Artist of Polish background, took third prize in the inaugural Arthur Rubinstein Competition in Tel Aviv. It changed her life for an extraordinary reason. “My friend Emanuel Ax got first prize,” she says, “but I got Rubinstein.”
Above: Janina Fialkowska enjoys the support of Arthur Rubinstein in taking third prize in 1974Right: Steinway Artist Fialkowska puts her successful career down to the kickstart Rubinstein gave her as a result of taking part in his piano competition
Photography: Julien Faugère / ATMA

Rubinstein himself was then in his late eighties, but still performing and a hugely influential figure. “I wanted to be a musician but I had no backing from home and I had enrolled in law school,” Fialkowska relates. “I only entered the competition because Canadian Radio – the French branch of the CBC – believed in me and sent me there.” After the second round, Rubinstein came up to her and told her how much he had enjoyed her playing. “He said, ‘Don’t worry, I’m going to make sure you have a career.’”
He was true to his word. The following season, he stipulated that whichever concert engagement he received, she would also be given. “My whole career since then has been based on those concerts,” she says. “It was a real case of deus ex machina, and it could only have happened at a competition.” Fialkowska adds that she now takes pains to help young musicians whose playing she likes when she is a juror herself.

Top: Anthony Hewitt (on the left) with fellow prizewinners and juror Seymour Lipkin at the 1992 William Kappell CompetitionAbove: Hewitt sees his prize as a “great calling card” and a “huge morale boost”, but warns against competition overkill
The British pianist Anthony Hewitt was joint winner of the top prize in the William Kapell Competition in 1992. His view of such events is pragmatic, personal and down-to-earth. “Most competitions provide exposure and a prize is a great calling card,” he says. “This prize, first of all, gave me a considerable amount of money, which was good for my independence and confidence, and it gave me some concerts as well – I was able play in some amazing places, like the Kennedy Center in Washington DC. It was a huge morale boost for me because the competition’s standard was as high as you’d find anywhere in the world and I’d never expected to get anywhere in it. I enjoyed the earlier rounds and the adrenalin, but for the finals there’s an additional pressure from having done well. It’s like tennis, when you’re serving the last game to win Wimbledon!”
What is his advice to today’s young pianists approaching these events? “I think it can be a mistake to do too many competitions because it can become like a career in itself,” he points out. “There should be an aim beyond. I know from having sat on juries myself that it’s much more important to have something to say and to have conviction in your musical ideas – not just to play with the jury in mind, being ‘correct’ technically and musically. Above all, don’t put too much importance on it. Competitions are good for learning repertoire and it’s a platform for you to perform, but it shouldn’t be an end in itself. If you’ve practised enough and you feel confident, just get on stage and play your heart out.”
The piano on which contestants compete can make a world of difference. “A great piano takes away a huge level of stress, particularly if you have a choice of instrument,” Fialkowska says. Hewitt agrees. “It makes a huge difference, a new piano with reliable action, and Steinways are known for that. You usually do have a choice of pianos at competitions and I’ve generally chosen a Steinway. There’s a quality of luxury in the sound of a Steinway – its resonance and beauty is a living, breathing thing and the sustained tone seems to go on forever.”
2013 Competition Calendar
Hilton Head International Young Artists Piano Competition
4-9 March, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
Virginia Waring International Piano Competition
24 March-1 April, Palm Desert, California
Queen Elisabeth Piano Competition
6 May-1 June, Brussels
Van Cliburn International Piano Competition
24 May-9 June, Fort worth, Texas
Top of the World
16-21 June, Tromsø
Cleveland International Piano Competition
30 July-11 August, Cleveland, Ohio
Ferruccio Busoni International Piano Competition
21-30 August (TBC), Bolzano
ARD International Music Competition
2-20 September, Munich (for piano trio)
What next, though, for the world of piano competitions and their winners? Inventing or harnessing new ways of disseminating information and performances to a wider audience – especially streaming on the Internet – will prove crucial to most competitions’ repute in the future, and here the potential for exciting development remains unlimited. It is already beginning to make a major difference not only to the number of music lovers the contests reach, but also to the way they can be entered and judged.
In the end, though, each musician has to carve out his or her individual niche in the musical world. A competition win can provide advantages of many different types, from morale to experience, from prize money to record contracts – but for the pianists themselves, that is just the beginning. Hewitt, who studied in the US with Leon Fleisher, returned to Britain after his competition win and today divides his time between solo performance, chamber music, teaching and running his own music festival at Ulverston in the Lake District. Fialkowska enjoyed international celebrity and made numerous acclaimed recordings before being stricken with cancer in her shoulder ten years ago; since then she has reinvented her musical approach and rebuilt her career. Today Abduraimov is well on the way towards international stardom and, with luck, he will enjoy a brilliant future.
Pianists take note: a prize can kickstart a career, but after that, it is up to you.
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Owners’ Magazine
Steinway Owners' Magazine
Steinway & Sons is a company constantly striving for perfection when it comes to its customers. With an audience that has a unique love for music and the Steinway brand, the Steinway Owners’ Magazine was launched to provide insightful and enjoyable reading to our valued owners. Now the magazine, in digital format, is available to everyone so that we can share the in-depth profiles of Steinway celebrity owners, exclusive interviews with Steinway Artists, and insightful features about many music- and piano-related topics and personalities with a wider audience, including those that wish to one day join the Steinway Family. The magazine is published twice per year (Issue One in winter, Issue Two in summer) and is still available in beautiful, glossy printed layout to Steinway Owners. If you don’t currently receive the magazine as a hard copy and would like to, please contact your area’s exclusive Steinway Dealer.
The Steinway Owners’ Magazine is published by Faircount Media Group.
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Carnegie Hall Congratulates Steinway & Sons on 160th Anniversary
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Steinway to Mark 160th Anniversary with Events, Celebrations

LONG ISLAND CITY, NY (March 5, 2013) – Steinway & Sons today celebrates the 160th Anniversary of its founding in 1853. To commemorate this milestone, the company will hold celebrations during the month of March at dealer locations throughout the United States as well as other special events over the course of the year. The dealer events will include performances by Steinway Artists, cocktail receptions, screenings of the award-winning Steinway documentary Note by Note and special “Secrets of Steinway” presentations, where guests will learn about the incredible craftsmanship and artistry that has made Steinway & Sons well known as the maker of the world’s finest pianos for 160 years.
One of the major highlights planned as part of the 2013 celebration is the opportunity to take part in events at the only Steinway & Sons factories in the world—in Astoria, New York and in Hamburg, Germany. A unique Steinway New York factory open house with in-depth, interactive tours by the foremen and craftsmen that build the world’s best piano will take place on Saturday, June 22 at the famed Astoria factory. Separate V.I.P. tours will be offered for both the press and the general public. A special Steinway Hamburg factory open house tour will take place in the late summer.
Steinway & Sons will also commemorate this milestone with the launch of a very special Limited Edition piano series. A grand piano with the melodic name “Arabesque” has been designed by renowned furniture designer Dakota Jackson, who previously designed a Limited Edition for Steinway & Sons in 2000 to commemorate the 300th birthday of the piano. Dakota Jackson is known for his simple yet inventive approach to design. Piano and art lovers alike can look forward to this elegant, exclusive piano, which will be available in two finishes beginning in fall 2013.
The history of Steinway & Sons is a history of innovation and vision. Founded in Manhattan by German immigrant Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg (later Anglicized to Henry E. Steinway) in 1853, Steinway & Sons developed the modern piano with revolutionary designs and created 127 patented inventions to perfect the piano-making process. By the turn of the century, the company was crafting thousands of pianos in its Astoria and Hamburg factories, each one created with the finest quality materials and the attention to detail for which the company quickly became known. Today, Steinway & Sons crafts approximately 2,500 pianos a year and is the choice of 97% of piano soloists performing at major venues. In an age where many piano makers have outsourced manufacturing to regions with cheaper labor, Steinway & Sons continues to handcraft its pianos only at its Astoria (Long Island City) and Hamburg factories using many of the same techniques developed by the Steinway family more than a century ago.
“Year after year, the Steinway & Sons brand continues to represent superior quality and craftsmanship,” said Ron Losby, President of Steinway & Sons-Americas. “The 160th Anniversary is an opportunity for us to celebrate a milestone and to reflect on our history. We look forward to sharing the Steinway story at special events around the world.”
For more information and a full listing of planned events, visit www.steinway.com/160
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160th Anniversary
Schedule of Steinway & Sons 160th Anniversary Events in U.S./Canada:
3/5 · Steinway Piano Gallery - Toronto · Toronto, Canada
"Note by Note" Screening + Reception
3/6 · Steinway Piano Gallery - Chicago · Chicago, IL
"Note by Note" Screening + Interactive Discussion with Producer Ben Niles
3/10 · American Piano Gallery · Knoxville, TN
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance
3/14 · Steinway Hall - Dallas · Dallas, TX
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance + Prizes
3/16 · Steinway Piano Gallery - Nashville · Nashville, TN
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance
3/19 · West Music Cedar Falls · Cedar Falls, IA
"Note by Note" Screening
3/21 · Steinway Hall - Fort Worth · Fort Worth, TX
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance + Prizes
3/22-3/24 · Rice Music House · Hilton Head Island, SC
Celebration event offered exclusively on Hilton Head Island
3/22-3/31 · Steinway Piano Galleries of Atlanta · Alpharetta, GA
160th Anniversary Steinway Factory Grand Event
3/22-4/2 · Pendley Piano Gallery · Shreveport, LA
See, Hear, and even Play the legendary Horowitz piano
3/23 · Steinway Hall · Manhattan, NY
"Secrets of Steinway" with Special Guest: Andy Horbachevsky, Steinway & Sons VP of Manufacturing
3/23 · Steinway Piano Gallery of Paramus · Paramus, NJ
"Secrets of Steinway" with Special Guest: Bill Youse, Steinway & Sons Director of Technical Services
3/23 · Steinway Piano Gallery of Spokane · Spokane, WA
Steinway Piano Concert Featuring Melissa Loehnig and Jeremy Mims
3/24 · Rice Music House · Columbia, SC
Steinway Artist Recital Featuring Dr. Joseph Rackers
3/26 · Fields Pianos · Santa Ana, CA
"Note by Note" Screening + Refreshments
3/28 · Steinway Hall - Plano · Plano, TX
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance + Prizes
3/30 · Broussard’s Piano Gallery · Mobile, AL
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance + Refreshments
4/1 · Pendley Piano Gallery · Shreveport, LA
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance
4/6 · Alabama Piano Gallery · Birmingham, AL
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance
4/6 · Jacobs Music of Delaware · Wilmington, DE
Steinway Anniversary Student Showcase + Food + Prizes
4/13 · Steinway Piano Galleries of Atlanta · Alpharetta, GA
Steinway Piano Concert Featuring Kapell Competition Winner Ning An
4/14 · Rice Music House · Columbia, SC
Steinway Recital Featuring Dr. Jane Luther Smith of USC, Sumter
4/19 · Valley Music Center of Fresno · Fresno, CA
"Secrets of Steinway" Presentation + Artist Performance
5/5 · Jacobs Music of Delaware · Wilmington, DE
Steinway Artist Recital Featuring Meral Guneyman
5/8-5/9 · Denton Cottier & Daniels · Rochester, NY (5/8) and Buffalo, NY (5/9)
Steinway Artist Concert Featuring Lara Downes + Reception
5/23 · Denton Cottier & Daniels · Buffalo, NY
“Chris Fallon and the Fables” Benefit Concert for Buffalo Music Hall of Fame Scholarship
6/22 · Steinway NY Open House Factory Tour · Long Island City, NY
Saturday Open House V.I.P. Tour - Pre-registation Available Now
If your area/city is not listed above, Find Your Nearest Steinway Dealer and contact them to find out what in-store events they have coming up.
Steinway to Mark 160th Anniversary with Events, Celebrations
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY (March 5, 2013) – Steinway & Sons today celebrates the 160th Anniversary of its founding in 1853. To commemorate this milestone, the company will hold celebrations during the month of March at dealer locations throughout the United States as well as other special events over the course of the year. The dealer events will include performances by Steinway Artists, cocktail receptions, screenings of the award-winning Steinway documentary Note by Note and special “Secrets of Steinway” presentations, where guests will learn about the incredible craftsmanship and artistry that has made Steinway & Sons well known as the maker of the world’s finest pianos for 160 years. More »
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Huffington Post: Visual Art Comes (Back) to Steinway Piano
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Steinway Mourns Passing of Van Cliburn
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY (February 28, 2013) – The House of Steinway & Sons notes with profound sorrow the unfortunate passing of legendary classical pianist and Steinway Artist Van Cliburn. He was 78.
Born in Shreveport, Louisiana and a long-time resident of Texas, Cliburn was one of the most beloved and celebrated musicians of the twentieth century and was a devoted friend to Steinway & Sons. He burst upon the classical music scene in the mid-1950s, and one of his most momentous early achievements was winning the First International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow at the age of twenty-three, stunning the world and helping to diffuse American-Soviet Cold War tensions. Upon his return from Russia, he was greeted in New York City with a ticker-tape parade, an honor typically reserved for military heroes and heads of state. He was subsequently featured on the cover of TIME magazine with the headline, “The Texan Who Conquered Russia.”
The partnership between Steinway and Van Cliburn is long and storied. In 1958, it was Steinway’s head of Concerts and Artists Alexander Greiner who helped Cliburn obtain a $1,000 grant and who encouraged him to use the money to go to Moscow for his history-making win. Greiner died of a heart attack just a week after Cliburn won the competition. Cliburn went on to international stardom in the classical realm, but he never strayed from his roots with Steinway & Sons. His vast collection of Steinway pianos was known to be meticulously tuned to accommodate his individual style and touch.
In 1964, Henry Steinway, great-grandson of founder Henry E. Steinway and then-president of the company, entertained 800 guests in Steinway Hall to honor the tenth anniversary of Cliburn’s debut with the New York Philharmonic. Also in the early 1960s, Cliburn became the artistic advisor for the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in Fort Worth, Texas, a contest that now rivals the Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in prestige. Since 2000, the competition has been conducted utilizing only Steinway pianos.
“As a young pianist growing up in the United States, I idolized Van Cliburn and what he was able to accomplish,” said Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons-Americas. “During my years at Steinway & Sons, I got to know Mr. Cliburn well and was thankful to consider him a friend. Often when we get to know our idols, they lose some of their luster. With Van, the sense of awe and admiration that he inspired never waned.”
During his five-decade career, Van Cliburn performed all over the world and became one of the most revered performers of our time. More than an entertainer, Cliburn was an agent of diplomacy and global cooperation through the power of music. He appeared at the 1987 White House meeting between President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. In 2003 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and in 2004 he received the Russian Order of Friendship. He played piano music for royalty, heads of states and every President of the United States since Harry S. Truman.
Diagnosed with advanced bone cancer last year, Van Cliburn lost his battle with the disease early Wednesday morning. We are reminded of the words he wrote in 1957 upon the death of his mentor Theodore Steinway, the company’s fourth president, who had been sick for some time: “The end must have been in a sense, a release and a relief on both sides—but that is cold comfort for such a loss.”*
Indeed.
Van Cliburn was a resident of Fort Worth, Texas. He will be sorely missed by Steinway & Sons.
*Quote taken from Steinway & Sons, by Richard K. Lieberman. Yale University Press, 1995.
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Pianist Van Cliburn Dies at Age 78
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Steinway & Sons Releases Lara Downes Exiles’ Café Today, February 26, 2013
Pianist Lara Downes is known for her fusing of rare pianistic sensitivity and evocative, thought-provoking concepts. Her latest album, Exiles’ Café — released on the Steinway & Sons label [30016] — is the result of a moment of inspiration after hearing a lovely little piece entitled Tango from the Exiles’ Café. Downes fantasized about this café and created a narrative around it, which she describes as “both real and metaphorical.” This album captures the pain, nostalgia, and freedom that are indelibly tied to this state of being—in exile. Featuring miniature works by composers such as Chopin, Milhaud, Bartok, Weill, and including a premiere work by Mohammed Fairouz, Exiles’ Café goes beyond an examination of what is to be in exile, to consider the inspiration exiled composers drew from the musical communities they found in their new homes. Because in this sense, the exiles cafes were actual places – there were indeed such locations throughout history to which composers and musicians gravitated and found each other, and they and their music were influenced accordingly.
Recorded with producer Dan Merceruio at Sono Luminus, this album is a focused exploration of musical miniatures created by composers who were prevented from returning to their homeland. Listening to this album, one is almost transported back to the cafes, to the restaurants, sitting with the composers and their circles, lamenting their homes now lost, celebrating their freedoms.
“Here is technique so good you’re not even aware of it – and yet she never flouts it, never gets in the way of the music. You’re only aware that you want to move…” – Fanfare Magazine on Lara Downes
This album includes works new and old—Chopin’s Mazurka in F minor, Rachmaninov’s Preludes and Fragments, a tango by Stravinsky and Hungarian Dances by Bartok, a gorgeous tune by Kurt Weill (arranged by Jed Distler) and a brand new work by the rising star Mohammed Fairouz. William Grant Still’s yearning piece “Africa” and Paul Bowles’ Preludes for Piano are also featured on this intriguing release. These and the other featured composers have exile in common, but there are different kinds of exile. Chopin could never return to Poland, Weill, Bartok, Milhaud and Prokofiev were all displaced by wars, and some, including Fairouz, simply long for an abstract home.
Exiles’ Café features 21 tracks; and there will be a digital-only release of Korngold’s complete second piano sonata.
Lara Downes is herself no stranger to the nomadic life of the exile—she was born, of Caribbean and Russian heritage, in San Francisco and after studying with Maria Cisyk and Adolph Baller, she spent a decade traveling around Europe with her sisters, performing and studying in what she describes as a “gypsy-like existence.” Her teachers and mentors during these years included Hans Graf, Olivier Gardon and Rudolph Buchbinder. Lara made early debuts at the Queen Elizabeth Hall London, the Vienna Konzerthaus and the Salle Gaveau Paris and has always been as happy performing in traditional venues such as Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center as at alternative spaces like Le Poisson Rouge and Classical Revolution. She has been acclaimed as one of the leading innovators in reinventing the chamber and solo piano show (benchmark successes have included “Long Time Coming” – a multimedia examination at the way Duke Ellington’s music gave hope to other musicians and to Depression-era America, and “Thirteen Ways of Looking At Goldberg” where twelve contemporary composers wrote their own Goldberg Variations to sit alongside one of Bach’s) and is heard regularly on national radio programs including NPR Music, APM’s Performance Today, WNYC’s New Sounds and WFMT’s Impromptu. Lara Downes is a Steinway Artist, Artist-In-Residence at UC Davis and has just been announced as Artistic Director of the performance series “The Artist Sessions” at the prestigious Yoshi’s Café venue in San Francisco.
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Black and Gold Go Green: Steinway & Sons’ Road to Sustainability
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Steinway Artist Feature: Jeremy Denk Talks with His Hands
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In his razor-sharp, funny and unexpectedly poignant blog Think Denk, pianist Jeremy Denk recounts a fuzzy-headed late-night meeting in a Brooklyn bar. While struggling through a faltering conversation with a companion, Denk fumbles a Roland Barthes book out of his leather bag and quotes a passage:
“Language is a skin: I rub my language against the other. It is as if I had words instead of fingers, or fingers at the tip of my words.”
“So says Roland,” says Denk, and by extension, so says Denk. And it all makes sense—words, language, fingers, sound. The concepts begin to blend, in both Barthes’ prose and in the dynamic worldview of this Steinway Artist, one of the most prolific and exciting performers and writers in today’s classical music world. The words, the music, the emotions and the art are all at the tips of Denk’s fingers.
“I have to confess I am slightly (as in rabidly) prejudiced against sports-music metaphors, in the same way that I detest phrases like ‘Beethoven was the Jimi Hendrix of his time’ … although I realize the importance of bringing classical music into semantic proximity with things that people actually like.” ~ Jeremy Denk, in Think Denk
Over the last two decades, Denk has steadily built a reputation as an unusual and compelling artist, and has been hailed as the “humorist-intellectual” of the classical music world. “So many recitalists these days mix old and modern music, but few have Denk’s gift for stacking both halves of the deck with works of such iconic grandeur, and then pulling off the mammoth recital as if it’s all in a day’s work,” wrote Boston Globe critic Jeremy Eichler of Denk’s recent Boston performance. Denk has appeared as soloist with many major orchestras, including the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the symphony orchestras of Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, and London. He regularly gives recitals in New York, Washington, Boston, Philadelphia, and around the United States. This season he makes solo appearances in venues including Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium and London’s Wigmore Hall to play concertos by Mozart, Beethoven, and Ravel.
But Denk is channeling more than music. When he’s not performing, practicing or recording, he’s writing. In addition to his enormously appealing and widely read blog Think Denk, which he launched in 2005 as a way to “talk about music,” Denk has written liner notes and program notes for many artists and performances. His essay on the failings of program notes appeared in The Best Music Writing 2011, and his essay “Flight of the Concord’ was published earlier this year by The New Yorker. Add to these impressive publications a Denk-penned New York Times Book Review of Krause’s “The Great Animal Orchestra” and an engaging Newsweek essay about his near-miss as a chemistry scholar, both published in 2012, and it’s clear that Denk’s profile as a writer is on the same skyward trajectory as his renown as a concert pianist.
“It’s not that I don’t want people to be happy, I’m just allergic to the eternal electronic happy-face.” ~ Jeremy Denk, in Think Denk
Though he was born in North Carolina, these days Denk is a New Yorker. He maintains a small apartment on the Upper East Side, where he spends most days writing, taking yoga breaks and playing his vintage 1917 Steinway B grand, a piano he describes as his “best friend” and an instrument he is “passionately in love with.”
“A piano is the way a pianist speaks to the world,” he explains. “And so you need to feel you have an ally, a friend that supports you and that allows your thoughts to become sound. Steinway is it for me. It’s the only piano that has this kind of centered sound that I can mold in interesting and expressive ways. It’s the only brand I feel comfortable playing on.”
He can scarcely remember, in fact, not being committed to Steinway. “I did grow up with a non-Steinway piano,” he says. “It was a beat-up old thing that my parents had found for me. But as soon as I got serious I discovered Steinway. My teachers, my schools—they led me to be naturally immersed in the brand. I borrowed a Steinway L for many years, and when it was time for me to get my own piano I found my beautiful 1917 Steinway B. I adore it. For a concert pianist, it really does become your very best friend in a certain way.”
“Beauty is not something that ends, but your ability to experience it ends. And a question: is the immortality of the works you love a comfort?” ~ Jeremy Denk, in Think Denk
But soon parting will be sweet sorrow—at least for a short time. Jeremy Denk will leave home and the Steinway B to embark on a multi-continent tour in support of his latest album, Ligeti/Beethoven, which includes Books I and II of György Ligeti’s piano etudes and Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 32. He’s also writing, writing, writing, with new essays and blog entries in the works as well as a new “irreverent” opera libretto that “pays very great homage to Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven,” he says, “but also offers a bit of farce.” He laughs, maybe a bit sheepishly, then again maybe not. “I guess I’m taking these three old guys for a bit of a ride,” he says. “It should be great fun.”
About Jeremy Denk
Pianist Jeremy Denk graduated from Oberlin College and Conservatory in piano and chemistry, then earned a master’s degree in music from Indiana University as a pupil of György Sebök, and a doctorate in piano performance from the Juilliard School, where he worked with Herbert Stessin. He appears often in recital in New York, Washington, Boston, and Philadelphia. The artist’s widely-read blog, “Think Denk,” is highly praised and frequently referenced by many in the music press and industry. The New York Times describes Denk’s playing as “bracing, effortlessly virtuosic, and utterly joyous,” and reviewers frequently comment on the freshness and originality of his musical interpretations (as well as in his blog). He lives in New York City. www.jeremydenk.net.
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The Piano Man Celebrates Love. Steinway Artist Feature: Billy Joel
Good news: On January 22, just in time for Valentine’s Day, Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings will release She’s Got A Way: Love Songs, by Steinway Artist Billy Joel. The album is a new collection of 18 love songs drawn from three decades of the legendary composer, lyricist and performer’s recordings. It marks the first Billy Joel release since late 2011’s double header: The Piano Man Legacy Edition and The Complete Albums Collection, and the first such compilation of his most ardent, passionate and tender music.
For Joel, a love for the classical music he’s been rediscovering after his long career in rock and pop is strong. He jokes often, albeit a bit ruefully, about other loves won and lost, sometimes referring to his wives (a trio) as Ex-One, Ex-Two and Ex-Three. But clearly, judging by the crooning on She’s Got a Way, the man knows a thing or two about passion. The new album brings together some of Joel’s most evocative and moving love songs, with iconic hits playing alongside lesser-known selections, including “Just the Way You Are,” “Honesty,” “She’s Always a Woman,” “Travelin’ Prayer” (the b-side of the “Piano Man” single), the haunting instrumental “Nocturne” (from 1971’s Cold Spring Harbor) and Joel’s version of “Shameless” (a #1 country smash for Garth Brooks).
Like the Steinway & Sons pianos he plays, Joel is a New York original. Born in the Bronx and raised in the suburbs of Hicksville, he started studying piano at age four, following in the footsteps of his father, a classically-trained pianist. But he realized as a young teen that his musical career would follow a different path.
“I realized early on, I’m not going to be a concert pianist,” he told Alec Baldwin last year during a radio interview. “I don’t have the Rachmaninoff hands, the Horowitz hands. I have strong hands but short fingers,” he said. So Joel put the classical lessons behind him, and he soon found his footing playing popular piano music to receptive crowds. In fact, he dropped out of high school to help his mother pay the bills by playing piano in local bars, and the trajectory of his musical career has since led him through 33 top ten hits, six Grammy awards and sales of more than 150 million records.
In 2012, the Piano Man was honored by Steinway & Sons with a painted portrait installed in Steinway Hall in Manhattan. Joel is the first non-classical pianist to be immortalized in the Steinway Hall collection. His portrait hangs alongside those of legendary musicians including Sergei Rachmaninoff, Franz Liszt, Arthur Rubinstein, Ignacy Paderewski and more.
“There’s Horowitz over there. I don’t know how crazy he is to have me hanging next to him,” he joked at the installation ceremony, before turning serious: “I’m honored to be hung in Steinway Hall, among these great artists,” he said.
He’s proud, he says, to represent Steinway. “They make pianos the old-fashioned way,” he has said. “They’re not mass-produced. They’re hand-crafted...it’s a phenomenal piano. There’s a quirkiness in individually produced pianos that I appreciate, sort of like handmade guitars.”
Though he’s talky and sharp, quick with a joke (and perhaps to light up your smoke), Billy Joel speaks most fluently with his fingers. In interviews, if there’s a piano nearby, he jumps up frequently to move toward the keyboard to illustrate a point, tell a story. And when his fingers trip across the keyboard of a Steinway grand, as they did during the unforgettable interview he gave to James Lipton’s Inside the Actor’s Studio, he speaks loud and clear, tracing the evolution of his own career from the classical music that first inspired him.
“I started out playing classical music before I ever wrote a pop song,” he says. “I played Mozart before I played Lennon and McCartney. I played Beethoven before I played Billy Joel. So there are elements of classical music in almost all my songs.” He jumps up and moves to the Steinway behind him to demonstrate. He whips into riffs of both “Uptown Girl” and “For the Longest Time,” adding intricate finger-work and a traditional pacing that indeed renders the pop hits distinctly classical in tone.
“And now,” he says, “I go back and I listen to classical music, and I get a feeling I don’t get from rock and roll any more. I will always love rock and roll, and I’ll always love the rock and roll of my youth, but I’m not the same age any more, and it doesn’t do the same things to me that it used to do. But when I listen to Beethoven…I love this stuff. It’s like my first great love. It’s not a stretch. I don’t even see it as a crossover. Music is music.”

He’s unequivocal about his preference for Steinway pianos to tell his musical stories. “Guitarists talk about their guitar like it’s a woman...they talk about the wood and the shape,” Joel has said. “It’s the same thing with these pianos.” He speaks as a man in love. And in January, we’ll celebrate that love with him. Watch for She’s Got a Way: Love Songs. And then keep watching—because if there’s one thing for sure, it’s that the Piano Man still has quite a bit to say.
About Billy Joel
Having sold more than 150 million records over the course of a career spanning more than four decades, Billy Joel is one of the most popular recording artists and respected entertainers in the world. Since signing his first solo recording contract in 1972, he’s achieved 33 Top 40 hits, every one of them self-penned. The American pianist, singer-songwriter and composer is a six-time Grammy Award winner (with 23 Grammy nominations overall) and in 1990, was presented with the Grammy Legend Award. Inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1992, Joel was presented with the Johnny Mercer Award, the organization’s highest honor, in 2001. In 1999 he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and has received the Recording Industry Association of America Diamond Award, presented for albums that have sold over 10 million copies. For his accomplishments as a musician and as a humanitarian, Billy Joel was honored as the 2002 MusiCares Person Of The Year by the MusiCares Foundation and the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences. On September 20, 2004, Billy Joel received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles, adding another milestone to his extraordinary career. “Movin’ Out,” a Broadway musical based on Joel’s music choreographed and directed by Twyla Tharp, was nominated for 10 Tony Awards and took home two including Best Orchestrations—Billy’s first Tony Award win—and Best Choreography. www.billyjoel.com.
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Steinway Chronicle: A First in the Heart of Cajun Country
Nicholls State University unleashes a monster on campus as students, faculty, alumni and guest performers partake in the annual Monster Piano Concert.As seen in the Fall 2012 edition of the Steinway Chronicle.
THIBODAUX, LA. – Through an unbeatable combination of visionary leadership and four years of undying dedication, Nicholls State University recently etched its name on a prestigious roster of All-Steinway Schools.
“Nicholls State University is the first public university in Louisiana to achieve this distinction, and serious students of music know just how significant that designation is,” says Dr. David Boudreaux, Vice President for Institutional Advancement. “The students are truly grateful for the opportunity to learn, practice, and perform on the world’s finest pianos, and they are very proud that their regional comprehensive university has achieved such a distinction for their sake.”
Under the guiding hand of University President Dr. Stephen Hulbert, Dr. Boudreaux assembled a group of generous donors that made possible the All-Steinway achievement. “As leading businesspeople in the region, they understood the importance of music in our cultural lives, and they certainly understood that their gifts were investments that will be here long after we are gone,” he adds.
Dr. Luciana Soares, Associate Professor of Music, and Bruno Duarte, conservatory student, perform at Nicholls State University.
© MISTY LEIGH MCELROY/NICHOLLS STATE UNIVERSITY
Similar to reactions at other institutions around the world, the All-Steinway news produced a strong ripple effect in the robust heart of Cajun Country.
“The greatest benefit of being an All-Steinway School is the support from our administration and our donors,” says Dr. Carol Britt, who heads the Department of Music. “Their support for our program strengthens us in this time of budget cuts to education, and helps build excitement about what we are accomplishing.”
“Our friends at Nicholls State have been fantastic to work with,” adds Steven O. Kinchen, President of Hall Piano Co. in Metairie. “Most, if not all, of the funds to purchase the new pianos were raised from private donations, and that’s no small task when you are talking about a small community of approximately 20,000 residents.”
When word spread that Nicholls State was close to achieving its milestone, the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra invited the school to host a concert that included a world premiere performance by Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, the first female composer to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Steinway Artist Jeffery Biegel served as pianist for the evening.
“That simply would not have happened without our being an All-Steinway School,” explains Dr. Boudreaux, adding that Nicholls State is working with the New Orleans International Piano Competition to bring winning performers to campus in the future.
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108 New Pianos by Steinway to Captivate and Transform the Puerto Rico Conservatory
As seen in the Fall 2012 edition of the Steinway Chronicle.
SAN JUAN – Seeking only the finest tools to build a multi-cultural musical bridge between the Caribbean and mainland United States, the Puerto Rico Conservatory of Music chose pianos by Steinway & Sons.
The Conservatory’s Founder, Pablo Casals.
Photo credit: Puerto Rico Conservatory of Music
The historic institution now stands as the first All-Steinway school in Latin America, bringing with it precious cultural heritage rooted in the vision of celebrated Spanish cellist Don Pablo Casals. By importing orchestral musicians – most of them from America – Casals launched his world renowned namesake festival as a way to promote tourism on his adopted island. The immense success of his annual event prompted the government to create the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra in 1957, and two years later, Conservatorio de Música de Puerto Rico.
“With 108 beautiful new pianos by Steinway & Sons, we are truly proud to be the new tropical piano paradise of Latin America,” proclaims Chancellor Maria del Carmen Gil, herself an accomplished pianist and former student of Leon Fleisher. “The Puerto Rico Conservatory of Music now becomes a pianist’s wonderland! What an honor it is to be in such good company with more than 140 prestigious conservatories and music schools, who like us, are sharing in this distinguished All-Steinway seal.”
Students and faculty are thrilled with the factory fresh pianos. “They comment in total delight that this is like a dream come true,” she says. “For a music student, pianist or any other musician, the piano is the foundation of solid musicianship. Wonderful Steinway instruments now enrich the learning and teaching experience in all our programs of study.”
She goes on to stress the importance of having high quality equipment for practice and performance. “The piano is the pianist’s voice. Despite talent and skill, sometimes that voice may be distorted or muted somehow by unresponsive and poor sounding instruments,” Chancellor Gil says. “Like a chameleon, a pianist has to constantly adapt and transform his or her playing to suit the piano. A great instrument can make you shine; a poor instrument can make for difficult performances. Great instruments like the Steinway truly make the pianist’s voice sing.”
The Conservatory’s historic building, left, and new academic/performing arts complex are equipped with pianos by Steinway & Sons.The Conservatory initiated an $80 million, two phase construction project for two buildings that make up the campus on Avenida Ponce De Leon in the Santurce section of Miramar. The first phase called for restoring an existing historic building, while the second phase culminated earlier this year with delivery of 52 pianos to a new academic/performance complex. The work was done in concert with a $2 million capital campaign to complete the All-Steinway program.
The Steinways were purchased through a combination of private foundations, local businesses and a prominent group of individual donors including the incomparable Spanish tenor, Plácido Domingo.
Plácido Domingo, Steinway donor to the Puerto Rico Conservatory of Music.An illustrious performer at the Casals festival, Domingo funded one of two Model Ds for the Jesus Maria Sanroma Concert Hall, the main performance venue of the new Teatro Bertita y Guillermo L. Martinez. In total, the Conservatory owns six Model Ds, the largest number anywhere in Latin America.
“We are truly grateful for the wonderful support of our donors,” says Chancellor Gil. “Without them, we would not have achieved this important institutional goal of becoming an All-Steinway School.”
While continuing to educate orchestral musicians and public school teachers, the island landmark’s mission has evolved over the years to touch virtually every aspect of musical and cultural life in Puerto Rico. Today, the Conservatory serves approximately 3,000 students through post-secondary degrees in Classical and Jazz/Caribbean music performance, composition and music education, as well as formative programs for the community at large. It is a highly innovative approach within a Conservatory environment that incorporates elements of social transformation alongside more traditional course offerings.
Música 100x35, an island-wide initiative based on a model of Venezuela’s successful El Sistema program, makes music education available to socially and economically disadvantaged children from high poverty communities. Through daily group sessions in instrumental, ensemble and choral music, students delve into a variety of genres, often led by teachers who have used the positive power of music to transcend their own economically-challenged backgrounds.
The Conservatory also offers centers of learning for aspiring entrepreneurs in the music industry and those interested in preserving and disseminating the rich musical heritage of Puerto Rico.
From left, Aleksandr Bernhard of Steinway Piano Gallery Miami, and Sally Coveleskie, National Director of Institutional Sales, congratulate Chancellor Maria del Carmen Gil and Dean Melanie Santana with a plaque acknowledging the first All–Steinway School in the Caribbean.“Latin American countries, like all other countries in the world, feature almost exclusively Steinway & Sons pianos on their great concert stages,” says Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons – Americas. “This key designation of an All-Steinway School bestowed upon Conservatorio de Música de Puerto Rico will now raise the bar for other great music education institutions throughout the Caribbean, Central America and South America with respect to the pianos they provide for their students, faculty and visiting performers.”
And what would Maestro Casals think?
Chancellor Gil responds swiftly with a smile: “From where the Conservatory stands today – not only on a local but international basis – we are positive he would be very pleased with our progress.”
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Steinway Unveils New Selection Room Suite, Honors Beloved Technician
The Steinway Factory Selection Room.As seen in the Fall 2012 edition of the Steinway Chronicle.
NEW YORK – When Stuart Isacoff, author of “A Natural History of The Piano,” asked pianist Menahem Pressler about the Steinway in his teaching studio at Indiana University, Mr. Pressler had this to say:
“The other night I was playing the Schubert B-flat Sonata on it, and the piano was like a living soul. This was at the end of the day, and I was very tired. And yet I was reminded of what a happy man I am playing on such a piano. You become elated, invigorated, and inspired . . . all through something built by a factory. It tells me that there is more to life than we can see.”

His words were likely the result of one of the more than 1000 selections presided over by Dirk Dickten, a beloved master technician at Steinway & Sons for more than 25 years who passed away in August at the age of 53. In his honor, Steinway & Sons has named the new factory selection room suite The Dirk Dickten Selection Room.
Dirk understood that selecting a new Steinway is often the result of a life-long dream for a private pianist and, for an institution, usually the culmination of dedicated efforts involving a host of individuals coming together for the greater good of students, faculty and performing artists. Current Steinway Selection Room technicians also know that choosing a new Steinway is a delicate and passionate process, subject to individual taste in touch and tone. It is an exhilarating practice that requires patience, sensitivity and the most astute ears in the world.
Building on great chemistry within the existing facilities, The Dirk Dickten Selection Room is equipped with refined acoustics and warm architectural lighting to help meet the highest standards of the most discriminating client.
Selection Room Conference Area.
Shenandoah Conservatory of Music, Winchester, Va., was among the first institutions to experience the new selection room facilities when donors John and Marjorie Lewis purchased two Model B pianos as part of the school’s All-Steinway initiative. From left: Ray and Karen Hillyard; Karen Walker; Bob Larson; John O’Conor; Marjorie and John Lewis; Terry and Diana Sinclair.Prior to arriving at the selection room, the Steinway factory tour becomes an integral part of choosing a new Model B or D. Meeting the men and women who have handcrafted one’s personal Steinway has a profound effect on the overall experience when one chooses the piano that will be their companion for the rest of their life. When a patron decides to donate a new Steinway to an institution, touring the factory and visiting the selection room serves to enhance the true value of their gift.
The Steinway Factory Selection Room experience is something that will create the memory of a lifetime.
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Steinway Artist Feature: Rufus Wainwright Throws a Party with “Christmas 101”
Photo: Tina TyrellRemember the scene in A Charlie Brown Christmas when Linus reminds Charlie Brown about love, goodwill, peace and hope? “That’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown,” Linus says simply.
It seems Steinway Artist Rufus Wainwright got the message.
This month, along with his sister Martha, the larger-than-life Wainwright will continue a feel-good holiday tradition started by his late mother Kate McGarrigle—a tradition that focuses on family, friends and all the peace the holiday season can deliver. The Wainwrights’ “Christmas 101” performances will feature eclectic seasonal carols performed in French and English by McGarrigles, Wainwrights and musical friends. The shows, which have been staged since Kate launched the concept in 2005, will take place in California this year on three nights: December 19 in Oakland’s The Fox Theater and December 21 and 22 in UCLA’s historic Royce Hall, one of America’s great concert venues. The Wainwrights will also host a post-show gala each night to benefit the Kate McGarrigle Fund for sarcoma research.

The Wainwrights will share the stage with special guests including Maria Muldaur, Emmylou Harris, Van Dyke Parks and Carrie Fisher—not to mention the venerable nine-foot Steinway Model D concert grand that made its entrance to Royce Hall earlier this year. When Rufus Wainwright takes to that keyboard, he’ll be continuing a tradition that’s thrived in his family since they gathered around his grandmother’s 100-year-old Steinway upright each Christmas to sing carols together. And this was no ordinary family—this was the Wainwright-McGarrigle family, musical royalty, including Rufus’ father Loudon Wainwright III, his mother and aunt, Kate and Anna McGarrigle, Rufus himself, Martha, and any number of aunts, cousins and friends to add to the mix. “That old Steinway was very much the anchor of our victorious warship of music,” he says today. “It was always the centerpiece of our holiday.”
But childhood traditions notwithstanding, the “Christmas 101” shows represent a bit of a change in focus for the adult Rufus Wainwright, who was once known for emulating the decadently unrestrained Oscar-Wilde-inspired lifestyle of the metropolitan pop/rock star. “I was in that world for a long time,” he says during a recent interview. “I did—oh, whatever—I did all that. I hung out with Courtney Love,” he says, adding, with tongue firmly in cheek: “and did even worse things than that, if you can believe it.”
Times have changed. Over the past three years Wainwright lost his beloved mother Kate to cancer, married his partner Jörn Weisbrodt, became a father to Viva Katherine (her mother is Leonard Cohen’s daughter Lorca, who is Rufus’ lifelong friend) and released his seventh studio album, fittingly titled Out of the Game. He’s settling down now, by his own admission—reassembling his life to focus on marriage and parenthood. “We’re working hard to fit the proper role required to bring up a child, although the little angel grows up mainly with her mother,” he says. And Christmas, he says, feels like the right time to celebrate those changes—a movement toward family, quietude and reflection.
Photo: Tina TyrellBut it’s also a great time to have a party, he’s swift to point out. He’s quick, after a moment of pensiveness, to snap back into the funny, antic chatter for which he’s known and loved. “Oh god,” he says. “I get it from my mother. Toward the end, when she was very sick, she continued to want to do these Christmas shows. She did them to bring awareness to her disease and to raise funds for research, but she also did them as a way of having a good time, no matter what.” He laughs. “She was nonstop. The last show she ever did was the Christmas show, in Royal Albert Hall in London in 2009. It was completely sold out, one of the most amazing nights ever. Electric.”
“So we’re keeping the faith, Martha and I,” he continues. “We’re doing the shows in Kate’s memory and to raise money for sarcoma research. But it’s also just to have fun together. Both Martha and I live such busy lives and we have kids ourselves now. This is our way to get everyone together again, have a blast.”
Not to mention that the performance venues are just around the corner from nearly-two Viva, the newest light of his life. He smiles again. “Christmas is for kids,” he insists, sounding like a rather large kid himself. “And these shows, with my family and with Viva, help me remember that.”
OAKLAND/LOS ANGELES ALERT: Buy tickets today to see “Christmas 101” and attend post-show gala events, where you’ll mingle with Rufus and Martha Wainwright and their special guests. December 19 at The Fox Theater, Oakland and December 21 and 22, 2012, Royce Hall, UCLA. All proceeds benefit the Kate McGarrigle Foundation for sarcoma research.
About Rufus Wainwright 
Affectionately referred to by Elton John as “the greatest songwriter on the planet” and praised by the New York Times for his “genuine originality,” Grammy nominee Rufus Wainwright has established himself as one of the great male vocalists and songwriters of his generation, having created a body of work that spans the worlds of rock, opera, theater, dance and film. He is the son of folk singers Loudon Wainwright III and Kate McGarrigle, and brother of Martha Wainwright. Wainwright’s catalog includes eight albums and two DVDs to date, and he has appeared on numerous soundtracks and compilations, as well as collaborating with artists like Elton John, David Byrne, Rosanne Cash and Keane. He has composed music for a theatrical adaptation of Shakespeare’s Sonnets with noted Director Robert Wilson at the Berliner Ensemble, which premiered in April 2009 and continues to play to sold-out houses and festivals internationally. Wainwright’s acclaimed first opera, titled Prima Donna, premiered at the Manchester International Festival in July 2009. The opera made its London debut at Sadler’s Wells in April 2010, and its North American debut in Toronto at the Luminato Festival in June 2010. Excerpts have been performed with the Oregon Symphony for The Portland Institute for Contemporary Art’s Time-Based Art Festival in August 2010 as well as at the Royal Opera House in London in July (during an unprecedented five night run). The work received a 2011 Dora Award for Outstanding New Musical/Opera. Rufus’ latest work is a pop record produced by Mark Ronson titled Out Of the Game. He lives in Manhattan and Montauk with his husband, Jörn Weisbrodt. www.rufuswainwright.com.
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Steinway Record Label Receives its First Grammy®-award Nomination for Ute Lemper & Vogler Quartet

NEW YORK, NY (December 6, 2012) – The Steinway & Sons record label has received its first Grammy®-award nomination as announced by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) on December 6, 2012. Renowned German singer Ute Lemper—along with her collaborators and fellow countrymen the Vogler Quartet and Stefan Malzew—has been nominated for Best Classical Vocal Solo for her album Paris Days, Berlin Nights.
Released in March 2012, Paris Days, Berlin Nights is a phenomenal exploration of post-war Europe through song. Ute Lemper considers herself “an ambassador to the European songbook of the Weimar years,” and this album grapples with the complex nature of this era by exploring its music. Her tremendous vocal and artistic talent has been recognized world wide, and a Grammy®-award nomination further solidifies Lemper’s place in contemporary vocal music.
About the Steinway & Sons Record Label
The Steinway & Sons record label was founded in 2010 and has produced many phenomenal artists and albums since its inception. Recordings on the Steinway & Sons record label are produced by ArkivMusic, LLC, and can be purchased through ArkivMusic online, as well as other retailers. This collaboration under the umbrella of the historic Steinway & Sons is a perfect vessel for producing the finest quality recordings by some of the most talented musicians in the world.
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Sir Paul McCartney Calls on Steinway & Sons to Restore Some Motown Magic
Two legends meet in Steinway Hall as Berry Gordy, Jr. joins
Paul McCartney at the restored Steinway Grand Piano to raise funds for the Motown Museum.© 2012 MPL Communications Ltd / Photographer: Mary Ellen Matthews
As seen in the Fall 2012 edition of the Steinway Chronicle.
NEW YORK – It was a shopworn part of living history that graciously gave all it had to help define a distinctively American musical genre, the sounds of which echoed across the pond to profoundly influence four lads from Liverpool.
So last summer, when Paul McCartney went to sit behind an 1877 Steinway grand piano at the Motown Museum in Detroit, it came as no surprise there was little left in terms of recreating some vintage magic on the keys.
The former Beatle told museum officials he wished to aid in the restoration and then called on Steinway & Sons in New York – the very place that handcrafted the nine-foot Victorian rosewood instrument the same year that Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. Motown acquired the Steinway when it purchased Detroit’s Golden World Studio in 1967.
Ain't Nothin' Like the Real Thing! Steinway’s restoration team gathers around the Motown piano.“Paul asked if we would be willing to partner with him in rebuilding this historic piano and of course, we were very excited to get involved with such an extraordinary project,” says William Youse, Director of Technical Services and Special Projects at Steinway & Sons. The highly prized artifact was shipped from Motown to Steinway & Sons Restoration Center in Astoria, Queens.
“While the Museum did its absolute best to keep this instrument from deterio- rating any further, they faced a daunting task,” Mr. Youse observes, adding the piano had interventions that impacted the soundboard, strings, action, finish and case.
“We learned that the piano was restrung in the 1960s, and the action was reworked on different occasions, along with several major repairs to the soundboard. There were parts from many different pianos that were used just to make it work,’’ he recalls.
At some point, the original rosewood finish was converted to black. Fancy legs from the factory were replaced, as well. “All very noble efforts but in their totality did not add up to a playable piano, never mind a Steinway,” Mr. Youse says.
Motown representatives toured the factory and restoration facility, where they had a chance to meet the highly skilled craftspeople who would be responsible for breathing new life into the piano.
Experienced hands authentically restore the Motown Steinway.After the get-together, Steinway artisans were told to replace everything to bring the instrument back to its authentic splendor including the soundboard, keys, hammers, pins and strings, but they were also instructed to retain the original case. “We needed to make the piano safe to play as well as mobile,’’ says Mr. Youse. “Everyone became comfortable with each other’s ideas, and I believe they were thoroughly convinced that only Steinway & Sons should handle such a critical restoration.”
Steinway & Sons opened the restoration facility more than 25 years ago. “This is the only place in the western hemisphere where a Steinway & Sons piano can be returned to its resplendent beauty and performance standards while remaining 100 percent Steinway,” he asserts. “Nobody else can replace a Steinway & Sons soundboard with a Steinway & Sons soundboard, as we neither sell this extremely important part of the piano nor share its technology.”
All work performed at the Restoration Center is warranted by Steinway & Sons for the same term and conditions as a brand new Steinway. Mr. Youse explains it this way: “Here is where you come if you want your Steinway piano – signed, sealed and delivered – to remain a pure Steinway piano.”
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Steinway Artist Feature: Jenny Lin Finds Happiness in a Hybrid Sound

She’s a study in contrasts: slight of build yet, when seated at the piano, as powerful as a freight train; serious in her craft yet exultant in her performance; ethereally beautiful yet as approachable as the girl next door.
Meet Jenny Lin, the Taiwan-born New Yorker who is the latest artist to cut a full-length record on the two-year-old Steinway & Sons label. That record, Get Happy, is a collection of show tunes by legends including Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Harold Arlen, Richard Rodgers and Stephen Sondheim. The songs are arranged for solo piano by artists including Earl Wild, Dick Hyman, André Previn, Stephen Prutsman, Stephen Hough, Marc-André Hamelin and Christopher O’Riley. And the result, at Lin’s fingertips, is a show-stopping high-energy experience that blends the mystique of the classical genre with the accessibility of popular Broadway material. It’s a hybrid sound, she explains—a bit of tradition and a bit of pop. It’s fresh, unexpected, unpredictable.
Which makes it quite consistent with the artist’s life. In fact, Lin’s fall season has been nothing if not unpredictable. Slated to begin a tour at Manhattan’s Steinway Hall to promote the new album in early November, she was waylaid by the chaos of weather and the dangling boom of a mangled construction crane that haunted West 57th Street as the result of Hurricane Sandy. So, with her first concert postponed, she simply regrouped and headed for higher ground, kicking off the Get Happy tour with intimate, dealer-hosted shows in California, Missouri and Minnesota before returning to New York to plan the next leg. Upcoming stops include Texas, Colorado, Tennessee and a return to New York City for a postponed album “debut” at Le Poisson Rouge.
“With the storm, everyone lost an entire week, at least,” she says ruefully. “It was difficult to communicate, difficult to plan. So we simply refocused the tour, changed a few things up. But overall, I consider myself very lucky.”

So do the audiences who have the opportunity to see her perform. Lin is an exquisitely visual artist. Willowy and elegant, she presides at the keyboard with a strength and power that is unexpected, and she produces a sound so energetic and explosive that it completely belies her composed disposition. Words fail, in fact, to adequately paint the picture of what the Get Happy tour is all about. Stop reading, and click here for a taste of what Lin delivers at each performance—this sampling taken from a recent rehearsal in Kansas.
Lin brushes off the wide-eyed praise of her receptive fans, humbly deferring the appeal to the innovations of the arrangements. “I’ve been amazed by the reception to Get Happy,” she says. “People love this performance, and it’s probably because it’s a program that’s so universal. The audience can hum to it, but also it’s serious at the same time. Plus, these are not just any arrangements. There are hundreds—if not thousands—of arrangements of Gershwin tunes in music stores, but these are extraordinary. These are difficult arrangements which challenge not only the performer, but also the audience. You have to listen closely, because there are so many layers to experience.”
Experience is something Lin knows well. Since 2000, she has over twenty albums to her credit, and Get Happy is the second album Lin has released on the Steinway & Sons label; it follows 2011’s Silent Music, a collection of 28 works composed between 1958 and 1967 by Catalonian composer Federico Mompou. The Steinway & Sons label, launched in 2010 and distributed through Steinway subsidiary ArkivMusic, highlights exceptional pianists from the Steinway Artist roster performing on Steinway grand pianos. Lin’s new album joins the ranks of a diverse range of recordings by renowned classical, modern, jazz and popular piano artists.
Yet, despite the relatively recent recording partnership, Lin’s connection to the Steinway brand began when she was quite young. “I was fortunate,” she recalls. “When I was a teenager in Austria, my family got a hold of a beautiful Steinway Model B. It’s the piano I still have today, and it’s moved many times with me.” She stops for a moment, thinks about the way the brand has resonated with her through the years. “I think what it is, is this,” she says: “You feel like you can rely on this instrument everywhere you go. When you are touring, there are so many things that can be unexpected. But with Steinway, I always know what I can expect out of my instrument. I always have complete faith in it. No surprises. Steinway is a pure, consistent friend.”
And in a world of storms and stalemates, of dangling cranes and detours, a steadfast friend can be a very, very good thing.

About Jenny Lin
Born in Taiwan and raised in Austria, Lin studied with Noel Flores at the Hochschule für Musik in Vienna, with Julian Martin at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, and with Dominique Weber in Geneva. She has also worked with Leon Fleisher, Richard Goode, and Blanca Uribe, and with Dimitri Bashkirov and Andreas Staier at the Fondazione Internazionale per il pianoforte in Como, Italy. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in German Literature from The Johns Hopkins University and currently serves on the faculty of the 92nd Street Y.
Lin is widely admired for her adventurous programming and charismatic stage presence. Her ability to combine classical and contemporary repertoire has brought her to the attention of international critics and audiences. The New York Times praised her “remarkable technical command” and “gift for melodic flow.” The Washington Post extolled Lin’s “confident fingers” and “spectacular technique,” while Gramophone has hailed her as “an exceptionally sensitive pianist.” Lin’s latest release on the Steinway & Sons label is a scintillating take on some of the most indelible melodies in American music. “Get Happy” presents a collection of show tunes arranged for solo piano by Stephen Hough, Earl Wild, Christopher O’Reilly, Alexis Weissenberg and others. Lin’s performance selections include “I Got Rhythm,” “My Favorite Things,” and “Blue Moon.” www.jennylin.net.
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CBS This Morning Talks to 50 Year Steinway Veteran Wally Boot
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The Steinway Chronicle: Institutional News from Steinway & Sons
The Steinway Chronicle presents Institutional news from Steinway & Sons. This publication includes in-depth articles with compelling photographs covering Steinway's Institutional customers. If you haven't read the hard copy of the newsletter, read the online version available at the link below.
- Download the Fall/Winter 2012 Edition (PDF 10MB)
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Rufus Wainwright, Regina Spektor, Jason Moran, Carter Burwell, Jeremy Denk New 2012 Steinway Artists
NEW YORK, NY (November 14, 2012) – As one of the oldest and most highly respected brands in music, Steinway & Sons has a long and storied history of partnering with many of the greatest musicians around the globe. The legendary piano manufacturer is known for unparalleled quality and in 2012, more extraordinary talents joined the ever-expanding list of elite musicians who can officially claim the title of Steinway Artist. The complete list of concert artists and ensembles across the world who bear the coveted Steinway Artist title can be found at www.steinway.com/artists and none are paid endorsers of the piano. Each artist or ensemble personally owns a Steinway and has chosen to perform on a Steinway piano exclusively. Steinway remains the choice of 9 out of 10 concert artists, and it is the preferred piano of countless musicians, professional and amateur, throughout the world. While the number of Steinway Artists is certainly substantial, each one is carefully considered by evaluating their commitment to the brand and superior musical quality of composition and performance that has become synonymous with the Steinway name.
This year was particularly notable with many high profile classical, jazz and pop musicians joining the ranks of other esteemed Steinway Artists. Among them are singer-songwriters Rufus Wainwright and Regina Spektor, jazz legend Jason Moran, film composer Carter Burwell and concert pianist Jeremy Denk. Many offered a glimpse into their own personal history with the brand, including Wainwright, who recalled “I grew up playing my grandmother’s 100 year old Steinway. That instrument is still the spiritual center of our family’s musical legacy.” Raised in a household of celebrated musicians, Wainwright has been referred to by Elton John as "the greatest songwriter on the planet" and praised by The New York Times for his “genuine originality.” Another pop singer-songwriter, Regina Spektor, built a grassroots following in New York City’s East Village with a singular ability to tell stories through piano with remarkable flair. When chosen as a Steinway Artist, Spektor exclaimed “I am so excited to become a Steinway Artist – though I have played all my shows on Steinways for years – and loved the instruments and the people I’ve worked with – it is so nice to make it official!” For Jason Moran, dubbed by Rolling Stone as “the most provocative thinker in current jazz,” the Steinway difference was a more recent epiphany. The pianist and composer shared that his recent acquisition of a Steinway Model M “marks the first time I’ve owned a piano that I actually feel is inspiring to play.”
This eclectic mix of artists showcases the exceptional versatility of Steinway’s unequaled product, but the brand’s reach can be felt far beyond the obvious impact it has made in the commercial music market. Composers like Carter Burwell have utilized the piano’s superior resonance to provide the subtle, but essential musical score for many blockbuster film releases. Burwell’s compositions have been featured in many recent motion pictures such as Where The Wild Things Are, The Blind Side and even the record-breaking Twilight franchise, proving that the superior tonal quality of Steinway is contributing to 21st century entertainment in more ways than many realize.
However, the Steinway name will always be associated with its unmistakable sound on concert stages around the globe by revered pianists such as Jeremy Denk. Denk has appeared as a soloist with orchestras including The Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the symphony orchestras of Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, and London. As he so eloquently illustrated in his own unique way, “A piano is the way a pianist speaks to the world – and so you need to feel you have an ally, a friend that supports you and that allows your thoughts to become sound. Steinway is it for me. It’s the only piano that has this kind of centered sound that I can mold in interesting and expressive ways. It’s the only brand I feel comfortable playing on.”
It is with great pride that the exemplary Steinway Artists of 2012 are accepted into the elite ranks of the many spectacular talents who came before. There is no doubt that these musicians will continue to inspire the next generation of pianists to pursue excellence in partnership with a brand that is synonymous the world over for a timeless love of great piano music.
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Steinway Artist Feature: Lang Lang Reflects on the Journey
© Peter Hönnemann, under exclusive license to Sony Classical for Lang Lang’s new release “The Chopin Album.”In his autobiography Journey of a Thousand Miles, Lang Lang recounts a jaw-droppingly rigorous childhood quest—driven by his perfectionist father—for the young musician to become the best pianist in the world. “Number one,” Lang Lang’s father repeated, over and over again. “Number one.”
The focus started early. Lang Lang began playing piano at the age of three, and by the age of five, he had won the Shenyang Competition and had given his first public recital. Four years later, he left his devoted mother in his native Shenyang and relocated to Beijing with his father to enter Beijing’s Central Music Conservatory. He won first prize at the Tchaikovsky International Young Musicians Competition and played the complete 24 Chopin Études at the Beijing Concert Hall at age thirteen. By fourteen, Lang Lang had made his American debut at Steinway Hall, and by fifteen, he was packing his bags to leave China and attend the prestigious Curtis Institute in Philadelphia.
But despite the trophies, the ribbons, the accolades and the applause, before his arrival in Philly, Lang Lang and his father remained filled with uncertainty about the future. For more than a decade, they’d endured terrible poverty, isolation and tension to pursue the best teachers, the best festivals, the best opportunities. Yet competition on the international level was fierce, and—until one magical day after his arrival in Philadelphia—there was little to put the young Lang Lang’s mind at ease.
Then they arrived at the apartment that had been provided by the Curtis Institute.
“We rode the elevator to the seventh floor,” Lang Lang remembers. “We walked down the hallway and opened the door to an immaculate one-bedroom apartment equipped with central heating, central air-conditioning and, most amazing of all, a seven-foot Steinway B piano in the living room.”*
Fifteen-year-old Lang Lang practicing in his apartment at the Curtis Institute. © Lang Lang.It was a big moment. The piano symbolized that a page had been turned in the young artist’s life. “It was very important for me,” he says today. “A wonderful piano can bring you special feelings and specific tone colors and make you enjoy every minute in practice. Before Curtis I didn’t have many chances to practice on such a great piano. My family couldn’t afford a Steinway. That was the first time I felt that close to Steinway, my favorite piano brand, and I was thrilled. I’d long admired Horowitz, Rubinstein and many other great Steinway pianists. I felt I was in my dream.”
The new school and the new instrument reinvigorated Lang Lang, and within two years he was on a clear trajectory to greatness. His biggest break into stardom came at age seventeen, when he was called upon for a dramatic last-minute substitution at the “Gala of the Century,” playing a Tchaikovsky concerto with the Chicago Symphony. Since this gigantic performance, he has stunned audiences around the world with his performances and has also become a tireless champion of children’s music education.
In fact, Steinway & Sons has recognized Lang Lang’s popularity with children by creating five versions of the “Lang Lang Piano” designed for early music education. Some models of this series, which is available in China, feature a white board on which students can draw or write while they’re practicing the piano. This is the first time in its history that Steinway has ever used an artist’s name to produce pianos, and Lang Lang is proud of the partnership.
“I hope every kid who loves piano will have the best piano to practice on,” he says. “I’ve felt this way for a long time. I like children very much. I think they can play the piano in a really imaginative way. With the white board design on the Steinway piano, kids can write or draw their thoughts, feelings and inspirations at any time; this will bring more fun to practice. Even for kids, classical music deserves the best sound.” He pauses, perhaps thinking of his own childhood—of the long hours on the piano bench. “And children are the hope of classical music,” he adds.
But Lang Lang stops short of saying his own unconventional childhood denied him certain freedoms. “I don’t think I lost freedom in my childhood,” he says. “My freedom is in music, always.”
© Peter Hönnemann, under exclusive license to Sony Classical for Lang Lang’s new release “The Chopin Album.”Lang Lang has had a busy summer. In June, he played the Queens’ Diamond Jubilee Concert at Buckingham Palace. In July, he carried the London 2012 Olympic Torch through Hornchurch on the torch’s Redbridge to Bexley leg. In August, he was awarded the Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, an honor which caps an extraordinarily busy and productive period and the achievement of some unprecedented career highs.
“I have always dreamed big,” he says simply. Yet with so many new plans on the table, including new initiatives in children’s education and new Chopin recordings planned for next year, the future remains largely unwritten for Lang Lang, who celebrated his thirtieth birthday this year.
“I have journeyed far more than a thousand miles,” he says. “And yet my journey is still only beginning.”*
About Lang Lang
Recognized in 2009 by Time Magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world and heralded by the New York Times as the “hottest artist on the classical music planet,” Lang Lang has taken on the status of a global classical music icon. He has performed with leading orchestras in Europe, the United States, and his native China. He is increasingly well known around the world for his concert performances, television appearances, albums and soundtracks. In 2008 he founded the Lang Lang International Music Foundation with the mission of inspiring the next generation of classical music lovers and performers by cultivating tomorrow’s top pianists, championing music education at the forefront of technology, and building a young audience through live music experiences. His biography, Journey of a Thousand Miles, published by Spiegel & Grau in eleven languages, was released to critical acclaim. As part of his commitment to the education of children, he released a version of his autobiography specifically for younger readers, entitled Playing with Flying Keys. He lives in New York City. www.langlang.com.
*Quotes taken from Journey of a Thousand Miles, by Lang Lang and David Ritz. Spiegel & Grau, 2009.
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Steinway Artist Jenny Lin Promotes New Album “Get Happy” with Nationwide Tour
“Remarkable technical command and a gift for melodic flow."
— The New York Times
Pianist Jenny Lin is taking her latest irresistibly scintillating Steinway & Sons release on the road with some of the most indelible melodies in American music. Get Happy: Virtuoso Show Tunes for Piano – available now – presents evergreen songs by the likes of Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Harold Arlen, Richard Rodgers and Stephen Sondheim as arranged for solo piano by such famous pianists as Earl Wild, Dick Hyman, André Previn, Stephen Prutsman, Stephen Hough, Marc-André Hamelin and Christopher O’Riley, among others. Get Happy features “Blue Skies,” “Embraceable You,” “Begin the Beguine,” “My Favorite Things” and other of history’s most hummable melodies refracted through a kaleidoscope of keyboard virtuosity, with Lin an ideal pianist for the material – being renowned for her subtle touch, commanding technique and adventurous taste in modern and contemporary repertoire, from Busoni and Bloch to Shostakovich and Silvestrov. Her previous Steinway & Sons release, Silent Music – featuring Federico Mompou’s beautiful Música Callada – received high praise, including being chosen as one of 2011’s best albums by The New York Times. Lin will be performing songs from the new album for music lovers in Steinway showrooms across the country through December of this year.
About the meeting of the “popular” and the “serious” on Get Happy: Virtuoso Show Tunes for Piano, Jenny Lin says: “It depends on how one defines 'popular' and 'serious.' A lot of these pieces are extremely virtuosic. Perhaps the original tunes themselves are popular, but the materials used in the arrangements are serious. What sets these arrangements apart is that they are all by performing pianists. I have always admired pianists who can play and compose, and I wanted to pay tribute to them with this album. They are our present-day versions of Liszt and Busoni. Also, I am always curious about new repertoire, always looking for ideas and music that bring something new to listeners.”
Get Happy: Virtuoso Show Tunes for Piano represents music as its most exuberant and lyrical – and universal. Lin says: “I remember hearing a lot of these tunes when I was a child in Taiwan and loving them. People from any culture and era can appreciate them. The songs are so well written, so warm and welcoming, so delightful as pure music. George Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and the other composers on this album were genius melodists. They created a universal language that everyone can embrace. And a successful arrangement can only enhance the greatness of this music, giving us a new and surprising way to appreciate it.”
Confirmed tour dates at Steinway & Sons dealers can be found below:
- November 9, 7:00pm - Schmitt Music Minneapolis, Edina, MN
- November 11, 3:00pm - Steinway Piano Gallery, Pasadena, CA
- November 13, 7:00pm - Schmitt Music Kansas City, Overland Park, KS
- November 16, 7:00pm - Steinway Hall - Fort Worth, Fort Worth, TX
- November 17, 7:00pm - Steinway Hall - Dallas, Dallas, TX
- November 18, 5:00pm - Steinway Hall - Plano, Plano, TX
- December 1, 7:00pm - Schmitt Music Denver, Englewood, CO
- December 6, 7:00pm - Steinway Piano Gallery, Nashville, TN
“Get Happy: Broadway Showpieces for Piano”
- “Blue Skies” (Berlin-Hyman)
- “I Got Rhythm” from Girl Crazy (Gershwin-Wild)
- “Eliza at Ascot” from My Fair Lady (Loewe-Malzew)
- “Lover” from Love Me Tonight (Rodgers-Weissenberg)
- “Begin the Beguine” from Jubilee (Porter-Walter)
- “Johanna” from Sweeney Todd (Sondheim-O’Riley)
- “Carousel Waltz” from Carousel (Rodgers-Hough)
- “March of the Siamese Children” from The King and I (Rodgers-Hough)
- “Blue Moon” from Manhattan Melodrama (Rodgers-Previn)
- “Cheek to Cheek” from Top Hat (Berlin-Hyman)
- “Embraceable You” from Girl Crazy (Gershwin-Wild)
- “Meditation on `Laura’ ” from the film Laura (Raskin-Hamelin)
- “Bess, You Is My Woman Now” from Porgy and Bess (Gershwin-Saperton)
- “Fascinatin’ Rhythm” from Lady, Be Good (Gershwin-Wild)
- “So in Love” from Kiss Me, Kate (Porter-Anderson)
- “My Favorite Things” from The Sound of Music (Rodgers-Hough)
- “Hello, Young Lovers” from The King and I (Rodgers-Hough)
- “Get Happy” from 9:15 Revue (Arlen-Prutsman)
News & Events
Useful Information Concerning Flood Damaged Pianos
Due to the unfortunate events and widespread flooding caused recently by Hurricane Sandy, we are posting our information regarding pianos that may have been damaged by flood waters. This information is relevant not just to pianos that were potentially damaged in this storm, but also to any flood situation involving your piano. Our heartfelt wishes for recovery go out to everyone who was affected by this terrible disaster.
Piano Exposure to Water/Moisture
Exposure to or immersion in water can indeed be very damaging to a piano. Even the exposure only to extreme changes in temperature and humidity for a few days in unoccupied homes and buildings can create extended instability in an instrument that will require numerous tunings and regulation of the action to ensure proper performance.
Immersion of the Piano above the Case
Pianos that have been sitting in water that has risen to the level of the case or higher will in all likelihood be damaged too badly to be restored and must be replaced. Direct exposure of the case, soundboard, strings, and action assembly to water can commonly cause major glue failure of integral structural components.
The rim and keybed of the piano are perhaps the most critical elements in determining the severity of present and future damage. The glued laminations of the rim can be weakened by exposure to water and cannot effectively be repaired. Damage by water also will not necessarily manifest itself immediately. It may take six to nine months for the effects of glue failure and wood deterioration to become fully evident.
Even the solidity of a Steinway rim cannot overcome the natural forces that occur when wood is exposed directly to water. The strings in a piano can have a combined tension of over twenty tons. Failure of the glue in the rim laminations severely compromises the ability of the rim to sustain these forces.
Shallow Water Exposure
Pianos that have been sitting in a few inches of water, but where the water has not reached the level of the case, are not necessarily ruined beyond repair. However, the effects of moisture still take their toll on all of the piano components and even these pianos would best be replaced rather than repaired. Constant exposure to excessive humidity can cause rust to form on the many metal parts in a piano including strings, tuning pins, hardware, action parts, and the cast iron plate that supports the tons of tension exerted by the strings. The soundboard will also be exposed to harsh climatic conditions that will cause severe expansion and contraction of the spruce that comprises the soundboard. The glue joints and wood grain of the soundboard can be permanently damaged by this movement and thus require replacement of the soundboard. The only way to ensure proper long-term integrity of the instrument is replacement of these parts.
The finish of the piano can also damaged by excessive moisture. The wood under the finish will move in the same manner as the soundboard described above. Cracking, checking, and other finish defects will likely result from this and thus necessitate refinishing of all furniture components of the instrument.
A thorough examination of the piano is the only way to determine the extent of the damage. Your Steinway & Sons dealer is the best resource for this examination. You can find your closest dealer at www.steinway.com/dealer.
The Presence of Mold and Other Bacteria
Mold and other bacteria can form in the many areas of the piano that cannot effectively be reached for cleaning and eradication. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) states on their website:
After natural disasters such as hurricanes, tornadoes, and floods, excess moisture and standing water contribute to the growth of mold in homes and other buildings. When returning to a home that has been flooded, be aware that mold may be present and may be a health risk for your family.
For further information concerning mold and other health concerns, visit the CDC website at www.bt.cdc.gov/disasters/hurricanes.
It is recommended that the piano owner consult a specialist in mold and bacteria removal prior to undertaking any repairs or restoration of the piano.
Assistance from Your Steinway Dealer
Your Steinway dealer is the best resource for you as you make decisions regarding your Steinway, Boston, or Essex piano. They will have expert help concerning the replacement or restoration of your piano and can assist with evaluations and data necessary for insurance claims. You can find your closest dealer at www.steinway.com/dealer.
Tips for Filing Insurance Claims
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Give immediate notice to your insurance company of your homeowner's insurance claim. Call your agent about any damages you feel you will need to file a claim for. Your agent will give you information on what steps to take next for your particular policy. It is best to keep your insurance agent's phone number and policy number in your wallet so you will have the information if it is not accessible in your home. Also, keep track of all communication between you and your agent regarding your homeowner's insurance claim.
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Document and assess the damage to your property. Try to document damage by using a video camera and/or digital camera along with written documentation of all damage you immediately notice and keep those documentation items handy for any future damage you discover.
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Make any temporary repairs you can. You are responsible for preventing future damage, so try to make any immediate repairs you can (such as putting a tarp over a leaky roof). Also make sure that you save the receipts from the supplies you use so that you can be reimbursed for these expenses (make sure that the expenses are reasonable to avoid a denial of reimbursement).
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Compile a list of items that you suspect are damaged or missing. Go one room at a time and have the whole family there to help remember everything that was previously in the room. If you have replacement-cost coverage on your personal property items, many of your items should be replaced new, even if their current value is below that cost (example: a new couch will replace an old couch that may have been only worth a few dollars) so it is important to remember everything that was damaged. This step is much easier if an inventory list of items was already compiled beforehand and kept in a safe place away from the home.
- Wait patiently. If your area has just been through a severe disaster, people with more severe damage will most likely be handled first. Keep in touch with your agent during your waiting period to get updates on how your homeowner's insurance claim is coming along. If you feel that you are not being treated fairly or your claim is being handled inappropriately you can contact your state insurance commissioner to file a complaint. Don't forget your loss-of-use coverage usually available in your homeowner's insurance policy that will cover reasonable living expenses if you cannot live in your home during repairs or have been denied access by a government order.
Registry of Damaged and Destroyed Pianos
We strongly recommend that you receive a letter from Steinway that provides the replacement value of your existing Steinway, Boston, or Essex piano. We offer this service to provide you with official documentation that may be useful in filing insurance claims or updating your current inventory documentation. If your piano has been destroyed, we would also like for you to contact us so that we can include this in our historical records for Steinway, Boston, and Essex pianos.
To obtain this letter or to contact us concerning your piano, please write to the address below or contact us via email at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). Please include the serial number (and model, if known). This information is necessary to determine the replacement value of your piano. Be sure to include your address for our return mail to you.
Steinway & Sons
Flood Damage Information
One Steinway Place
Long Island City, NY 11105
News & Events
Charm of The Dragon - Steinway & Sons Commemorative Edition Piano Sold for 6.9 million RMB

BEIJING, CHINA (October 31, 2012) - At the Inspiration-Artistic Design auction run by China Guardian, Steinway Commemorative Edition Piano Charm of The Dragon, which attracted much attention of the public before the auction, closed for RMB 6.9 million.
Steinway Commemorative Edition Piano Charm of The Dragon, designed by the distinguished Chinese scholar Mr. Tian Jiaqing, was just unveiled on October 10 and exhibited for the auction preview from October 25 to 27 at the Conference Center of Beijing International Hotel. Charm of The Dragon, the first Steinway Commemorative Edition Piano for China, is a perfect combination of the rich Chinese culture and long history, as well as a symbol of modern piano building.

Taking the idea of the ancient Chinese dragon that stands for vitality and integrity, Mr. Tian designed a dragon logo for the Steinway concert grand piano. Both the music stand made like a traditional Chinese fan and the bench modeled after the matching desk of the traditional Chinese instrument Guqin embody the exquisite furniture style designed and made by Jiaqing. Beyond that, the platform that holds the music desk features foldable signature books at the both ends, so that future performers can leave their written testimonials on it. On the wooden pages, handwriting will penetrate into the grains of the wood, and so will never disappear as time goes by. With the uncompromising Steinway dedication in the building of the piano, Charm of The Dragon itself is an extremely outstanding Steinway concert grand piano in terms of sound and musical performance.
The collector who has successfully won out and owned Charm of The Dragon can not only get satisfaction from the superior sound and artistic pleasure from this Steinway Commemorative Edition Piano, but also enjoy the special tracking service provided by Steinway & Sons. The company will offer the exclusive transport and tuning service for Charm of The Dragon on any important musical occasions, as well as professional consulting service regarding the piano maintenance.
Undoubtedly, Steinway pianos have been the most valuable pianos in the world and collected by major museums worldwide such as Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and Piano Museum of Manhattan. Several presidents in the history of the United States of America, including Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Harry S Truman and Ronald Wilson Reagan all treated Steinway pianos as precious treasures in their collections. The unsurpassed quality of Steinway pianos, in particular the extremely strict material selection, the innovative 128 technical patents and the superior traditional handcraftsmanship, ensures its great investment value and potential. Steinway Commemorative Edition Piano Charm of The Dragon will definitely have its own story to tell in the generations to come.
News & Events
Steinway Artist Feature: Night Owl Adam Young Takes Flight
It’s the kind of success story many young artists dream of: a shy insomniac, lugging boxes and loading trucks by day, then whittling away the long nights making music in the basement of his parents’ home. Alone but focused, he reaches out to connect with an audience through social media—posting his musical compositions on MySpace and YouTube and watching in amazement as his exposure and his fan base skyrocket overnight. Then come the record deals. The tours. The dream collaborations with musicians and artists he’d once admired only from afar.
Meet Steinway Artist Adam Young, known to many of his fans as the electronic musical venture Owl City. Though he’s largely recognized for his electronic pop oeuvre and his experiments in “laptronica,” Young is also a diverse instrumentalist with a deep affinity for the classical sound and aesthetic of the acoustic piano.
Young’s ascension to stardom was a meteoric rise he’s described as “zero to sixty in one second.” To put the time frame in perspective, consider that Owl City hit the music scene right about the same time Steve Jobs was introducing the first iPhone. And thanks to the Platinum-selling 2009 single “Fireflies” from Young’s second album Ocean Eyes and the 2012 summer smash “Good Time” duet with Canadian singer Carly Rae Jepsen, the electronic energies of Owl City are now almost as ubiquitous as the iPhone itself.
Young admits it’s been a wild ride. “It was tough to process at first,” he says. He’s had to work at finding ways to stay grounded, to stay focused on the music while the trappings of stardom whirl around him. One way he’s succeeded is by staying close to family and friends in his hometown of Owatonna, Minnesota. Another way is by beginning all of his musical compositions in an unlikely place for a young electronic pop artist: seated at an antique Steinway Model L grand piano.

“My Steinway,” he begins, then stops, begins again—“It’s…it’s…I love it so much.” He laughs. His energy is infectious, the aura of a person whose thoughts are firing on a level that outpaces his ability to articulate them. “It gives me so much inspiration,” he says.
Even though Young, born in 1986, is “young” indeed, in relation to the venerable piano manufacturer that will soon celebrate its 160th anniversary, he clearly remembers his introduction to the brand. “Back when I was nine or ten, I used to go into my church in Owatonna, where there was a Steinway Model D. I’d slip in on a weekday when there was nobody there and just fiddle around on the piano. It had such a magical quality to it.”
Young’s career, especially through the work he’s completed as Owl City, has taken him in a decidedly electronic direction. But he’s never moved far from the acoustic piano roots that drove his early composing efforts. “I’m very interested in the marriage between electronic music and acoustic instruments,” he says, “so I love featuring acoustic pianos in some of the dance music I produce. As an electronic-oriented artist there is something so fulfilling, so amazing, so inspiring about the acoustic piano. There are no electronics to it—it’s wood and wires. That’s so cool to me. There’s no editing and there’s no sequencing. The piano is designed to just feel. And you do. You feel so much more sitting at it than you do working with a synthesizer plug in, looking at a screen on an airplane or wherever you may be.”
But what about creating that “feeling” on the road? Young laughs. “Well, here’s the bummer,” he says. “I wish I could take my Steinway everywhere I go out on the road. I love it that much. I’m that attached to it. I write all my music, from the first note to the last, sitting at my Steinway in my house.”
So he’s developed a strategy for bringing some of the inspiration of his Steinway along for the ride, even when the ride is on an airplane or a tour bus. “What I do is record and sample tracks when I’m at home, working at the piano,” he says. “I compile music files. Then I bring those files with me on the road. A lot of times those clips, those simple piano recordings will be all the inspiration I need to create a new track. So the Steinway still has a presence in my music, even on the road.”

On the road indeed. As the summer winds to a close and the fall revs up, Young has dates booked all over the United States and Europe, not to mention Japan, Indonesia, Australia and New Zealand. He admits it’s going to be a very busy year, and that he’s still a little stunned by the pace of success.
“This was unexpected. This level of performing, of making music—it was something I didn’t think I’d be able to do. So the next step is to keep it going; to keep doing what I love and keep trying new things,” he says. “I’m so blessed to be here.”
About Adam Young
Singer-songwriter and instrumentalist Adam Young is widely known for his work with Platinum-selling electronic music project Owl City, which he created in 2007 in his hometown of Owatonna, Minnesota. Prior to signing with Universal Republic records, Young self-released 2007’s EP Of June and 2008’s album Maybe I’m Dreaming, both of which reached the Top 20 on Billboard’s Electronic Albums chart. Young’s second album, Ocean Eyes, featured the smash hit “Fireflies,” which went to #1 in 24 countries including the U.S., where it hit the top spot twice, and sold more than 12 million downloads worldwide. Owl City released its third studio album All Things Bright and Beautiful in 2011 and its fourth, The Midsummer Station, in August 2012. The latest album features a collaboration with Carly Rae Jepson for the single “Good Time.” Of Young’s eclectic approach to both classical and electronic styles, The New York Times wrote it is “a textbook illustration of how the music business needs new and old forms of media to make an artist a star.” In addition to his recording and performance work, Young is the founder of Sky Harbor Studios, where he provides remixing and production for artists including Dispatch, John Mayer, Relient K and Armin van Buuren. www.ayoungmusic.com and www.owlcitymusic.com.
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YouTube: Paul McCartney’s Video Highlights from Motown/Steinway Event
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Steinway and RISD Collaborate to Explore New Art Case Piano Designs
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Andrew Rangell Surveys J.S. Bach’s “The Art of Fugue”
“Rangell does things with these towering works than no one has done before.” — All Music Guide on the pianist’s Steinway & Sons set of late Beethoven
Pianist Andrew Rangell has plotted an individual, ever-involving course in music, setting his virtuosic talents to illuminating the most profound music in the canon, from J.S. Bach to Janácek, from Haydn to Stravinsky. Rangell has, according to All Music Guide, “through his commanding technique, prodigious intellect and consummate artistry, created a series of recordings that stand comparison to the best ever released.” Rangell’s recording of Bach’s The Art of Fugue will be released on September 25, 2012 (with the digital release on September 4). Deeply attuned to the recording process – the pianist serving as his own session producer – Rangell recorded The Art of Fugue as the first commercially released album to be made at the Shalin Liu Performance Center in Rockport, Massachusetts.
For Rangell, The Art of Fugue is the latest entry in an acclaimed journey through Bach’s greatest works for the keyboard, with the pianist having previously recorded the Goldberg Variations, The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, the Italian Concerto and the Six Partitas, among much else by the composer. Reflecting on his way with Bach, International Record Review called him “a free-thinker among pianists – a master of graded dynamics and the long crescendo. Rangell's consistently provocative playing and ideas are so interesting that we can hardly keep ourselves from appreciating them.” The New York Times has said that Rangell’s “free-spirited Bach is distinguished by its powerful drive and intensity and a remarkable articulation that illuminates contrapuntal intricacies with microscopic clarity.”
Rangell wrote his own penetrating album essay for The Art of Fugue, explicating the content and context of the work even as he underscores his emotional connection to it:
The Art of Fugue is Bach’s final major instrumental composition – and a farewell testament for the ages. It is an ordered set of 14 fugues and four canons, all deriving from a single theme, and all sharing the same key of D minor. A unique and prodigious demonstration of contrapuntal craft and imagination, the work was not fully completed at the time of Bach’s death. It had been begun some eight years earlier, around 1741-42, as two other keyboard masterworks were being brought to fruition: the second book of The Well-Tempered Clavier and the Goldberg Variations, both destined to reap a worldly popularity never to be accorded their more forbidding, inward-looking successor. In the last decade of his life, Bach withdrew from many of his longstanding activities as a composing cantor. And now, “alone with his genius,” Bach joyfully and purposefully immersed himself in one self-assigned project after another, the culmination of a life’s work, intending to place his own indelible stamp on the already vanishing art of pure instrumental counterpoint. In The Art of Fugue, practically every movement is long, elaborate, even arduous. Texture is largely unchanging. The D-minor tonality is a constant. The language is austere, the tone serious – even through contrast. The “variations” unfold at a glacial rate. And yet! Such is the triumph, and the mystery, of this impossible enterprise that its slow evolution yields not so much a drama as a vast and moving meditation...
If the Goldberg Variations, with its overview of Baroque styles, is Bach’s “most worldly” keyboard creation (as Charles Rosen has called it), The Art of Fugue, conceived at almost the same time, would seem to be his most unworldly. Or, otherworldly ... It is doubtful to me that Bach constructed, or intended, The Art of Fugue for full performance. But he unquestionably regarded it as a summa of his art and had the highest hopes for its dispersion into the minds and ears of generations of musicians to come. Let us not forget that throughout his lifetime of composing for keyboard, Bach’s guiding precept was always to combine instruction with delight. I have been moved and nourished in my study of these pieces; therefore, I have sought to lift them off the page – and to place them lovingly in the ears of those who would listen.
About Andrew Rangell
Pianist Andrew Rangell has recorded 25 albums on the Dorian, Bridge and Steinway & Sons labels. Some two decades ago, Mr. Rangell’s recording debut featured performances of Bach’s Goldberg Variations, F-sharp minor Toccata and the two Ricercares from The Musical Offering. More recently, the pianist’s superlative recordings of The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, Italian Concerto, Partitas, French Suites and other works have established him among today’s most distinguished interpreters of Bach. His many other recordings reveal Mr. Rangell to be an artist of exceptional scope and affinity. These discs range from composers such as Sweelinck, Gibbons, Tisdale and Froberger across several centuries to Stravinsky, Enescu, Schoenberg, Ives, Nielsen, Fartein Valen and Christian Wolff. Recently, Mr. Rangell has created a new album for future release, featuring folk-influenced masterworks by Bartók, Kodály and Janáček.
Mr. Rangell made his New York debut as winner of the Malraux Award of the Concert Artists’ Guild, and he has since performed and lectured throughout the United States and in Europe and Israel. He has also taught on the faculties of Dartmouth College, Middlebury College and Tufts University. In the 1980s, already recognized as a distinctive recitalist and collaborative artist, Mr. Rangell gained national attention – and the award of an Avery Fisher Career Grant – for his vivid, probing traversal of the complete Beethoven sonata cycle on stage in New York, Boston, Cleveland, Rochester, Denver and other U.S. cities. A hand injury sustained in 1991 forced Mr. Rangell to gradually alter the trajectory of his career, and he eventually placed his highest priority on recording. In recent years, he has created several DVDs for children, integrating his special talents as author, illustrator, narrator and pianist.
News & Events
Thomas Kurrer to Retire from Steinway & Sons
WALTHAM, Mass., Sept. 21, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc. (NYSE: LVB) today announced that Thomas Kurrer will retire from his position as President and CEO of Steinway & Sons Worldwide by the end of this year.
Mr. Kurrer has had an outstanding 23-year career at Steinway & Sons. He joined the company as Managing Director of Steinway Germany and undertook responsibility for Steinway's European and Asian-Pacific operations. During his tenure, Steinway established operations in both Japan and China and grew its retail piano operations in both Europe and the Americas. After his promotion to President Worldwide in 2008, Mr. Kurrer spearheaded Steinway's brand harmonization initiative, establishing consistency of the iconic brand's image across the globe.
Commenting on Mr. Kurrer's retirement, Michael Sweeney, CEO of Steinway Musical Instruments, said, "On behalf of our employees worldwide, I'd like to thank Thomas for his extraordinary leadership, particularly over the last five years. Thomas took the reins of Steinway & Sons just prior to the global economic downturn. His sound guidance through very challenging times helped the company emerge as the strong competitor it is today. Although Thomas' retirement has been planned for some time, he has agreed to consult for Steinway & Sons in 2013 and remains a member of Steinway Musical Instruments' Board of Directors."
Since Steinway Musical Instruments is in the process of evaluating strategic alternatives, the operational duties of President of Steinway Worldwide will be assumed by SMI CEO Michael Sweeney, with the regional heads of Steinway & Sons Americas, Europe and Asia-Pacific reporting to him as of October 1, 2012.
About Steinway Musical Instruments
Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc., through its Steinway and Conn-Selmer divisions, is a global leader in the design, manufacture, marketing and distribution of high quality musical instruments. These products include Bach Stradivarius trumpets, Selmer Paris saxophones, C.G. Conn French horns, Leblanc clarinets, King trombones, Ludwig snare drums and Steinway & Sons pianos. Through its online music retailer, ArkivMusic, the Company also produces and distributes classical music recordings. For more information about Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc. please visit www.steinwaymusical.com.
News & Events
Motown Museum Announces Project: Harmony a Success
NEW YORK CITY, September 19, 2012 — One of Motown’s prized musical instruments, a nine-foot 1877 Steinway grand piano, made its debut at a charitable event to benefit Motown Museum at Steinway Hall in New York City on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012, where Motown founder Berry Gordy and Paul McCartney played it for the first time following its extensive restoration.
With 100 patrons of Motown Museum in attendance, guests had the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hear Paul McCartney share with the audience why he was moved to support the restoration of this piano—one of the many instruments that helped create the legendary Motown Sound—following a visit to Motown Museum in July 2011, saying “We were wandering around Studio A inside Motown Museum, when I saw this piano I thought, I can’t come to Motown and not tinker on it. Once I realized it was unplayable, I called Steinway & Sons and they also realized…this piano was part of a major moment in history. And, now people in the future will record on it and keep the legacy of Motown alive.”
He also shared his personal appreciation for Motown and its musical influence.
“Growing up in Liverpool as little kids we started to get a feel for American music,” said McCartney. “And, suddenly it all changed—there was this sound we never heard before. So we bought the records like everyone else, we learned them.” McCartney said jokingly.
He continued, “When I went to Detroit last year, for me the Museum was such a special place where this music was made. If you are in Detroit you must go and see it—its history—that’s what it is.”
Motown founder Berry Gordy spoke about the lasting cultural influence and social impact of Motown, the upcoming, highly anticipated opening of Motown: The Musical on Broadway in spring 2013 and the vital role and bright future of Motown Museum—as the physical space where the celebrated Motown legacy and its artifacts are protected and preserved to inspire future generations. He also told a story about the day he heard The Beatles wanted to use three Motown songs on one of their albums.
“That was the day Motown truly went international thanks to The Beatles,” said Gordy. “It is amazing to me how music continues to bring people together. Paul and I grew up thousands of miles apart and here we are united in music.”
Gordy continued, “I am so proud to stand next to you tonight,” he said to McCartney. “You are a dear friend who was the catalyst for this evening because of your love and appreciation of Motown.”
Paul McCartney and Berry Gordy unveiled the piano together by removing a covering with the Steinway & Sons emblem, with Paul McCartney saying to Berry Gordy, “I think you should kick it off, it’s your piano.”
Following the unveiling, the two musical icons together played an electrifying rendition of Motown’s 1959 first hit record “Money (That’s What I Want)” written by Berry Gordy that was subsequently covered by The Beatles. Berry Gordy started the song and then graciously asked Paul McCartney to take over. Paul McCartney then continued his performance by playing “My Valentine” followed by “Lady Madonna” and “Hey Jude.”
The meaning behind Project: Harmony—to celebrate Motown’s lasting legacy following this piano’s restoration—inspired other artists to perform and show their support as part of this special evening. Following McCartney and Gordy’s performance, the energy of the evening continued with singer/songwriter Michael Bolton and Motown star Valerie Simpson performing a powerful rendition of “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough.” Avid Detroit supporter Kid Rock was also in attendance.
“My childhood was greatly influenced by Motown,” said Michael Bolton. “Listening to Paul McCartney talk about the influence of Motown tonight speaks to its magnificence and impact.”
The evening concluded with a live auction, with bidding led by Leila Dunbar—a recognized auctioneer and featured appraiser on Antiques Roadshow on PBS. The auction featured collectible music items to benefit Motown Museum, including a one-of-a-kind, metallic white 2000 Gibson Les Paul Standard Guitar signed by Paul McCartney and Berry Gordy, Berry Gordy and Smokey Robinson autographed “Shop Around” sheet music, two tickets to the opening night of Motown: The Musical, including access to a private post-reception following the event, two tickets to Paul McCartney’s “On The Run” North American VIP tour and a private party at Motown Museum for up to 200 people.
“This event served as another example of the continued worldwide appreciation of Motown, the depth of its enduring legacy and the powerful ability of this timeless music to transcend generations and move audiences today,” said Robin R. Terry, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Motown Museum. “We won’t soon forget the excitement and energy present this evening surrounding this piano and its place in music history thanks to Paul McCartney and Steinway & Sons. Their generosity has inspired others, including our patrons and the other artists who joined us for this special evening. Project: Harmony was a fitting celebratory send off for this piano as it makes its way home to Detroit following this restoration, where inside Motown Museum it will continue to be treasured, preserved and protected as an enduring part of Detroit and Motown’s lasting legacy.”
Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons—Americas said, “Steinway & Sons was honored to play our part in the restoration of this historic Steinway piano in the same New York factory where it was originally built in 1877. We are equally honored that the Motown Museum allowed us to host the public unveiling of this piano, Project: Harmony, at Steinway Hall. Motown and Steinway & Sons are inextricably linked in the annals of American music through the great Motown music that was performed and recorded on Steinway pianos. We feel that this piano is the embodiment of this partnership for the ages.”
Now that the event is complete, the piano will make its final journey home to Detroit where it will be put back on exhibit in Studio A inside Motown Museum. Plans are still being finalized for the arrival of the instrument in Detroit in late fall, where the Museum plans to utilize the newly restored piano in future performance and educational events.
The story of Project: Harmony began when Paul McCartney visited the Motown Museum in July of 2011, when he was so moved by its musical aura that he later declared it to be the “Holy Grail.” The next day after his concert in Detroit, he called the Museum to offer his support restoring this historic piano. Now its restoration is complete and all of its internal components are restored to professional recording quality. While the original strings, hammers and “action” were worn beyond repair, they were retained and will be returned to the Museum for exhibit. The piano’s case was left as is to preserve its authenticity and DNA, while the legs—which were not original—were replaced.
Built in 1877, the Victorian rosewood piano first made its way to Motown when the studio acquired Golden World Records in 1967. This facility was redubbed Motown Studio B and was used by the stable of Motown artists, musicians and songwriters to create more music by the likes of Marvin Gaye, Earl Van Dyke of the original Funk Brothers, Stevie Wonder and Edwin Starr, to name a few.
Patrons of this exclusive event showed their support for Motown Museum and the importance of this cultural gem with their own individual contributions of $10,000 following the lead of Paul McCartney and Steinway & Sons’ generosity.
About Motown Museum
Founded in 1985 by Esther Gordy Edwards, Motown Museum is a 501(c)(3) not for profit, tax-exempt organization in Detroit. The Museum is committed to preserving, protecting and presenting the Motown story through authentic, inspirational and educational experiences.
Press Contact:
Andrea Trapani
Motown Museum / Identity PR
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
(313) 220-9500 (cell)
News & Events
Special Collections
News & Events
Piano for Body, Mind and Soul
There has always been a recognized trinity between the mind, the body, and the therapeutic qualities of music. And the piano, specifically, has been a long-recognized source of remedy for those seeking escape and creative expression. But recent years have also offered a wealth of scientific studies that demonstrate our instincts have always been correct: playing the piano offers proven benefits—from physical and intellectual to social and emotional—to people of all ages.
Let’s Get Physical
Who knew? Those piano lessons we took when we were young offered specific physical benefits to our developing bodies. And piano lessons and practice can also, it turns out, improve the physical health of adults and the elderly. Dr. Arthur Harvey, retired professor at University of Hawaii at Manoa, published a study through the American Music Conference that details the vast physiologic benefits generated by regular musical practice. One obvious boon of regular piano playing, Harvey found, is the sharpening of fine motor skills in children. But playing music, according to Harvey’s research, also “activates the cerebellum and therefore may aid stroke victims in regaining language capabilities.” Additional research revealed that group keyboard lessons given to older Americans had a significant effect on increasing levels of human growth hormone (HGH), which is implicated in slowing such aging phenomena as osteoporosis, energy levels, wrinkling, sexual function, muscle mass, and aches and pains.
The physical benefits of piano playing are even more far reaching. Mitchell Gaynor M.D., in his book Sounds of Healing, demonstrates that music has therapeutic physical effects including reduced anxiety, heart and respiratory rates; reduced cardiac complications; lowered blood pressure; and increased immune responses.
Keys to Better Thinking
In addition to the proven body benefits of regular play, piano practice can also boost cognitive and intellectual abilities. Playing piano, in other words, makes us smarter. Research through the years has demonstrated that musical training taps into similar areas of brain function as those used in spatial intelligence and even math. In fact, kids who continue their playing through their teenage years average about 100 points higher on the SAT. In 1994, research revealed, undergraduates who majored in music had the highest acceptance rate into medical school, at 66%.
In a study conducted by E. Glenn Schellenberg of the University of Toronto at Mississauga in 2011, researchers split 132 first-graders into four separate groups for after-school activities. One group was given singing lessons, one was given drama lessons, another piano lessons, and the last was offered no after-school instruction. All of the students’ IQ’s were evaluated at the end of the year. Those who participated in the piano lessons saw an IQ increase of 7 points, while the other groups saw an increase of 4.25 at most. The researchers concluded that the fact that piano education requires one to be focused for long periods of times contributes to the greater IQ gains in the piano-playing group.
Striking a Contented Chord
As if the physical and cognitive benefits of regular piano playing were not enough, studies also show that time at the keyboard offers emotional advantages, as well. In fact, research reveals that those who are involved in creating music on a regular basis experience less anxiety, loneliness and depression.
Barry Bittman, MD, of the Body-Mind Wellness Center in Meadville, Pennsylvania, created a study to gauge stress levels among 32 volunteers. The volunteers were put through a stress-inducing activity—attempting to assemble a difficult puzzle while incentivized by a monetary prize—and then were told to “relax” afterward using a variety of different methods, including reading magazines and playing keyboards. The volunteers also gave blood during the study, and the blood was tested for the activity of 45 stress-related genes. In the group that played keyboard to relax, the results showed a significantly higher reversal in the markers for stress-related genes than in the other groups.
“With ongoing research,” Bittman concludes, “recreational music-making could potentially serve as a rational stress-reduction activity, along with other lifestyle strategies that include healthy nutrition and exercise.”
Add to this data the other benefits that come from piano playing—increases in work ethic, diligence, creativity, self-reliance and perseverance—and the result is a veritable symphony of good news for your body and your soul. Ready to tickle the ivories?
- Bittman, B. Medical Science Monitor, February 2005; vol 11.
- Calter, M. “Playing the Piano Can Strengthen Fine Motor Skills.” http://www.toptenreviews.com
- Gaynor, M. Sounds of Healing, Broadway Books.
- Schellenberg, E. Psychological Science, August 2004; vol 15.
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CBS News: Paul McCartney Helps Save 1877 Steinway Grand Piano Used by Motown Artists
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Pianist Jeanne Golan Surveys the Complete Piano Sonatas of Viktor Ullmann
“Golan has the gift to clarify the core of the music." — The Philadelphia Inquirer
For her Steinway & Sons label debut, pianist Jeanne Golan surveys the complete piano sonatas of Czech composer Viktor Ullmann (1898-1944), whose restlessly, valiantly creative career culminated in the Nazi concentration camp of Theresienstadt/Terezín before he was sent to his death in Auschwitz. Golan’s double-CD set – the first to put all seven of Ullmann’s piano sonatas together in more than two decades – will be released by Steinway & Sons/Arkiv Music on August 28, 2012 (with digital release August 7). The set also includes a premiere recording of the Totentanz (Dance of Death), a minuet from his opera The Emperor of Atlantis, or Death’s Refusal – which is one of the more famous examples of “entartete Musik,” “degenerate music”), the label placed by the Nazis on works they deemed out of step with their policies. Ullmann was a student of Arnold Schoenberg, as well as a protégé of Alexander Zemlinsky. Active in Prague before he was incarcerated in the “model” camp of Theresienstadt, Ullmann explored a wide range of influences in his piano sonatas, from Mahler to Mozart, Bartók to Gershwin. He wrote his final three sonatas in the camp.
In a testimonial by James Conlon for Golan’s recording, the conductor – long a champion of music by composers persecuted and displaced by the Nazis – says: “Viktor Ullmann and others of his generation are less known to us today not because of any lack of musical quality, but because their voices were stifled by a regime and then pushed aside once again in the clamor of post-war cultural advancement. This excellent and important recording by Jeanne Golan will do much to generate greater appreciation for Ullmann’s music among musicians and music lovers everywhere. I hope other musicians will follow her example by immersing themselves in the music of Ullmann and, in so doing, discover the work of a true 20th-century master.”
The Massachusetts-bred, New York-based Golan fully immersed herself in Ullmann’s music and life for this ambitious project, her total engagement paying off in unexpected ways. She says: “This project became personal very quickly – I’m used to that when working with living composers, but I hadn’t expected to feel the presence of another person with Ullmann’s music. It was almost like having a ghost in the room with me. Learning all the sonatas at once and doing so much research on Ullmann’s life, it felt like I was living with him at all the various stages of his life – like this is the young man’s sonata or this is when he was interested in Gershwin, and so on. Also, when you play the music of a composer who was a pianist, you get a sense of their physicality – not just the way their mind worked or their ear, but the way their body worked at the keyboard. You feel the hand span, the muscle memory, certain kinds of figurations. In a way, their body becomes your body – it’s the only way to really bring the music alive.”
Golan points out that Ullmann’s range as a composer was extraordinary: “He had this capacity to tap into all these different styles yet still sound like himself,” she says. “Ullmann was such a curious musician. Each sonata is a sort of experiment in a certain sound world, as he explores what’s suggested in folk songs or Mahler and Bartók. But it’s never derivative – the music comes out as Ullmann. He had a real sense of play. His is a very sad story, and that was a horrific time, obviously. But along with distressed emotion in his music, there is humor and often a real exuberance, a reveling in creativity.”
After following Schoenberg and experimenting with micro-tonality, Ullmann ultimately came to embrace the traditionalism of his forebears. In her extensive, multidimensional liner notes to the album, Golan quotes the composer from an essay he wrote titled “Goethe and Ghetto,” in which he lays out an ethos that animates his piano sonatas: “The ‘Greats’ whom we take as examples, influence the ‘habitus’ [the body] by reaching into the very life-ducts of subsequent generations. And it seems to me that the cultivated European has had his behavior and thoughts, world-view, language, relationship to life and art, determined by Goethe... Goethe’s maxim, ‘Live in the moment, live in eternity’ always seemed to me to reveal the puzzling nature of art.”
About Jeanne Golan
Jeanne Golan has been described by The New York Times as a pianist who is “technically polished and superbly expressive,” while The Philadelphia Inquirer declared that she has “the gift and ability to clarify the core of music.” Golan’s programming reflects her active involvement in the fostering of works by new composers and discovering relatively unknown musical treasures. She has performed throughout the U.S. and across Europe. Her extensive work with singers includes the album Innocence Lost: The Berg-Debussy Project, as well as Einstein on the Beach with the Philip Glass Ensemble. With an impressive assortment of pieces written for her and that she has premiered, Golan has been featured by the contemporary music organizations MATA, Theodore Wiprud/New Music Productions and the Friends & Enemies of New Music. She has released previous solo and collaborative recordings on the Albany, Arsis, Capstone and Newport Classic labels. In addition to her Steinway & Sons/Arkiv recording of Viktor Ullmann’s complete piano sonatas, Golan is bringing Ullmann’s repertoire to concert and educational venues across the country for specially designed programs that balance performance and discussion. Such appearances have already taken place at the Spertus Institute in Chicago, WFMT Radio, the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, and with her debut at the Ravinia Festival in a program hosted by James Conlon. Golan earned her Masters and Doctorate of Musical Arts degrees from the Eastman School of Music. Her Bachelor of Arts degree is from Yale University. She is a Professor of Music at the State University of New York/Nassau, where she has received the SUNY Chancellor’s Award on multiple occasions. Her blog, “Ullmann at Hand: A Pianist’s Journey,” is at www.jeannegolan.com. Jeanne Golan is a Steinway Artist.
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YouTube: CNN Features Steinway New York Factory
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Steinway Notes with Sorrow the Passing of Steinway Artist Mihaela Ursuleasa
The House of Steinway & Sons notes with profound sorrow the untimely passing of the excellent Romanian pianist and Steinway Artist, Mihaela Ursuleasa. She was found dead in her apartment in Vienna on the morning of the 2nd of August 2012. The forensic doctor pronounced a natural death caused by a brain aneurysm. She was only 33 years old.
As a musician full of passion, energy and integrity, Mihaela was convincing and inspiring for her musical partners as well as for her audience. Those who did not have the chance to experience her talents in concert should listen to her latest CD, “Romanian Rhapsody”, or watch one of her last performances, Chopin’s concerto no. 2 in f-minor, which she played in Bucharest two months ago (www.ursuleasa.com).
In December 2000, she wrote in a dedication to Steinway: “In the last few years, one thing has become clear for me: A piano has to sound like the pianist plays by his nature – and this is exactly what the Steinway incorporates, sometimes it even “over-plays” the pianist. Thank you very much!”
Mihaela Ursuleasa certainly had her own natural sound and a charming and unique personality. For Mihaela, Franz Grillparzer’s wording for Schubert’s tomb is very applicable: “The art of music here entombed a rich possession, but even far fairer hopes.”
She is survived by her 7-year old daughter and her mother. To them, we extend our heartfelt condolences.
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Crown Jewels
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Legendary Horowitz Piano Continues its North American Tour
Long Island City, NY (July 23, 2012) – The legendary Steinway & Sons Model D Horowitz Piano continues its tour of North America with upcoming stops in New York, California, Oregon, Washington and Canada. The stunning piano—a nine-foot grand and one of Steinway’s most revered designs—was most recently showcased at Steinway Piano Gallery Pittsburgh; it was moved this past weekend to its next destination, Buffalo, New York. The tour provides a rare opportunity for the public to see, hear, touch and even play CD 503, which is the fabled piano that accompanied classical titan Vladimir Horowitz (1903-1989) on tour. It was known to be one of Horowitz’s favorite instruments.

Horowitz, a Steinway Artist Immortal, is widely considered one of the greatest pianists of the 20th century. His colorful personality and astounding performances enthralled audiences for decades. Early in 1934, as a wedding present, Steinway & Sons presented Horowitz and his wife Wanda with a Steinway Model D, Serial #279503. In the early 1940’s, this piano was replaced with #314503, now known simply as CD 503. This is the piano Horowitz kept in his New York townhouse. He used it in many recitals and recordings in the 70’s and 80’s, and he famously demanded that the piano be his exclusive touring instrument during the last four years of his life, including for his triumphant return to the former Soviet Union for performances in Moscow and Leningrad in 1986.
The remaining stops on the Steinway & Sons Horowitz Piano Tour are:
- July 24 – Aug 20: BUFFALO, NY, Denton, Cottier & Daniels
- Aug 29 – Sept 21: MONTREAL, Pianos Bolduc
- Sept 25 – Oct 8: TORONTO, Steinway Piano Gallery Toronto
- Oct 14 – Oct 28: CALGARY, Steinway Pianos of Calgary
- Oct 30 – Nov 12: EDMONTON, Piano Centre
- Nov. 13 – Dec. 1: VANCOUVER, RICHMOND BC, Tom Lee Music Company, (two locations)
- Dec 4 – Feb 11, 2013: SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA, SACRAMENTO, PORTLAND, SEATTLE, Sherman Clay & Co. (four locations)
- Feb 12 – Feb 25, 2013: FRESNO, CA, Valley Music Center
While each location will offer viewing and listening opportunities for CD 503, some will also offer appointment-only playing access to piano students and teachers. In addition, famed Steinway technician and author Franz Mohr will make special appearances at select locations. Check with your local Steinway & Sons dealership prior to the event for specifics.
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Steinway Artist Feature: Jason Moran. Quite Possibly the Busiest Man in Jazz.
Jason Moran is a busy man. The Manhattan-based jazz pianist and composer—dubbed by Rolling Stone Magazine as “the most provocative thinker in current jazz” and named a MacArthur Fellow in 2010— is also the newly-appointed Artistic Adviser for Jazz for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. He’s on a short break from a tour that concludes soon with stops in Finland and Germany. He’s embarking on his ninth album for Blue Note Records, a project focusing on the music of the legendary Fats Waller. And today, a verifiable scorcher in a New York City heat wave, he’s busy escorting his four-year-old twin sons on a donut run to Brooklyn. “We heard there were special donuts here,” he says, laughing. “So we came looking for them.”
Moran settles into an easygoing banter, with a relaxed voice that reveals none of the pressures of the many roles he juggles in a given day: composer, musician, bandleader, teacher, administrator, husband, father. “I like to be busy,” he says simply.
And now there’s one more title Moran can claim. As of early 2012, he is officially a Steinway Artist. A longtime devotee of the Steinway legacy, Moran’s home studio features a newly-acquired Steinway Model M grand piano, an instrument he says “marks the first time I’ve owned a piano that I actually feel is inspiring to play.” The piano is not his first introduction to the Steinway sound, however. In fact, he says the purchase is a natural evolution of the lifelong influence Steinway pianos have had on his music. A Texas native, Moran attended Houston’s High School for Performing and Visual Arts and had the opportunity to play on Steinway grand pianos in his school. Over the years, he’s performed, studied, taught, and practiced on a wide range of Steinway pianos.
“These instruments have always been on my mind,” he says. “They are the standard, for me and for my colleagues in the performing arts. They are the artist’s piano.”
The new Steinway comes at a good time for Moran. He’s evolving his new role at the Kennedy Center from administration to hands-on artistic direction. Plus, he’s hard at work on the new Fats Waller record, and the instrument is an integral tool in developing the new recordings, which he plans to complete in several months’ time. After that, it will be back to a red-hot schedule of performances, promotions and touring.
But for now? “These days I’m staying home,” he says, satisfied. “Lots of my music friends are on the road in Europe now, because it’s jazz festival season, but other than two trips at the end of the summer, I’ll be home for a while. And that feels good. I’m working on new music in a new home studio, and I’m finally composing with the piano that I’ve always wanted.”
Moran pauses, collects his thoughts. “Right now,” he says, after a moment. “Even though it’s summer, I feel like it’s really—I don’t know—it’s spring. Everything is coming to life. The music feels like it’s coming out of the instrument in a different way. I want to capture this moment.”
But then a small boy calls for him, and he laughs. After the donuts, of course.
About Jason Moran
Pianist and composer Jason Moran was born in Houston, Texas in 1975. After getting his early inspiration from Thelonious Monk and his academic start at Houston’s High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, Moran moved to New York to study with Jaki Byard at the Manhattan School of Music. Upon graduating, Moran began studying piano and composition with mentors Andrew Hill and Muhal Richard Abrams.
Named “Up-n-Coming Jazz Musician” of 2003 by the Jazz Journalists Association, and called “the most provocative thinker in current jazz” by Rolling Stone, Moran first came to prominence as a member of saxophonist Greg Osby’s touring and recording band in 1997. In 1999, Blue Note Records signed Moran to a recording contract. He has since released eight CDs as a solo pianist or bandleader, to great acclaim. His band, The Bandwagon, is a trio with bassist Tarus Mateen and drummer Nasheet Waits. In 2010, The Downbeat critics’ poll voted their latest recording, TEN, “Jazz Album of the Year” while also voting Moran “Pianist of the Year” and “Jazz Artist of the Year.” Also in 2010, Moran was awarded a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and was cited by the Foundation for his “adventurous, genre-crossing jazz performances.”
In addition to critical and audience recognition of his music, Moran has received commissions from the San Francisco Jazz Festival, Jazz @ Lincoln Center, Monterrey Jazz Festival, Chamber Music America, The Whitney Museum, The Walker Art Center, and Philadelphia Museum of Art. Moran’s willingness to mix media is currently being fulfilled by collaborations with such noted visual and performing artists as Glenn Ligon, Kara Walker, and Joan Jonas. Moran has performed as a sideman with such artists as Cassandra Wilson, Charles Lloyd, Esperanza Spalding, Wayne Shorter, Joe Lovano, Don Byron, Steve Coleman, Lee Konitz, Dave Holland, Jack Dejohnette and countless more. He is the Jazz Artistic Advisor for The Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. He is also a co-artistic director at the San Francisco Jazz Festival, and he is on faculty at New England Conservatory in Boston. He lives in Manhattan with his wife, mezzo soprano Alicia Hall Moran, and their twin sons. http://www.jasonmoran.com.
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Steinway & Sons Welcomes Gulf Coast Dealership
Long Island City, NY (July 9, 2012) – Steinway & Sons is proud to announce the addition of Broussard’s Piano Gallery and Academy of Music to its exclusive family of Steinway-authorized dealers. Broussard’s, headquartered in Mobile, Alabama, will join an elite group of hand-selected dealers who bring the world’s finest pianos to artists, students and institutions around the globe.
Broussard’s will handle sales and service of Steinway pianos—from majestic concert grands to traditional uprights. The dealership will also offer Steinway-designed Boston and Essex pianos, ensuring buyers will find the right instrument for every budget and price point. The addition of The Family of Steinway-Designed Pianos to Broussard’s offerings marks a new era for a business known throughout the region for its expertise in piano sales and service.
“Our business has been in the family since my grandparents founded it in 1945. We are absolutely honored and thrilled that Steinway has asked us to be an authorized dealer,” said Christy Broussard Myers, Gallery Manager. “This is a very prestigious designation. My grandparents, my father and I have worked very hard to build our business, and this partnership is tremendously meaningful to us. We’re proud to bring American-made Steinway pianos to our customers.”
“The Gulf region is a wonderful market for Steinway, rich in America’s musical heritage and home to some of the most memorable musicians and venues in the world,” said Todd Sanders, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Steinway & Sons. “The addition of Broussard’s to our family of dealerships marks a new commitment to this region. We’re very pleased with the new partnership and are looking forward to seeing our pianos in the gallery.”
About Broussard’s Piano Gallery
Since 1945, Broussard’s Piano Gallery and Academy of Music has served the Gulf coasts of Alabama, Florida, Mississippi and Louisiana. The company was founded by Otis and Amida Broussard as a piano boutique in the Evangeline Hotel in Houma Louisiana, and now has locations in Mobile, Alabama and Slidell, Louisiana. The gallery also hosts piano lessons and recitals and a wide range of musical performances. Broussard’s headquarters is located at 1541 East I-65 Service Rd., S. in Mobile. For more information, please call (251) 344-8856 or visit www.broussardspianos.com.
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USU Becomes All-Steinway School with Sorenson Legacy Foundation Gift
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Pianist Mirian Conti Surveys Rich but Rarely Heard Music from Her Native Country with New Album
“Conti's playing is full of sparkle, color, intelligence and rhythmic life." — Fanfare
Argentine-American pianist Mirian Conti’s second recording on the Steinway & Sons label showcases an irresistibly affecting selection of music from her native land. To be released June 26, 2012, her album Nostalgias Argentinas features works that are undeniably rich but rarely heard outside Argentina. Interweaving the influences of folk traditions, classical music, popular songs and, of course, the tango, these deeply evocative, often bittersweet pieces range from the 20th-century Romanticism of such composers as Carlos Guastavino and Carlos López Buchardo to a more modern strain of composition by Pedro Sáenz and Gilardo Gilardi to the sophisticated contemporary tango of Horacio Salgán. Like Chopin and Rachmaninoff, these are composers who wrote brilliantly for the piano, says Conti: “Their music reveals a deep feel for the instrument and how to use all its resources to achieve rich sonorities and vivid colors.” Conti’s own ability to conjure magic from the keyboard has been recognized far and wide. La Capital of Argentina has said: "In Conti’s interpretations, there is the necessary mix of brio and tenderness, of fire and introspective melancholy, of strength and delicacy, a simplicity that only those genuinely endowed are able to master."
In Conti’s characteristically thoughtful, detailed liner notes to Nostalgias Argentinas, she writes: “For me, this recording brings with it nostalgia for my own musical past, for those Argentine composers lost or forgotten on the shelves of libraries, conservatories and old pianos. As one travels through the pieces in this recording, melancholy, longing and nostalgia are sounded in different ways, shaped by the personal experiences of each composer. The deeply nationalist feelings within express a longing to return to one’s roots, to one’s essence: to find something left behind or lost on some shelf of one’s personal life. Many of us who have gone away from our homes experience this feeling of nostalgia.”
Nostalgias Argentinas shows the many faces of classical Argentine solo piano music from the 1920s to today, with the composers continuously searching for a national voice even as they chose various styles of expression. Many of the pieces are based on folk or popular dances, though threads of Schubert, Chopin, Franck and Prokofiev may weave in and out. But whether the musical language was romantic or modern, these composers from Argentina were very much aware of the importance of returning to their roots; for all the stylistic differences among these works, the composers are all recognizably Argentinean, says Conti: “It’s just as with Copland or Gershwin or Bernstein or Scott Joplin – all their music is very different yet each is recognizably American. It’s the same with these Argentine composers, who differ stylistically yet obviously have a kindred spirit. All of the works on the album, whether angular in polytonality and accents or luscious in an impressionist mood, are without a doubt Argentine.”
Nostalgias Argentinas is a sequel to Looking South, Conti’s widely praised 2006 Albany Records release that featured a different selection of Argentine rarities. Reviewing that disc, All Music Guide declared: “Conti is a sympathetic interpreter of this music, with lots of rhythmic verve.” Conti’s 2011 Steinway & Sons release of Chopin’s complete mazurkas was also a critical favorite. In his glowing Classics Today review of that double-disc set, Jed Distler wrote: “Fusing instinct and intellect, Conti clearly has thought these amazingly inventive and diverse pieces through. . . Thousands of fetching details abound throughout this release.” Fanfare magazine added: “Conti brings all these pieces to life with a spirit of fantasy and imagination that is totally endearing.”
About Mirian Conti
Reviewing a recital by Mirian Conti, The New York Times said: “Ms. Conti's pianism offers more than tonal luster – her's was an impressionism imbued with sinew and, in livelier movements, with the spirit of the dance. Her playing was impulsive, colorful and precise.”
A Steinway Artist based in New York City, the Argentine-American Conti has earned growing renown for performances that combine technical brilliance with originality and insight in a wide range of repertoire. In recognition of her extraordinary talent, a scholarship honoring Mirian Conti was established at the Juilliard School by the Edwin Bachman Estate. In addition, she was selected as one of “100 Outstanding Alumni” to celebrate Juilliard’s centennial in 2005-6. She was a scholarship student of Richard Fabre and Josef Raieff; other teachers include Genny Blech, Freda Rosenblatt and Byron Janis.
Conti’s 18 album-length recordings cover a diversity of styles, from the music of Spain and her native Argentina to Chopin’s complete mazurkas released on the Steinway & Sons label. Many 20th- and 21st-century composers have written works for her, including Samuel Zyman, David Diamond, James Cohn, Katherine Hoover, Michael White, Phillip Ramey and Benjamin Lees. She has premiered works by Vincent Persichetti, Morton Gould and Paul Bowles. Conti has performed solo and with orchestras in Europe, Asia, Africa, South and Central America, Canada and throughout the U.S. She has made solo, orchestral and chamber appearances at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles and at Merkin Concert Hall, Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall and Carnegie’s Weill Recital Hall in New York, as well as the Teatro Colón in Argentina. She has also appeared in Spain, France, Italy, Poland, Latvia, Morocco, Montenegro, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and several cities in China.
Actively involved in the music education of young pianists, Conti has for many years been creating and directing competitions, festivals and marathons in the U.S. and South America. She also participates as adjudicator of major international competitions and is currently on the faculty of the Evening Division at the Juilliard School. For more information, go to www.mirianconti.com.
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Singer Songwriter Regina Spektor Joins Steinway Artist Roster
Steinway & Sons, makers of the world’s finest pianos, announced today that singer songwriter Regina Spektor has been named as a Steinway Artist. She joins a distinguished international roster of Steinway Artists including Billy Joel, Diana Krall, Harry Connick Jr, Lang Lang and past music greats such as Irving Berlin, Cole Porter and Sergei Rachmaninoff.
The announcement coincides with the launch of Spektor’s new album, “What We Saw from the Cheap Seats”, released on May 29th.
“I am so excited to become a Steinway Artist – though I have played all my shows on Steinways for years – and loved the instruments and the people I’ve worked with – it is so nice to make it official!,” says Spektor.
Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons - Americas welcomed Spektor to this exclusive roster adding: “I could not be happier to welcome such a wonderful one-of- a- kind musician and artist to Steinway. Regina Spektor is someone we all admire and respect.”
About Regina Spektor
Born in Moscow, 32 year old Spektor emigrated with her family to the United States in 1989 and studied classical music with Sonia Vargas until her late teens. An accomplished pianist, she started writing songs at the age of 16 and was soon gaining a reputation with the scene in New York’s East Village. She uses the piano as her partner in telling stories through song, and for many years has preferred to play exclusively on Steinway pianos.
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Qatar Music Academy Achieves Steinway Accreditation
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The Boston Chronicle: Institutional News from Steinway & Sons
The Boston Chronicle presents Institutional news from Steinway & Sons regarding Steinway-Designed Boston pianos. Published twice a year, this publication includes in-depth articles with compelling photographs covering Steinway's Institutional customers.
- Download the Issue One 2012 Edition (PDF 0.7MB)
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Singer Songwriter Rufus Wainwright Becomes Newest Steinway Artist
Steinway & Sons, makers of the world’s finest pianos, announced today that acclaimed singer songwriter and composer Rufus Wainwright has been named as a Steinway Artist. He joins a distinguished international roster of musicians including Billy Joel, Diana Krall, Harry Connick Jr, Lang Lang and past music greats such as Irving Berlin, Cole Porter and Sergei Rachmaninoff. The announcement coincides with the release of Wainwright’s new album, “Out of the Game”.
Says Wainwright: “I grew up playing my grandmother’s 100 year old Steinway. That instrument is still the spiritual center of our family’s musical legacy.”
Affectionately referred to by Elton John as "the greatest songwriter on the planet" and praised by The New York Times for his “genuine originality,” Grammy nominee Rufus Wainwright has established himself as one of the great male vocalists and songwriters of his generation.
Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons - Americas welcomed Wainwright to this exclusive roster adding: “Rufus Wainwright is a truly iconic musician and his love of Steinway pianos goes all the way back to his childhood. He will be a wonderful addition to our family of Steinway Artists.”
About Rufus Wainwright
Rufus Wainwright has recorded seven albums of original music and numerous tracks on compilations and film soundtracks. He has also written a classical opera and set Shakespeare sonnets to music. The son of folk singers Kate McGarrigle and Loudon Wainwright III, his latest album is the Mark Ronson produced “Out of the Game” – released by Decca Records on May 1st.
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RMS Titanic: Five Steinway Pianos for the Ages
During the early 20th century, pianos by Steinway & Sons were filling concert halls from Europe to the United States with brilliant sounds in some of the most memorable musical triumphs of their time.
By a remarkably merciless twist of fate, Steinway also bore witness to the greatest trans-Atlantic tragedy when, on April 15, 1912, the maiden voyage of RMS Titanic ended in icy waters southeast of Cape Race, Newfoundland.
Five Steinways from the Hamburg factory were brought on to the ship in mid-March of that year, designated for First and Second Class. All were ordered through Steinway & Sons of London, according to Steinway archives, with serial numbers indicating the immortalized instruments shipped between March 15 and May 12, 1911. "Four of the five Titanic Steinway pianos were ordered ‘raw’ or ‘rough,’ meaning that they became art cases after they were shipped to London," explains David R. Kirkland, Administrator for Customer Service at Steinway & Sons in Long Island City. Once all finishing touches were added, the pianos were put in place as Titanic departed from the English port city of Southampton on April 10.
Steinway records show the fifth piano – an oak K upright – was one of two Model Ks sold to Harland & Wolff in Belfast, the same name and place as the shipyard where Titanic and her sister luxury liners, RMS Olympia and HMHS Britannic, were constructed between 1909 and 1914.
Two Model R uprights and a Model B Drawing Room Grand piano selected to entertain First Class passengers “were the zenith of 20th century piano culture," says Rebekah Maxner, an avid researcher, musician and author from Nova Scotia who maintains a passionate interest in all things musically related to Titanic. The Model B was formerly called “Parlor Grand" in the late 19th century.
"Titanic was designed to impress, and the pianos played their part to appeal aesthetically to the great expectations of the contemporary world’s wealthy travelers," she writes in her blog, Titanic Piano.
All three First Class Steinway pianos were to be customized according to the ship’s specifications. Craftsmen added rich appointments to match the Steinways with their luxurious surroundings, creating showpieces to be appreciated equally for eye-appealing sight as well as uniquely distinctive sound.
One of the Model R uprights was situated in the Boat Deck entrance of the Grand Staircase, with the other positioned in the Dining Saloon on D Deck. The Model R had a Victorian case style, and was two inches taller than the Model K. Production in Hamburg of the Model R was discontinued in 1942, according to Mr. Kirkland.
Titanic’s D Deck was also home to what Ms. Maxner hails as Steinway’s crown jewel -- the 6’10.5" Model B Drawing Room Grand piano that as some could imagine, assumed a commanding presence in the Reception Room.
Ordered from the factory without veneer, legs or lyre, Steinway documents indicate the Model B was one of three pianos sold to A. Heaton & Co., an interior decorating firm based in London.
With mahogany veneers offset by other exotic woods, "the grand was the crowning glory of Titanic’s pianos, a showcase of workmanship as it stood out against the white Jacobean walls of the Reception Room," she writes.
In a recent article for the Clavier Companion, Ms. Maxner noted that performance venues in the First and Second Class were located in areas where the music would carry throughout the ship, and the Steinway pianos were installed in those places.
The Model K uprights were chosen for Titanic’s "Second Class" – a misnomer of distinction in musical parlance, as both were considered instruments of exceptional quality.
Located in the entrance foyer on C Deck, one of the pianos boasted a French finish that was applied after delivery, to ensure the wood stain on the piano matched the décor of the entrance hall, according to Ms. Maxner.
Stationed in the Dining Saloon on D Deck, the other instrument had a different cabinet to distinguish it from factory-built Model Ks, which Mr. Kirkland says have a 20th century look in the Sheraton case style. He adds the Model K remains in production to this day.
Asked to speculate on the fate of the five Titanic Steinways, Mr. Kirkland had this to say: "The pianos were fastened securely to the ship’s floors. When the Titanic submerged, the piano’s keys, hammers and hinged components suspended due to the buoyance of the wood. Although glues dissolve and metals corrode, at the bottom of the ocean amidst the wreckage there probably lie remnants that bear the name of Steinway & Sons. I believe it to be inevitable one day that something will be raised."
There is one certainty that remains in the 100 years since the iconic luxury liner came to rest at the bottom of the North Atlantic, ever since the company’s founding in 1853: Steinway remains dedicated to making the best pianos in the world.
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The New York Times Magazine: “Inside the Steinway Factory”
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Romero Britto
Miami, Florida
Romero Britto was born in Recife, Brazil in 1963. Self-taught at an early age, he painted on surfaces such as newspapers. In 1983 he traveled to Paris where he was introduced to the world of Matisse and Picasso. He combined influences from cubism to pop, to create a vibrant, iconic style that The New York Times describes, “exudes warmth, optimism, and love”.
In 1988 Britto moved to Miami and emerged as an international artist. In the following year, he was selected alongside Andy Warhol and Keith Haring for Absolut Vodka’s “Absolut Art” campaign. Britto’s pop sensibility has since leant itself to many collaborations with brands such as Audi, Bentley, Disney, Tec hnomarine, Evian and FIFA, for whom he created an official poster for the 2010 World Cup. He has also illustrated several books published by Simon & Schuster and Rizzoli. Britto’s work has been exhibited in galleries and museums in over 100 countries, including the Salon Nationale des Beaux-Arts exhibition at the Carrousel du Louvre in 2008 and 2010. He has also created public art installations for the O2 Dome (Berline), Hyde Park (London), John F. Kennedy Airport (New York) and Cirque du Soleil at Super Bowl XLI.
Britto considers the role of an artist to be an agent of positive change. He serves as a benefactor, donating time, art and resources to over 250 charitable organizations and several boards such as Best Buddies International and St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital. He was recently named a founding inaugural benefactor of Harvard’s “International Negotiation Program”, by Dr. Daniel Shapiro, in his quest for peaceful conflict resolution. Britto has also spoken at the World Economic Forum in Davos, and at countless schools and institutions. In early 2011 the President of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, invited Britto to create the logo for Rede Cegonha, a project to reach over 61 million pre- and post natal mothers and babies.
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Europa III

The complex technique of bookmatching utilizes successive veneer leaves turned over like pages in a book and joined edge to edge. The legs and lyre are solid walnut double-tapered pillars, a tribute to some of Steinway’s legendary Heirloom architecture styles, accented with inlaid walnut burl to complete this refined and subtly complex design. The elegant Europa III is a subtly differentiated encore presentation of his widely celebrated 2005 design, and has received Schrunk’s gold signature on the keylid, reserved for his finest work.
Theme and Inspiration
“Whenever one embarks on an art project it is necessary to have a goal, a statement that is the theme of the work,” says Mr. Schrunk. “Because this project was a musical instrument, I thought it would be appropriate to use the musical terms ‘Rhythm’ and ‘Variations on a Theme’ as the design basis. To be honest, once that was decided and the first element was designed, the others came about easily, almost automatically. The use of these themes naturally then tied the various parts together as I moved from one element to the next”.
"Rhythm" is expressed in the repeating book matched veneers as they flow around the rim of the instrument.
"Variations on a Theme" is found in the various examples of the radial, or “fan” book matching on the music desk and the upper and lower surfaces of the lid and the fallboard. The book matching on the underside of the lid radiates from the center of the interior, the source of the sound, and emulates its movement up and out of the instrument toward the listener. The radial book matching on the lid focuses thoughtfully on the position of the seated pianist.
The Magnificent Burlwoods
Carpathian Elm Burl may be the most varied of all burls, and is amongst the most difficult to work with, but gives magnificent results. The Walnut burl serves as a rich, dark, and complex frame for the featured Carpathian burl.
The upper surface of the lid is of special note. In a display of rare skill, Schrunk executes a burl wood border which can only be achieved by book matching the lines right down to the miters at the corners. When the underside of the flap is folded over to rest on the opened lid, the lines of Walnut Burl are perfectly aligned with the Carpathian Elm Burl of the upper surface, completing the last iteration of the radial or “Fan” motif. “This may be the most complex piece of book matching done in this country or elsewhere,” Schrunk says.
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Crane School of Music Students to Perform at Lincoln Center with Renowned Conductor
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600+ Music Teachers Visit the Steinway Factory as Part of the 2012 MTNA Conference
More than 2,000 music teachers recently visited one of the world’s most desirable classrooms – New York City – for five phenomenal days that featured a full slate of festivities involving Steinway & Sons.
Founded in 1876, the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) represents approximately 22,000 members, providing support through networking, financial assistance and continuing education initiatives aimed at advancing the teaching profession.
This year’s national conference on March 24-28 marked MTNA’s first visit to the Big Apple in twenty-five years and was one of the most popular meetings in the group’s storied history.

The most eagerly anticipated event was a tour of the famous Steinway factory located in Astoria, Queens. More than 600 teachers participated in the tour, riding round trip buses provided by Steinway & Sons from the Hilton New York in midtown Manhattan. Many visitors witnessing the handcrafted procedures were proud Steinway owners themselves and teach regularly on Steinway pianos.
Gail Berenson, MTNA Past President said, “What an incredible experience it was to take the tour. I found it to be absolutely fascinating. Thank you to Steinway & Sons for making this unique experience available to us.”
MTNA’s international influence was evident as instructors from China, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom joined their American counterparts on the 90-minute tour, where they observed the rim-bending process, the belly department, case making and action departments. Each tour was conducted by a head of Steinway’s manufacturing team, each one an expert in their field.

“We were delighted to welcome this wonderful organization to our hometown and provide an opportunity for teachers from around the globe to come and learn more about our world-renowned instruments,” said Ron Losby, President, Steinway & Sons - Americas.
Opening ceremonies of the conference featured Steinway Artists Stecher and Horowitz, while later in the week internationally-celebrated soloist, chamber musician and teacher Menahem Pressler presented a master class using two Steinway Model D grand pianos.
A reception for New York City teachers at Steinway Hall offered a presentation by Franz Mohr, former chief concert technician of Steinway & Sons who also served as personal piano technician to Vladimir Horowitz. The “Horowitz Steinway” piano that accompanied Mr. Horowitz on his legendary return to Moscow was on display at Steinway Hall and available for MTNA members to play during the week.
Texas Christian University, an All-Steinway School, also hosted a special gathering at Steinway Hall following a recital at Carnegie Hall by TCU faculty members Jesus Castro-Balbi, cellist, and Gloria Lin, pianist. Dr. Richard Gipson, Director of the TCU School of Music, Dr. Ann Gipson, Past President of MTNA and Steinway Artists Jose Feghali and Harold Martine were on hand to welcome TCU alums and arts patrons.

Copyright 2012, Harry Butler.
Meanwhile, at the Conference Gala, Mr. Losby and Sally Coveleskie, National Director of Institutional Sales, were recognized for Steinway’s ongoing support of MTNA’s Young Artist Piano Competition. Steinway has sponsored the competition for 13 years, and offered the first prize of a Steinway Model 1098 upright piano, valued at $24,000, to this year’s winner, Mr. Yi-Yang Chen. Mr. Chen is a student of Dr. Douglas Humphreys at the Eastman School of Music.

Conference attendees also got a chance to see some rare, behind-the-scenes craftsmanship at the Steinway display in the Hilton’s exhibit hall. Mr. Santé Auriti, a native of Abruzzi, Italy, has spent the last 20 years working on every Louis XV Steinway piano that has been produced, and enthralled spectators with hand carving demonstrations of the instrument’s intricate case design. The Steinway exhibition also included a large banner listing the current roster of more than 135 All-Steinway Schools.
“Accomplished music teachers are at the core of everything Steinway & Sons stands for,” said Ms. Coveleskie. “What a privilege it was to share some of our time-honored traditions and offer them the experience of witnessing the hand crafted process of building our instruments.”
Finally, Steinway Artist Christopher O’Reilly, host of From the Top on NPR, was on hand to record the conference’s last performance at Carnegie Hall for a future radio program. Prior to the recording, a reception was held to honor the Carnegie Hall Royal Conservatory Achievement Program, which is designed to inspire excellence through individual assessment, and allows students to celebrate accomplishment and track their progress with others across the country. Speakers at the event included Clive Gillinson, Executive and Artistic Director of Carnegie Hall, Dr. Peter Simon, President of the Royal Conservatory and Dr. Gary Ingle, Executive Director and CEO of the Music Teachers National Association.
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Ute Lemper Joins the Vogler Quartet for Songs of Love and War
Renowned German chanteuse Ute Lemper joins her countrymen the Vogler Quartet and Stefan Malzew for a collection of songs that takes the listeners on a journey through time via Europe and Argentina. Paris Days, Berlin Nights (Steinway & Sons 30009 — March 20, 2012) will coincide with a North American tour beginning at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC on March 19 and ending April 6 in Quebec, with stops in Akron, OH; Beaver Creek, CO; Vancouver; Los Angeles, CA; La Jolla, CA; San Francisco, CA; Toronto; and New York City.
Bookended by post-war tales of love and despair from the French songbook by Jacques Brel and Edith Piaf, Paris Days, Berlin Nights hearkens back to the years of the revolutionary and decadent Weimar Republic, rooted in music and stories by Kurt Weill and Berthold Brecht.
Stepping into the darker world embodied in the songs of Hanns Eisler, reflections of political revolt composed during his exile from Nazi Germany, Lemper guides us through glimpses of a world shattered by war. Like a great love story, the listener is then led into the passionate world of the Latin American adventurer Astor Piazzolla, the composer of decadent songs of Argentina’s nuevo tango, before venturing to Eastern Europe with repertoire of love and war in Yiddish and in Russian, including two chansons by the Polish-born Israeli singer Chava Alberstein.
The Vogler Quartet lends these chansons a sound that is by turns delicate and powerful in thoughtful arrangements by Stefan Malzew, who infuses Lemper’s cunning interpretations with complementary flavorings of piano, clarinet and accordion. “We are all the same generation of Germans, says Lemper of her partners the Vogler Quartet. “Actually, they are from the East and I’m from the West, but still, I would definitely say we meet in the middle.”
In speaking about her commitment to the root repertoire she presents on this recording, Lemper calls herself “an ambassador to the European songbook of the Weimar years — the Brecht, the Weill, the Piaf, the Brel, the Kabarett.... It’s a great responsibility and I’m proud to bring this music out into our millennium and into the world.”
Founded in East Berlin in 1985 and still with its original members, the Vogler Quartet first attained recognition in 1986 after winning First Prize at the International String Quartet Competition in Evian, France. Shortly thereafter, BMG/RCA produced the first of many recordings for the quartet. In 2011 they began a relationship with Sony Classical, releasing a recording of Golijov’s Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind and the Mozart clarinet quintet, with clarinetist David Orlowsky. In 1993, the Vogler Quartet instituted its own concert series at the Konzerthaus in Berlin; because of its great popularity, they now offer a parallel series in Neubrandenburg. The quartet founded the Vogler Spring Festival in Sligo, Ireland in 1999, which brings together international artists for chamber music and workshops every spring.
Stefan Malzew has brought classical masterpieces to German audiences through his chamber orchestra version of The Magic Flute, a semi-staged version of Wagner’s Tannhäuser and transcriptions of Tosca and La Bohème for small opera theaters. His special presentations such as Mozart250, Sunday at Four, Concert Nights of Neubrandenburg, a prizewinning YouTube project entitled Stefan’s Musikworkshop, and his own radio show for children, have allowed the German public to discover classical music in new ways. Mr. Malzew currently serves as the Music Director of the Neubrandenburg Orchestra, is the founder of the youth orchestra festival Baltikum 2004 and appears regularly as a pianist with his own orchestra and numerous chamber groups.
Ute Lemper’s career has grown out of a passionate and enduring commitment to art, politics and history, as well as a complicated relationship with her homeland and its past, and has led to international acclaim as a recording artist and in the theatre, cabaret and film worlds, including Velma Kelly in Chicago (London, New York, Las Vegas), Cabaret in Paris; in solo concerts such as Kurt Weill Recital and Berlin Cabaret Evening; in symphony concerts, including The Seven Deadly Sins and Songs from Kurt Weill; and in Pina Bausch’s Kurt Weill Revue. Although she is perhaps best known for her interpretations of music of the Weimar Republic era, her edgy aesthetic and repertoire also reach far beyond Germany. She has explored the French chanson of Edith Piaf, Jacques Prévert, Joseph Kosma and Serge Gainsbourg, and Belgian poet Jacques Brel, as well as contemporary alternative rock music — from Tom Waits and Elvis Costello to Nick Cave, as well as Philip Glass, on her Punishing Kiss album. She has created her own original material which can be heard on the albums But One Day, Between Yesterday and Tomorrow and The Bukowski Project. In 2011, Ms. Lemper collaborated with Wynton Marsalis in an homage to the music of Kurt Weill presented in three extraordinary concerts at Jazz at Lincoln Center and featuring 15 exclusive arrangements. Her newest project is Ultimo Tango, presenting the music of the composer of Nuevo Tango Astor Piazzolla and the lyrics of Horacio Ferrer. Her solo concerts reflect these pan-European and international interests, and include Songs from Piaf & Dietrich; Illusions (also material associated with Piaf and Dietrich); Songbook, consisting of settings by Michael Nyman of texts by Romanian Holocaust poet Paul Celan; and City of Strangers, with chansons of Prévert side by side with songs of Sondheim. Ms. Lemper’s extraordinarily supple and expressive voice does not provide her only creative outlet. She has appeared in many international films. Maurice Béjart created a ballet for her, La Mort Subite, which premiered in Paris in 1990. Her paintings have been exhibited at the German Consulate in New York, the Goethe Institute in Washington and at the Théâtre de la Ville in Paris.
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Piano for Peace
To commemorate the legendary Bed-In by John Lennon and Yoko Ono which took place at the Hilton Hotel in Amsterdam on March 26, 1969, a very special event is taking place over the days leading up to the anniversary. This event will take place at the same hotel, in the very same room, and to help in the celebration, will feature an impressive white Steinway & Sons Imagine Series Limited Edition grand piano.
During their honeymoon in 1969, for a full week on and around March 26, John Lennon and Yoko Ono gave interviews from the bed of their hotel room. John Lennon later explained it as follows: "When we got married, we knew our honeymoon would be public anyway, so we decided to use it to make a statement. Our life is our art. That’s what the bed-in was. We sat in bed and talked to reporters for seven days. In effect we were doing a commercial for peace."
In collaboration with Steinway & Sons and the Hilton Amsterdam, DDB Tribal has organized this event as a commemorative sign of peace
The microsite www.pianoforpeace.com connects the scene with the web community. Through the computer keyboard of any Internet-enabled computer, people can actually physically play the Imagine Series piano from anywhere in the world through use of a custom-built robot arm – thereby sending their own personal musical message of peace. From March 23 through March 25, musical pieces can be recorded on the microsite and uploaded along with an optional photo.
On March 26, during the anniversary of the Bed-In, the songs will be played on the Limited Edition piano (which has a value of approximately 90,000 Euro), while the image of the respective pianist will appear on a screen above the historic bed. The pieces played will be documented on the microsite and will be available after the event.
"With ‘Piano for Peace’ we commemorate the yet unattained goal, which John Lennon and Yoko Ono pursued in their authentic and unique way: peace in the world. We will not be able to achieve it either, but with the help of modern technical facilities and the enthusiasm of the people on the social web, we have the chance to take a symbolic stand. Transported by the only universal language of mankind – music,” says Eric Schoeffler, Chief Creative Officer, DDB Tribal Group.
All information about the event will be available on the microsite, www.pianoforpeace.com, beginning on March 19. 2012.
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Video: Lady Gaga Talks About the Boston Steinway-Designed Piano She Received as a Teenager
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YouTube: Utah State University’s Journey to Become All-Steinway
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Odessa College Plans to Become All-Steinway School with Purchase of 22 New Pianos
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NY Daily News: Steinway Piano Factory Setting the Tone Locally for Over 100 Years
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Dale Chihuly
Born in 1941 in Tacoma, Washington, Dale Chihuly was introduced to glass while studying interior design at the University of Washington. After graduating in 1965, Chihuly enrolled in the first glass program in the country, at the University of Wisconsin. He continued his studies at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where he later established the glass program and taught for more than a decade.
In 1968, after receiving a Fulbright Fellowship, he went to work at the Venini glass factory in Venice. There he observed the team approach to blowing glass, which is critical to the way he works today. In 1971, Chihuly cofounded Pilchuck Glass School in Washington State. With this international glass center, Chihuly has led the avant-garde in the development of glass as a fine art.
His work is included in more than 200 hundred museum collections worldwide. He has been the recipient of many awards, including ten honorary doctorates and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Chihuly has created more than a dozen well-known series of works, among them Cylinders and Baskets in the 1970s; Seaforms, Macchia, Venetians, and Persians in the 1980s; Niijima Floats and Chandeliers in the 1990s; and Fiori in the 2000s. He is also celebrated for large architectural installations. In 1986, he was honored with a solo exhibition, Dale Chihuly objets de verre, at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Palais du Louvre, in Paris. In 1995, he began Chihuly Over Venice, for which he created sculptures at glass factories in Finland, Ireland, and Mexico, then installed them over the canals and piazzas of Venice.
In 1999, Chihuly mounted a challenging exhibition, Chihuly in the Light of Jerusalem; more than 1 million visitors attended the Tower of David Museum to view his installations. In 2001, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London curated the exhibition Chihuly at the V&A. Chihuly’s lifelong affinity for glasshouses has grown into a series of exhibitions within botanical settings. His Garden Cycle began in 2001 at the Garfield Park Conservatory in Chicago. Chihuly exhibited at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, near London, in 2005. Other major exhibition venues include the de Young Museum in San Francisco, in 2008, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 2011.
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Timothy Martin
Timothy Martin is a classically trained painter and sculptor who first gained widespread recognition when he was selected by Tiffany & Company to display artwork in its Manhattan flagship on Fifth Avenue. Since that time Martin’s renown has spread internationally with the publication of dozens of reproductions of his charming work, as well as exhibitions from New York to Paris.
During the 2011 holiday season, Timothy Martin paintings brought the holidays to Paris. Commissioned by the global luxury fashion house, Hermes, Martin created an 8-foot by 15-foot original oil painting — L'Arche de Noël— for Hermes main window of its flagship store on the rue Faubourg Saint-Honore. The other nine windows also featured Timothy Martin paintings. Following its debut and exhibition, the large original oil remains in Hermes private collection.
From March through July 2009, a one-man show of Timothy Martin’s original paintings were on exhibition at the Mona Bismarck Foundation in its Paris Cultural Center located opposite the Eiffel Tower. (Created in the 1980s by the American philanthropist, Mona Bismarck, the Foundation focuses on a Franco-American cultural exchange and reflects the late Countess Mona Bismarck’s tastes and interests.) Martin’s exhibition, The Naturalist: paintings by Timothy Martin, is one of the few the foundation has devoted to a living artist, and broke Foundation attendance records.
In 2006, Martin transformed the Philadelphia Flower Show’s Garden Gallery into the Enchanted Spring of his imagination with images of flora and fauna, fox and fowl morphed into furniture. Many of the original paintings on display at the show were among Martin’s newest work ranging from chairs fashioned from topiary to a tiger lily settee on which rests a fitting feline. Based on crowd reaction at the 2006 show, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society invited Martin to return to the 2008 Philadelphia Flower Show, this time to exhibit paintings with musical instruments and themes to complement the show’s Jazz it Up motif.
Embraced by the horticultural community, Martin was invited to exhibit at Atlanta's 2008 Southeastern Flower Show, at the Lewis Ginter Gardens in Richmond, Virginia and at Omaha's Lauritzen Botanical Gardens. Martin's work was also featured in 1998 by Macy's Flower Show on Herald Square in New York City, where his painting Daffodil Settee made its premiere, later named Editor's Choice by U.S. Art magazine.
In 2000, Martin was commissioned by the venerable Steinway & Sons to paint an actual one-of-a-kind baby grand piano, the first painter in nearly 70 years commissioned by the piano makers. Following a nationwide tour, the "Summertime Piano" is now part of a private collection in Texas.
Martin’s unique vision began with a wingback chair he created for a Bucks County (PA) show in the ’80s; enthusiastic response led to the distinctive work that has become his signature style, a style that defies art world labels. Martin, who studied in Italy, paints as a classic realist—landscapes and still lifes of another age can be glimpsed in his work—and yet some might describe the work as surreal, but the absence of menace makes his a genre unto itself.
Timothy Martin’s images have been licensed by The Bombay Company, Caspari International and a number of fine art publishers. Martin 1994-1995 New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship grantee.
Originals of Timothy Martin’s work now adorn collectors’ homes from coast-to-coast as well as in France, The United Kingdom and the Middle East.
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White Forest
This charming art case depicts a grove of aspen trees that wraps gently around the case, forming a complete landscape scene. The Macassar Ebony V-shaped legs appear organic, and tree like themselves as they open up into the case, while broadening the canvas of forested trees. The customization is sweetly enhanced through tiny details, as the customers’ initials are “carved” into the trunk of one of the trees, making this work of art uniquely personal and deeply meaningful.
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Walden Woods
Designed by marquetry master Silas Kopf, this unique art case was built to commemorate the 150th Anniversary of the publication of Henry David Thoreau’s book Walden. The piano was auctioned as part of a fundraiser for the Thoreau Institute, in Concord, Massachusetts. The piano was entirely built from woods native to Massachusetts, actually sourced from the beautiful Walden Woods that served as Thoreau’s literary inspiration. The rim depicts twelve plaques of the flora and fauna seen around Walden Pond. The legs are parabolic in shape and each is a pond scene, with the water line running at the same height on all three. At the top of the rim there is a long frieze with a famous sentence from Walden, “I went to the woods because I wished to live there deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.”
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Summertime
Every available surface of this masterful celebration of the summer landscape is beautifully painted by celebrated artist Timothy Martin. The radiant florals of the season wind gracefully around the case, including brilliant red lilies, golden sunflowers, dainty freesia, a pastel palette of irises and hydrangea, and more beneath a blue summer sky, and a climbing trellis of pink roses frame a wistful waterfall on the music desk. Painted on the graceful Louis XV style case, Summertime is at once romantic and vibrant: the very essence of the summer.
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Steuben
This decorative masterpiece celebrates a momentous year in the history of two world-renowned companies: the 150th Anniversary of Steinway & Sons and the 100th Anniversary of Steuben. Reflecting a shared commitment to craftsmanship and innovation, this exquisite instrument combines the finest in both piano and glass making artistry, pushed to the edge of creative expression. The most distinctive design details of Steuben glass include brilliant, 100% clear crystal in the legs, top stick, music desk and bench, as well as an elegant aubergine colored lacquer finish. Other parts feature mirror backing to enhance the piano’s beautiful reflective qualities.
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Romance
The beauty and allure of this exquisite piano are undeniable. From the detailed marquetry to the prized veneers of Sapele and Holly, Romance is a feast for the senses. The rim is banded with figurative trim, with reversed fans of Sapele slices comprising the outlined faces. The legs and lyre are curved, convex-shaped assemblies which include delicate carving and masterful marquetry.
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Reflections
This inspired design features hand cut sections of ribbon-striped Sapele veneer, meticulously matched to vary their grain direction and form a dramatic wave pattern. As light reflects off the surface, it creates a shimmering, mesmerizing effect, changing the piano’s color and texture from every angle. Other distinctive design details include elegant Y-shaped legs and a rear leg that curves to mirror the piano’s rim. Reflections truly makes an unforgettable impression. Mr. Schrunk encored Reflections in 2002 with the stunning Reflections in Cardinalwood, which takes its name from the highly prized crimson colored Brazilian cardinal wood from which it is crafted. This artistic masterpiece also features Mr. Schrunk’s gold signature, which he reserves for his finest work.
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Peace Piano
Following the recreation of the Alma Tadema Art Case, the Steinway Peace Piano is the second to be named to Steinway & Sons Legendary Art Case Collection. It is a re-creation of a historic Steinway concert grand piano that was first exhibited at the New York World's Fair in 1939. The original piano, designed by renowned 20th Century Art Deco designer Walter Dorwin Teague, is now housed at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Steinway & Sons created this awe-inspiring concert grand piano to increase the public's awareness of UNICEF and to raise money for children in need through the joy of music. The Peace Piano made its debut in 2004 when acclaimed Steinway artist and newly appointed UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Lang Lang became the first pianist to play it. In keeping with the theme of peace, above each leg is a hand carved dove grasping an olive branch. The lower rim of the case, painted gold like the doves, is adorned with 63 stars. The 195 flags of the nations of the world wrap around the bottom edge of the piano. The 35 flags across the front of the piano are those of developed nations, such as the United States, Great Britain, and other European countries that are aiding in relief efforts on UNICEF's behalf.
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Palissandre
So admired was the original Palissandre of 2000, that designer Tim Philbrick completed an encore edition in 2002 that was met with equal demand. The 6-legged form of this Macassar Ebony Art Case pays tribute to various heirloom and vintage designs, juxtaposed by its thin, straight legs capped with ivroid, and minimalist embellishment which lend it a stylish industrial appearance. Ivroid piping surrounds the top edge of the lid, and the thin ribbon striped quarter-sawn satinwood veneer on the music desk, fall board, and underside of the lid add a hint of Art Deco styling to this striking design.
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Oasis
One of the only Art Case uprights Steinway has produced in recent history, Oasis is inspired by the reeds of a desert oasis, tall and resplendent amidst the barren sands. The background is veneered with the rare and beautiful Amboyna Burl wood, and the handcrafted golden reeds are finished in quilted maple. The visual of the quilted maple’s curly figuring subtly alters with the light or viewer’s angle, giving the reeds the illusion of soft movement, and completing the alluring aesthetic.
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Northstar
A color palette of light maple, with accents of lemonwood and pear, give this piano its wonderfully light and airy feel. The highly polished cast aluminum lyre and legs, and slightly curved face of the fallboard add to its elegant and distinctive design. Northstar’s outer case and lid feature an eight-pointed compass pattern inlay, and the bench is upholstered in stylish suede.
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Note By Note (The Making of Steinway L1037) Broadcast Schedule
Oct 19 2009 -
University of Southern California Thornton School of Music Celebrates 125 Years
Sep 10 2009 -
Donors Key in Helping Radford University to Become a Steinway School
Aug 13 2009 -
Steinway White House Pianos Pay Tribute to America
Jul 16 2009 -
The Juilliard School Purchases Twelve New Steinway Grands
Apr 15 2009 -
Steinway Unveils William E. Steinway Limited Edition Piano
Feb 2 2009 -
Michael J. Fox Addresses Hastings College Students at Steinway Hall New York
Jan 23 2009 -
The University of Victoria becomes Canada’s first All-Steinway School
Dec 1 2008 -
Lock Haven University Earns Status as an “All Steinway School”
Nov 1 2008 -
Radford University Announces All Steinway School Campaign
Oct 28 2008 -
Kennesaw State Celebrates 27 New Steinway Pianos; Reservations for Celebratory Concert Filling Quick
Oct 15 2008 -
For Lindenwood, Steinways are the key
Oct 5 2008 -
Western Michigan University’s music program ‘auditions’ Steinway pianos
Oct 3 2008 -
Eastern Michigan University Strengthens All Steinway School Campaign
Oct 1 2008 -
Crane School of Music honors John D’Addario, Jr. at Steinway Hall New York.
Sep 15 2008 -
Oklahoma State University Celebrates All Steinway School Status
Sep 15 2008 -
Hoagy Carmichael sculpture finds permanent home at Indiana University
Sep 5 2008 -
Columbus State University becomes fourth Georgia music school to be an All-Steinway School.
Aug 15 2008 -
Lang Lang helps celebrate $2 million All-Steinway gift to Columbus State University
Jul 15 2008 -
NEW YORK TIMES reports: School Buys 42 Pianos, Steinways, That Is
Jun 15 2008 -
West Chester University of Pennsylvania Hosts Reception at Steinway Hall
Jun 15 2008 -
Boise State University Announces $1.9 million All-Steinway School campaign
Apr 15 2008 -
Steinway & Sons is honored with Belmont University’s Prestigious APPLAUSE Award
Apr 15 2008 -
Manhattan School of Music announces $3 million All-Steinway campaign
Mar 15 2008 -
Dr. Bobbie Bailey donated 32 pianos to Kennesaw State University
Oct 15 2007 -
Eastern Michigan University announces $2 million All-Steinway School campaign
Sep 15 2007 -
Eastern Michigan University announces $2 million All-Steinway School campaign
Sep 15 2007

























