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The Luthéal
has four registers that can be used in different combinations,
so it works a bit like a church organ.
If you disconnect the registers the grand piano still sounds like
a piano.
For the register
of the harpsichord steel pins hang one millimetre above the strings.
The pins touch the strings only when played louder than mezzo
forte and this makes the instrument sound like a harpsichord but
still retaining the dynamics of a piano.
With the
harp register on, thin pieces of felt lay on all the different
unisons, exactly in the middle of the length of the string, which
make the instrument sound an octave higher and flageolet tones
appear.
With both
registers connected one can hear the typical sound of the Hungarian
Cembalo.
'Tinkering' with sound.
There are
a few composers who, not satisfied with the possibilities their
piano offers, start 'tinkering 'with their instrument as if it
is a car or scooter. And like a car that has been tinkered with,
it will produce a different sound!
Satie
squeezed pieces of paper in between the strings, for his composition
´Le piège de Méduse´(1914)
One can see
pianists crawling under ` the bonnet ´of their piano to play the
strings with their fingers instead of properly using the keys.
Henry
Cowell called the piece composed this way `Piece for a
piano with strings´. ('Pièce pour piano avec cordes', 1924)
One wonders if a composer has ever tried to write a piece for
piano without strings?
The American
composer John Cage needed more noise and prepared
his Grand with items from his kitchen cabinet.
Erasers, isolation tape, screws and spoons were rattling happily
along with the music. It sounded like a Gamelan orchestra under
the influence of drugs or a drunken carilloneur, but that was
what Cage wanted.
Cages most famous piece for prepared piano is called `Sonatas
and interludes´(1946/1948) It consists of sixteen `sonatas` and
four intermezzos. Little 'gems' of sound, each taking not longer
than four or five minutes.
During `De
klap op de vuurpijl `a new years performance of the Willem
Breuker Kollektief in Amsterdam the pearl necklace of a female
singer broke.
The pearls fell into the grand piano and skipped happily along
with the music between the strings.
This sound effect is later added to the score, but sadly one has
to imagine the surprised face of singer Pauline Post to
go with it!
One can listen
to the different sounds of the Luthéal performed by pianist Carlos
Moerdijk and violinist Emmy Verhey.
They play pieces written for violin and prepared piano written
by different composers like Kodály, Granados, Bartók,
and Ravel.
Often traditional music is the source of inspiration of these
composers hence the whimsical, contrasts, passion, melancholy
and gayety.
The Luthéal offers extra possibilities to express those different
moods in this kind of music.
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