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favorite classical keyboard instrument

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Topic: favorite classical keyboard instrument
Posted By: video vertigo
Subject: favorite classical keyboard instrument
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 02:55
    of these 3 classical keyboard instrument which do you prefer in classical-style music

I love the piano especially later classical/early romantic, the Harpsichord is also good I enjoy it because it is unique and works very nice with the flute and string instruments (such as in trio sonatas). And of course the Organ is nice such as in Fugue's especially those by Bach.

Overall I think it is a tough decision and depends on my mood, the piano is the most versatile instrument as the harpsichord really doesn't work with very many styles and the organ sounds best alone.

I will refrain from voting until I put a bit more thought into it.

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"The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Zappa



Replies:
Posted By: Drew
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 04:52
Kazoo.

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Posted By: Stefanovic
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 05:03
P I A N O... What else ? Smile


Posted By: R o V e R
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 05:07
Harpsichord
for me


Posted By: Joolz
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 09:41
Organ every time .... love a big pipe organ played well .... such power and majesty

Wurlitzer and Hammond come close


Posted By: Ricochet
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 09:48
the piano, by the mechanism, can actually be a mild percussion instrument...Wink

kidding. LOL

The piano, obviously, that's what I'm living for, about, after, in..etc.




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Posted By: Dalezilla
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 09:53
Piano.


Posted By: Scapler
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 11:50
I say piano, but in classical times it would have techincally been called the
Piano-Forte.


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Bassists are deadly


Posted By: mystic fred
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 12:01
i would say piano as i have so many piano concertos in my collection (favourite pianists Murray Perahia and Wilhelm Kempff), though the organ symphony by Saint-Saens (amazing live at the Albert Hall!) and the aforementioned  famous Bach organ fugues still give me goose bumps!Wink
Harpsichord occasionally
 
 


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Prog Archives Tour Van


Posted By: Joolz
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 12:06
Originally posted by mystic fred mystic fred wrote:

i would say piano as i have so many piano concertos in my collection (favourite pianists Murray Perahia and Wilhelm Kempff), though the organ symphony by Saint-Saens (amazing live at the Albert Hall!) and the aforementioned  famous Bach organ pieces still give me goose bumps!Wink
Harpsichord occasionally
 
 


Now you're talking    Big smile

Wonderful stuff .... I have a version on CD by Los Angeles Phil / Mehta with Anita Priest on organ


Posted By: The Whistler
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 12:12
If you'd said prog, I would have said organ, but as it stands for classical, harpsy-chord.

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"There seem to be quite a large percentage of young American boys out there tonight. A long way from home, eh? Well so are we... Gotta stick together." -I. Anderson


Posted By: Philéas
Date Posted: November 05 2006 at 15:51
Harpsichord. Very underrated.


Posted By: Norbert
Date Posted: November 06 2006 at 14:25
Organ. It's not called the King of Instruments for nothing.


Posted By: andu
Date Posted: November 07 2006 at 08:59
i can't choose. i haven't yet seriously listened to organ pieces. can anyone recommend me some start-up stuff? my favourite piano player are Dinu Lipatti and Glenn Gould, with their splendid efforts on Bach, Haydn, Scarlatti and Haendel in the first place (i'm not into romanticist composers). still, recently i heard Gustav Leonhardt's Goldberg Variations and i fell in love with the harpsichord. at the moment i am looking forward for more pre-classical harpsichord stuff.

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"PA's own GI Joe!"



Posted By: Ricochet
Date Posted: November 07 2006 at 09:02
Originally posted by Scapler Scapler wrote:

I say piano, but in classical times it would have techincally been called the
Piano-Forte.


of course. WinkLOL


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Posted By: PROGMAN
Date Posted: November 07 2006 at 09:20
Hammond Organ every time!!
 
I also like the Mellotron.


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CYMRU AM BYTH


Posted By: video vertigo
Date Posted: November 07 2006 at 21:27
Originally posted by PROGMAN PROGMAN wrote:

Hammond Organ every time!!
 

I also like the Mellotron.

    classical instruments

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"The rock and roll business is pretty absurd, but the world of serious music is much worse." - Zappa


Posted By: Arrrghus
Date Posted: November 07 2006 at 21:31
Harpsichord in classical context.

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Posted By: yesfan88
Date Posted: November 07 2006 at 22:47
I love all of them, but the harpsichord is awesome.

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"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"- Evelyn Beatrice Hall


Posted By: andu
Date Posted: November 08 2006 at 06:39
rick wakeman has a hapsichord-like part on Siberian Khatru if i'm not wrong. awesome. the possibilities of harpsichord in prog are enormous but noone seems to think this way.

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"PA's own GI Joe!"



Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: November 09 2006 at 08:17
Piano!!

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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!


Posted By: Dick Heath
Date Posted: November 10 2006 at 09:36
Originally posted by Scapler Scapler wrote:

I say piano, but in classical times it would have techincally been called the
Piano-Forte.
 
And before then you also had the Forte Piano - true.


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Posted By: Joolz
Date Posted: November 10 2006 at 10:26
FORTEPIANO [from the Wikipedia article]

Construction

The fortepiano has http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leather - leather -covered hammers and thin, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harpsichord - harpsichord -like strings. It has a much lighter case construction than the modern piano, and except for later examples, of the early nineteenth century (already evolving towards the modern piano), it has no metal frame or bracing. The action and hammers are lighter, giving rise to a much lighter touch, which in good fortepianos is also very responsive.

The range of the fortepiano was about four http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octave - octaves at the time of its invention and gradually increased. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart - Mozart ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1756 - 1756 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1791 - 1791 ) wrote his piano music for instruments of about five octaves. The piano works of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_van_Beethoven - Beethoven ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1770 - 1770 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1827 - 1827 ) reflect a gradually expanding range; his last piano compositions are for an instrument of about six octaves. (The range of most modern pianos, attained in the 19th century, is 7⅓ octaves.)

Fortepianos from the start had devices similar to the pedals of modern pianos; but these were not always pedals: sometimes hand stops or knee levers were used instead.

The sound of the fortepiano

Like the modern piano, the fortepiano can vary the sound volume of each note, depending on the player's touch. The tone of the fortepiano is quite different from that of the modern piano, being softer with less sustain. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sforzando - Sforzando accents tend to stand out more than on the modern piano, as they differ from softer notes in timbre as well as volume, and decay rapidly.

Fortepianos also tend to have quite different tone quality in their different registers--noble and slightly buzzing in the bass, "tinkling" in the high treble, and more rounded (closest to the modern piano) in the mid range. In comparison, modern pianos are rather more uniform in sound through their range.

History

Cristofori

What we now call the fortepiano was invented by the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harpsichord - harpsichord maker http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartolomeo_Cristofori - Bartolomeo Cristofori in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence - Florence around the turn of the 18th century. The first reliable record of a fortepiano appears in the inventory of the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medici - Medici family (who were Cristofori's patrons), dated http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1700 - 1700 . Cristofori continued to develop the instrument until the 1720's, the time from which the surviving three Cristofori instruments date.

Cristofori is perhaps best admired today for his ingenious fortepiano action, which in some ways was more subtle and effective than that of many later instruments. However, other innovations were also needed to make the fortepiano possible. Merely attaching the Cristofori action to a harpsichord would have produced a very weak tone. Cristofori's instruments instead used thicker, tenser strings, mounted on a frame considerably more robust than that of contemporary harpsichords. As with all later pianos, in Cristofori's instruments the hammers struck more than one string at a time; Cristofori used pairs of strings throughout the range.

Cristofori was also the first to incorporate a form of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano - soft pedal into a piano (the mechanism by which the hammers are made to strike fewer than the maximum number of strings; Cristofori's was a hand stop). It is not clear whether the modern soft pedal descends directly from Cristofori's work or arose independently.




Posted By: gong
Date Posted: November 11 2006 at 02:28
Organ, coz of Keith Jarret's "Hymns/Spheres" and "Invocations"  (ECM) 



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