What is the piano player?
Piano player is the type of piano played. Although it is rare to see the piano players in modern times, they were quite popular at the beginning of the 20th century and some still survive. The piano plays a pneumatic mechanism that plays music that is coded as a formula of holes on a perforated role of paper.
Separate musical instruments have existed for many centuries, even for millennia according to some records. At the beginning of the 20th century, automatic tools became quite sophisticated. The first real players piano was built in 1880 in New York and the subsequent designs were developed to make them even more useful and aesthetically pleasant. Many early players pianos were not integrated into the piano itself, but rather operated externally and had to be pushed up to the front of the piano and aligned with the keyboard.
As the instrument developed, the player was subject to some variations and redesign, but in general the mechanismThe players' pianos have shared some universal qualities. They were usually based on the suction principle, which was generated by the user by pressing two legs of the pedals at the base. The role of the paper was on the reel and perforation on the paper was read by a device called tracking bar. When the hole in the paper passed through a certain location, the valve was to open and lower the engine that pushed either the piano key or the string itself, in later models.
The remarkable degree of popularity participated in the piano of the player at the beginning of the 20th century, especially when the sale increased in the 1920s. The 1929 stock market and a major depression 30 years have effectively written the end of the piano piano industry, although several manufacturers tried to fight through depression. At the age of 60, the player's piano was revived, leading to a renewed process of some manufacturers. Some also created new piano roles - paper with coded musical selection - allowing old and new gaming pianos to play current MELOdie. This helped give the player's piano restored relevance than to be an antique or historical curiosity.
While the production of players' pianos is no longer common, because of the prevalence of programmable digital pianos, some companies offer products that basically turn a conventional piano piano. These work on the basis of digital technology and are added to existing pianos in a highly adapted way. The installation of these sets can often stand as well as a brand new piano, but the new digital players are highly advanced and universal.