Yamaha also makes electronic player pianos called Disklaviers, as well as a variety of hybrid acoustic/digital instruments, such as Silent Piano (formerly called MIDIPiano), the AvantGrand series, and model NU1, that account for a substantial percentage of the company’s sales. These products are reviewed separately in the articles "Buying an Electronic Player-Piano System" and "Hybrid Pianos."
Warranty: Yamaha and Cable-Nelson — 10 years, parts and labor, to original purchaser.
YOUNG CHANG
including Weber and Albert Weber
Young Chang North America, Inc.
6000 Phyllis Drive
Cypress, California 90630
657-200-3470
800-874-2880
www.youngchang.com
www.weberpiano.com
Pianos made by: Young Chang Co., Ltd., Incheon, South Korea; and Tianjin, China
In 1956, three brothers — Jai-Young, Jai-Chang, and Jai-Sup Kim — founded Young Chang and began selling Yamaha pianos in Korea under an agreement with that Japanese firm. Korea was recovering from a devastating war, and only the wealthy could afford pianos. But the prospects were bright for economic development, and as a symbol of cultural refinement the piano was much coveted. In 1962 the brothers incorporated as Young Chang Akki Co., Ltd.
In 1964 Yamaha and Young Chang entered into an agreement in which Yamaha helped Young Chang set up a full-fledged manufacturing operation. Yamaha shipped partially completed pianos from Japan to the Young Chang factory in Incheon, South Korea, where Young Chang would perform final assembly work such as cabinet assembly, stringing, and action installation. This arrangement reduced high import duties. As time went by, Young Chang built more of the components, to the point where they were making virtually the entire piano. In 1975 the arrangement ended when Young Chang decided to expand domestically and internationally under its own brand name, thus becoming a competitor. Young Chang began exporting to the U.S. in the late 1970s, and established a North American distribution office in California in 1984. In addition to making pianos under its own name, Young Chang also made pianos for a time for Baldwin under the Wurlitzer name, for Samsung under the Weber name, and private-label names for large dealer chains and distributors worldwide.
Weber & Co. was established in 1852 by Albert Weber, a German immigrant, and was one of the most prominent and highly respected American piano brands of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During the consolidation of the American piano industry in the early 20th century, Weber became part of the Aeolian family of brands. Following Aeolian's demise in 1985, Young Chang acquired the Weber name.
In 1995, in response to rising Korean wages and to supply a growing Chinese domestic market, Young Chang built a 750,000-square-foot factory in Tianjin, China, and gradually began to move manufacturing operations there for some of its models. Today, the Tianjin facility produces Young Chang and Weber pianos, and components for the Albert Weber line, which is assembled in South Korea.
Hyundai Development Company, a Korean civil-engineering and construction firm, acquired Young Chang in 2006. The company says that Hyundai Development has brought the necessary capital for factory renovations and has instituted new advanced industrial quality-control systems.
In 2008 Young Chang hired noted American piano designer Delwin D. Fandrich to undertake a redesign of the entire Young Chang and Weber piano line. Highlights include extensively redesigned cast-iron plates, new string scales, and new rib designs. New directly-coupled bass bridges, along with unique "floating soundboard" configurations, improve soundboard mobility around the bass bridge for better bass tonal response. At the same time, a revised hammer-making process, in which the hammers are cold-pressed with less felt compression, provides for greater hammer resilience and improved tone, with less voicing required. Fandrich says that all of these features and processes contribute to his goal of building instruments with improved tonal balance and musicality, and provide opportunities to standardize manufacturing processes for better quality control. The new designs are being phased in gradually throughout 2011 and 2012.
Until recently, the Young Chang and Weber pianos lines, each with three levels of quality, were identical: The top level instruments were the Young Chang Platinum Edition (models beginning with YP) and the Albert Weber (AW), made in Korea; the mid-level lines were the Young Chang Professional Artist (PE, PF, PG) and the Weber Sovereign (WSE, WSF, WSG), also made in Korea; and the entry-level lines were the Young Chang Traditional/Gold (T, AF, GS), the Weber Legend (WLE, WLG), and, at one time, Bergmann, a name no longer used, all made in China.
FALL 2012 — page 193
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