The Definitive Guide to
Buying New, Used,
and Restored Pianos

SPRING 2012 — page 96

August Förster Pianos The most important factor in maintaining the utility and longevity of any institution's pianos is the choice of piano technician. An institutional technician should possess the advanced skills and experience required to prepare pianos for public concerts, organize and manage a large inventory of instruments, deal daily with high-level pianists and educators, and be familiar with the techniques necessary for the time-efficient maintenance of practice-room pianos. An underqualified technician can contribute to an accelerated rate of deterioration and shorten the lives of the instruments under his or her care. Some fully qualified technicians, mostly manufacturer-trained, have no formal credentials. However, hiring a Registered Piano Technician (RPT) member of the Piano Technicians Guild (PTG) ensures that at least a minimum standard of expertise has been tested for and achieved. A good way to begin planning any institution's piano-maintenance program is to read PTG's Guidelines for Effective Institutional Piano Maintenance, available in printed form or as a free download from www.ptg.org.


Period Piano Center Chris Solliday services the pianos at several institutions, including Lafayette College, Lehigh University, and East Stroudsburg University. He lives in Easton, Pennsylvania, and can be reached through his website at www.csollidaypiano.com.

SPRING 2012 — page 96

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Copyright 2012 Brookside Press LLC. All rights reserved.

PIANO BUYER HOME

A Message from the Publisher (p. 1)

The Prodigious Power of Piano Playing (p. 7)

Acoustic or Digital: What's Best For Me? (p. 11)

FEATURE ARTICLES

Review: The New Feurich Pianos (p. 49)

Upright Cabinet Styles in American Piano Manufacturing, 1880–1930 (p. 69)

Moving the Family Piano (p. 102)

ACOUSTIC PIANOS

Piano Buying Basics (p. 13)

The New-Piano Market Today (p. 35)

A Map of the Market for New Pianos (Ratings) (p. 44)

Buying a Used or Restored Piano (p. 53)

Buying a High-End Piano (p. 83)

Buying Pianos For an Institution (p. 89)

Piano Maintenance in Institutions (p. 95)

How to Make a Piano Room Sound Grand (p. 97)

Caring For Your Piano (p. 105)

Benches, Lamps, Accessories, and Problem Solvers (p. 110)

DIGITAL PIANOS

Buying a Digital Piano (p. 115)

Digital Piano Basics, Part 1: Imitating the Acoustic Piano (p. 121)

Digital Piano Basics, Part 2: Beyond the Acoustic Piano (p. 128)

My Other Piano is a Computer: An Introduction to Software Pianos (p. 138)

HYBRID & PLAYER PIANOS

Hybrid Pianos (p. 141)

Buying an Electronic Player-Piano System (p. 146)

NEW-PIANO BUYERS' REFERENCE

Acoustic Pianos

Brand & Company Profiles (p. 158)

Digital Pianos

Brand & Company Profiles (p. 263)

Advertiser Index/Photo Credits (p. 288)