Grand Piano

Bartolomeo Cristofori Italian

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 684

Bartolomeo Cristofori was the first person to create a successful hammer-action keyboard instrument and, accordingly, deserves to be credited as the inventor of the piano. This example is the oldest of the three extant pianos by Cristofori. About 1700 he began to work on an instrument on which the player could achieve changes in loudness solely by changing the force with which the keys were struck. By 1700 he had made at least one successful instrument, which he called "gravicembalo col piano e forte" (harpsichord with soft and loud). His instrument still generally resembles a harpsichord, though its case is thicker and the quill mechanism has been replaced by a hammer mechanism. Cristofori's hammer mechanism is so well designed and made that no other of comparable sensitivity and reliability was devised for another seventy-five years. In fact, the highly complex action of the modern piano may be traced directly to his original conception.

#945. Kids: Grand Piano

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    Playlist

  1. 945. Kids: Grand Piano
  2. Martin Souter. Sonata in G minor, K373, Presto e fugato, Domenico Scarlatti. Keyboard Classics: Period Music Performed on the World's Oldest Piano. Classical Communications CCL CD005. 1999.
  3. Partite in A minor by Domenico Zipoli. Recorded by Susan Alexander-Max for the CD "Domenico Zipoli: Sonate d'Intavolatura per Organo e Cimbalo (1716), Band II. Albany Records, 2004. TROY669.
  4. Preludio from Suite in B Minor by Domenico Zipoli. Recorded by Susan Alexander Max for the CD "Domenico Zipoli: Sonate d'Intavolatura per Organo e Cimbalo (1716), Band II. Albany Records, 2004. TROY669.
Grand Piano, Bartolomeo Cristofori (Padua 1655–1731 Florence), Cypress, boxwood, paint, leather, fir, Italian (Florence)

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