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Piano Assembly

January 31st, 2010

The piano is by far the most refined and elegant of all musical instrument.  A piano is the type of musical instrument that uses keys and strings to generate vibration that produces different sound notes.  In addition, a lot of people think that the piano is the hardest musical instrument to learn or master.

For an individual to master a complex musical instrument like the piano, he/she needs to pour dedication and a lot of practice.  In contrast to other modern musical instruments like guitars or drums, learning to fluently play a piano takes patience together with the memorization of every note and pitch.

Learning to play the piano may be challenging but a lot of renowned musicians like Mozzart and Beethoven have created different orchestral symphonies with their pianos.  In our modern age, various musical instruments are used to create and distribute all sorts of melody and one important musical instrument being used is the piano.

The inner workings of pianos and other forms of musical instruments with keys are intricate in so many ways.  A piano’s whole construction all play a role to its well-defined quality in generating sound and one is made over a careful and laborious process.

Building a piano is much like manufacturing a car in an assembly line.  The piano’s body, keys, strings, and other workings are produced separately and put together.  Up to 12,000 parts make up one piano.

The Frame

Wood such as maple or cherry is the primary material to make a piano’s frame.  Pianos that are made with straight frames are easier to fabricate than the ones that have bent frames such as grand pianos.  In order to attain the distinctive curve of a piano, many planks of thin maple wood are glued together, bent, and stored to become rigid. 

The Sound Board

The sound board of a piano is a type of bendable and elastic wood that serves as the piano’s vocal chords.  The common wood used is spruce due to its flexibility and this flexibility makes it possible to vibrate.  A sound board needs to vibrate together with the strings in order to produce a concise, clear and audible sound.  The key to have this synchronization is a bridge and this bridge is the reason why the sound board and the strings produce synchronized tunes.

The Piano’s Strings

The individual in charge of arranging and attaching all 230 strings is the piano stringer.  Connecting piano strings is both long and risky.  The strings themselves are very razor-sharp and can definitely cut flesh. 

The Keys

The most distinct and noticeable attribute on a piano is its keys.  All 88 of them.  These black and white mix are what enable piano players to create song and music. 

After the piano’s assembly, tuning it will be next step and will take a number of processes.  Voicing a piano demands somebody who has years of tuning skill as well as good hearing.  To accurately tune every piano key, the piano tuner sands each individual hammer that is attached to each individual key. 

Once the piano has been tuned and toned, piano players can now play their favorite music and even compose their own symphonies.

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