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Encyclopedia > Steinway

Steinway & Sons is a piano manufacturing firm, currently based in New York and Hamburg, Germany.


The firm was founded in 1839 in Seesen, Germany by Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg, who emigrated to America in 1851 and changed his surname to Steinway. By the 1860s they were the leading piano manufacturer in America. The innovations introduced by Steinway, including the cast iron frame and overstringing, have become a model for other piano manufacturers worldwide.


In 1866, Henry Steinway built Steinway Hall on 14th Street in New York City. It housed the firm's offices and showrooms on the first floor, and a large auditorium on the second floor which became a center of culture and music.


In 1880, Henry Steinway's son William Steinway established a company town, Steinway, Queens Co., New York, which later became part of Long Island City, and built piano factories and worker housing there.


Their success is reflected by their presence on the most prestigious concert stages in the world. Steinway was for a time nearly the exclusive provider of high-end pianos. Their production now has been outnumbered by other firms such as Yamaha and Kawai, with each brand having its loyalists. At the top of their success in the 1920s they sold more than 6,000 pianos a year. Steinway's long established reputation and hand-crafting, particularly for those produced in Hamburg, set them apart from others.


After long financial woes the firm was finally sold to CBS in 1972. CBS sold Steinway to Steinway Musical Properties, Inc. which finally sold it to Selmer in 1995. Only one member of the Steinway family currently still works for Steinway.


Most pianists have a preference for either Hamburg-built Steinways or New York Steinways. Whilst the differences are preferential and not qualitative, each has its loyalists. Influential artists such as the late Vladimir Horowitz insisted on the New York Steinway, with its clearer, and more penetrating timbre, whereas others, including Marc-Andre Hamelin, Alfred Brendel and Arcadi Volodos, prefer the Hamburg Steinway for its more mellow, rich, warm tone. The differences in tone are determined by the quality of the construction, as well as piano's hammer manufacture (the New York Steinway uses considerably softer felt hammers (using a Texas-Australian composite) than their Hamburg counterparts). Despite the insistence by the Steinway management that there is no difference between the two, there are substantial differences in the manufacturing process and the skill level in the labour, resulting in dramatic differences between them.


Official Website

Steinway & Sons (http://www.steinway.com)


Trivia

The Hyperion Cantos, set in a distant future, mention the Steinway as being one of the mythical music instruments, along with Stradivarius violins.


  Results from FactBites:
 
PianoSearch: Steinway Reading (7442 words)
Steinway had chosen No. 565700 to be one of the 300 or so grands in its concert fleet, a bank of pianos the company lends out for concerts, recitals, recording sessions and television programs.
Steinway remains one of the last outposts of hand craftsmanship in a machine-dominated industry in what was once a boomtown for piano makers.
Steinway is now one of the last large manufacturing operations in New York City, which the State Labor Department says lost 666,400 factory jobs between 1962 and the end of last year, when 217,000 remained.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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