Bösendorfer (L. Bösendorfer Klavierfabrik
GmbH) is an Austrian
piano manufacturer and, since 2008, a
wholly owned subsidiary of
Yamaha Corporation.[1] Bösendorfer is unusual in that it produces
97- and 92-
key models in addition to instruments with standard 88-key
keyboards.
History
Bösendorfer, one of the oldest piano manufacturers, was established in 1828 by
Ignaz Bösendorfer. It has a history of producing highly respected instruments.[2]
In 1830, it was granted the status of official piano maker to the
Emperor of Austria.[3]
Ignaz's son
Ludwig Bösendorfer (1835–1919) assumed control in 1859, operating from new premises from 1860.[4]
Between 1872 and its closure in 1913, the associated
Bösendorfer-Saal was one of the premier concert halls of Vienna.[5]
In 1909,
Carl Hutterstrasser purchased the company and was succeeded by his sons Alexander and Wolfgang in 1931.[6]
In 1966, the Jasper Corporation (later renamed
Kimball International), parent company of Kimball Pianos, assumed control of Bösendorfer.[6]
In 2001 Bösendorfer returned to Austrian hands, when the
BAWAG PSK Gruppe purchased it.[4]
On 21 December 2007 BAWAG signed an agreement to sell 100% of Bösendorfer to
Yamaha Corporation.[7]
Bösendorfer continues to make handcrafted pianos in the same Vienna factory. Almost 300 of these premium pianos are made each year.[5]
Characteristics
Bösendorfer pioneered the extension of the typical 88-key keyboard, creating the
Imperial Grand (Model 290), which has 97 keys (eight octaves).
Ferruccio Busoni initially ordered this innovation in 1909 as part of a custom piano, as he wanted to transcribe an organ piece that extended to the C below the standard keyboard.[8] This innovation worked so well that this piano was added to regular product offerings and quickly became one of the world's most sought-after concert grands. Because of the 290's success, the extra strings were added to Bösendorfer's other line of instruments such as the 225 model, which has 92 keys. The extra keys, at the bass end of the keyboard, were originally hidden beneath a hinged panel mounted between the piano's conventional low A and the left-hand end-cheek to prevent their being struck accidentally during normal play; more recent models have omitted this device and simply have the upper surface of the extra natural keys finished in matte black instead of white to differentiate them from the standard 88.
The Bösendorfer sound is usually described as darker or richer than the purer but less full-bodied sound of other pianos, such as
Steinway & Sons or
Yamaha. On the Imperial Grand, this characteristic tonal quality in part derives from the inclusion of nine additional bass notes below bottom A. These extra keys were originally added so that pianists could play
Busoni's transcriptions of
J. S. Bach's organ works, which required the 32′ bass pipes (usually played on the pedal organ). As very little other music makes direct use of the extra strings, they usually contribute to the piano's sonic character not through being played directly but via
sympathetic resonance, when other strings in the piano are struck, contributing additional body to the tone. Moreover, the bass notes of the Bösendorfer, including the extra bass keys, are very powerful, adding volume in demanding literature.
Bösendorfer Kuhn pianos come with 10 Swarovski leaded-glass crystals inserted along the steel structure. The million-dollar Kuhn has 72 crystals installed under the strings.
The rim of a Bösendorfer grand piano is built quite differently from that of all other grands. Instead of veneers bent around a form, the rim is made in solid sections of spruce and jointed together. Spruce is better at transmitting sound than reflecting it. This is perhaps why Bösendorfers tend to have a more delicate treble and a bass that features the fundamental tone more than the higher harmonics.[9] There are also two other features of Bösendorfers that are shared with only a few other piano brands: one is a removable capo d'astro bar in the treble, which facilitates rebuilding of the instrument and, Bösendorfer says, provides greater acoustic separation from the plate, decreasing tonal absorption; the other is single-stringing, providing each string its own individual hitch pin on the plate instead of connecting it to a neighbouring string. This design may slightly improve tuning stability and is an advantage in case of string breakage.[10]
The latest development in the Bösendorfer range is the CEUS digital grand piano reproducing system, which incorporates a computer-controlled mechanism that records a performance on a digital storage medium (magnetic disk or memory chips) and plays it back. The requisite equipment can be fitted to most Bösendorfer pianos to allow the direct recording of pieces while capturing all the
keyboard velocity data as a .boe file.[11] Bösendorfer uses a proprietary format to record key and pedal movements as a digital file.
Models
Bösendorfer makes eight models of grand piano from 155 cm to 290 cm in length (5'1" to 9'6") and two vertical pianos,120 cm and 130 cm in height (47" and 51"). The Imperial Grand is one of the world's largest pianos.[12]
Each numerical Bösendorfer model directly corresponds to its length in centimeters. For example, a Model 170 is 170 centimeters long (approximately 5'7"). The following tables describes the current Bösendorfer models:
To appeal to a wider market, Bösendorfer designed the Conservatory Series for colleges and universities that could not afford Bösendorfer's standard black-model pianos. The production of the two CS Series pianos spends less time in "non-critical areas", cutting down costs of production and purchase, making them more affordable than standard models. The cases and frames are of satin finish, rather than polished and, initially, the pianos were loop-strung[14] rather than single-strung, but those practices have since been abandoned.[15]
Special and Limited editions
Bösendorfer has produced a number of specially designed pianos named after famous composers such as
Franz Schubert,
Frédéric Chopin and
Franz Liszt, as well as pianos designed for special occasions, such as Bösendorfer's 170th and 175th anniversaries.[16]
SE reproducing piano
Under the ownership of Kimball, Bösendorfer built and sold a small number of 290SE automatic reproducing pianos.[3] The 'SE' designation was for Stahnke Engineering, whose founder,
Wayne Stahnke, invented the mechanism. The 290 was fitted with electronics and mechanics to record on magnetic tape and playback through electro-mechanical actuation of the piano. After the release of the
Microsoft Windows v3.1 operating system, the 290SE could be attached to a PC computer for recording, editing and playback. The 290SE system was the first commercially available computer-controlled "
player piano" capable of accurately reproducing both the notes and intensity of a performer's playing. This system was not further developed or patented due to its high cost. Competitors soon introduced patented reproducing piano technologies such as the
YamahaDisklavier in 1982.[17]
Thirty seven SE models were produced between 1984 and 1986, including the 225SE, the 275SE, and the 290SE Imperial model pianos. In the 290 range, this included some 290 to 290SE conversions, while one third of the production were 290SEs that sold for $90,000.[18]
The research that went into the 290SE later laid the foundation for the CEUS computerized reproducing piano system.[19]
Designer models
Bösendorfer produces a limited number of Artisan Models annually, each available for order only during the calendar year in which it was developed. An example of a designer model is the Bösendorfer
Swarovski Crystal Grand piano. Three of these special pianos were produced in 2003 in honour of Bösendorfer's 175th anniversary. Each piano's case is encrusted with 8000 crystals and layers of gold.[20][21]
Three notable architects who have designed Bösendorfer piano models are
Theophil Freiherr von Hansen (1866),
Josef Hoffmann (1909) and
Hans Hollein (1990). There were only two Hans Hollein 225 models produced in 1990; one can be found in the lounge of the Grand Bohemian Hotel in Orlando, Florida.[22]
Bösendorfer artists
Among the earliest artists to be associated with Bösendorfer was
Franz Liszt, who at least once opined that Bösendorfer and
Bechstein pianos were the only instruments capable of withstanding his tremendously powerful playing. The renowned twentieth-century American composer–conductor
Leonard Bernstein has also performed on a Bösendorfer. Another great pianist who championed Bösendorfer pianos was
Wilhelm Backhaus.
In his memoirs,
Arthur Rubinstein recounts having insisted on a Bechstein instead of the hall's Bösendorfer before a recital in Austria. After the performance, the then-head of the Bösendorfer company came backstage to meet this young artist who refused to play a piano highly cherished by his Russian namesake,
Anton Rubinstein; Rubinstein claims he thereafter always sought out Bösendorfers when in Austria.
In the late 1970s, following a concert performed in
Vienna, jazz pianist
Oscar Peterson turned to his impresario,
Norman Granz, with the words: "Dammit, Norman, where does this box go? I also gotta have such a thing!" Such was his reaction to playing a Bösendorfer 290.[23] Musician/comedian
Victor Borge also played Bösendorfer pianos.[24]
Minimalist composer
Charlemagne Palestine chose a nine-foot Bösendorfer as the vehicle on which to perform his 1974 composition Strumming Music. Released as his first compact disc in 1991, it features in excess of 45 minutes of Palestine forcefully playing two notes in rapid alternation, slowly expanding into clusters, with the sustain pedal depressed throughout.[29] As the music swells (and the piano gradually detunes), the harmonics build and the listener can hear a variety of timbres rarely produced by the piano.
Jazz pianist
Keith Jarrett performed the solo improvisations (his
Köln Concert) at the Cologne Opera House in
Cologne, Germany, on 24 January 1975 on a Bösendorfer and became a Steinway & Sons artist in 1981.[30]
The jazz singers/pianists
Nina Simone and
Shirley Horn performed on Bösendorfers many times throughout their careers.
In a recent interview for Broadway.com, Academy Award-winning composer
Stephen Schwartz stated that he purchased a Bösendorfer after the initial success of his musical
Wicked.
Recordings
Bösendorfer pianos have appeared on numerous records. Some examples are:
Classical (recordings made with 19th century Bösendorfer pianos)
Wolfgang Brunner, Michael Schopper. Anton Bruckner. Piano Works. Label: CPO. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (before 1835).
Christoph Eggner. Anton Bruckner. Piano Pieces from the Kitzler-Studienbuch. Label: Gramola.
Hardy Rittner, Teunis van der Zwart. Johannes Brahms. Early Piano Works Vol. 2. Label: Dabringhaus und Grimm (MDG). Played on an Ignaz Bösendorfer piano (1849-1850).
Isabelle Faust,
Alexander Melnikov, Teunis van der Zwart. Johannes Brahms. Horn Trio Op. 40, Violin Sonata Op. 78, Fantasies Op. 116. Label: Harmonia Mundi. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1875).
Isabelle Faust, Alexander Melnikov. Albert Dietrich, Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms. Violin Sonatas Op. 100 & 108. Label: Harmonia Mundi. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1875).
Alexander Melnikov. Franz Schubert, Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt, Igor Stravinsky. Four Pianos, Four Pieces. Label: Harmonia Mundi. Played on pianos by Alois Graff (c. 1828-1835), Érard (1837), Bösendorfer (c. 1875) and Steinway (2014).
Italian Piano Quartet. Johannes Brahms. Piano Quartets Op. 25, 26 & 60. Label: Symphonia. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1880).
Maria Milstein,
Jozef De Beenhouwer. Johannes Brahms. Hauskonzert bei Brahms - Mürzzuschlag, 23. August 1885. Label: Brahms Museum Mürzzuschlag. Played on a Ludwig Bösendorfer piano (1882).
Simona Eisinger, Zuzana Ferjenčíková. Sergei Rachmaninoff, Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms, Richard Strauss. Seelenverwandt. Label: Schwechtenstein-Records. Played on pianos by
Johann Baptist Streicher (1847),
Friedrich Ehrbar (1878) and Ludwig Bösendorfer (1893).
Alexander Baillie, John Thwaites. Johannes Brahms. Sonaten für Violoncello und Klavier, Vier ernste Gesänge. Label: Somm. Played on pianos by
Karl Rönisch (1860), Ehrbar (1877) and Streicher (1878).
Radoslav Kvapil. Antonín Dvořák. Dvořák Piano Works. Label: Alto. Played on the composer's own Bösendorfer piano (1879).
Radoslav Kvapil. Antonín Dvořák. Dvořák Piano Works II. Label: Alto. Played on the composer's own Bösendorfer piano (1879).
Jan Michiels. Antonín Dvořák. Suite Op. 98, Poetische Stimmungsbilder Op. 85, Humoresken Op. 101. Label: Eufoda. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1884).
Jan Michiels. Johannes Brahms. Klavierstucke & Intermezzi Opus 116-119. Label: Eufoda. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1884).
Classical (recordings made with modern Bösendorfer pianos)
Malcolm Frager recorded ten compositions by
Frédéric Chopin on a Bösendorfer Imperial 290 piano for the TELARC label on August 3 and 4, 1978. This is one of the earlier, high-quality
digital recordings of the Imperial. Sampling frequency conversion of Telarc's Soundstream digital master to the Compact Disc format was accomplished with the Studer SFC-16 sampling frequency converter. The digital data was not subject to any analog processing, thus preserving the integrity of the original digital master. Originally released as "Malcolm Frager Plays
Chopin", Telarc DG-10040 in 1979. Re-released with "Sonata, Op. 58" added in 1991 on Telarc CD-80280.
Aldo Ciccolini recorded his second traversal of the piano music of
Erik Satie on a Bösendorfer; his first traversal was on a Steinway. Both are included in French EMI set 50999685824 2 5, offering record listeners an unusual opportunity for direct comparison of the two instruments.
Peter Hill recorded
Havergal Brian's complete piano music on a Bösendorfer Imperial[31] at the Northern College of Music for Cameo Classics.
John Ogdon highly praised the recordings in his review for Tempo.[32]
Robert Silverman committed a complete Beethoven sonata cycle to computer hard drive on a Bösendorfer 290SE reproducing piano. John Atkinson of Stereophile magazine then recorded a similar piano at the Maestro Foundation recital hall in Santa Monica, California replaying the files;[39] the resulting CDs were issued as a 10-disc set.[40]
Robert Ekelund – Two albums of piano pieces performed by economist and pianist Robert Ekelund, performed on the Murray N. and JoAnn B. Rothbard Bösendorfer Imperial Concert Grand Piano in the Mises Institute's Conservatory. Ekelund also
performed Brahms Rhapsody Op. 79, No. 2; J.S. Bach, Gigue, French Suite No. 5 (G-major).
Valentina Lisitsa Chopin's 24 Études D.V.D. track. Op. 10 and Op. 25 Études.
Costantino Catena has recorded on new Bösendorfer VC280 the CD "Dedications—
Schumann-
Liszt / Costantino Catena plays the new Bösendorfer 280VC" for Camerata Tokyo[43]
Zoltán Kocsis recorded on Bösendorfer, together with conductor Ivan Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra, the complete work for piano and orchestra by Bela Bartok for Philips.
Popular
Victor Borge was known for using Bösendorfer pianos during many of his shows.
Peter Bence used a Bösendorfer 290 Imperial to record a cover of Toto's Africa.
Dr. Evil plays a Bösendorfer Imperial piano in the Austin Powers movies ('böse' means evil in German). While
Mini-Me plays a "mini Bösendorfer Imperial" piano [46]
The Greek composer
Vangelis used a Bösendorfer grand piano on his albums Heaven and Hell (1975) and China (1979).
Singer/songwriter
Tori Amos has recorded and toured exclusively with Bösendorfers since 1993.[47]
A Bösendorfer piano featured prominently in the radio drama series The Adventures of Harry Nile episode 97, first aired on 10/05/1997, titled The Bösendorfer Matter
General bibliography
Fine, Larry (2007). 2007–2008 Annual Supplement to The Piano Book. Brookside Press
ISBN1-929145-21-7 and
ISBN1-929145-22-5 (electronic edition).
Fine, Larry (2001). The Piano Book. Brookside Press
ISBN1-929145-01-2
Kunz, Johannes (2002). Bösendorfer: A Living Legend. Molden Publishing Co.
ISBN3-85485-080-8
^Fine, Larry; Jarrett, Keith; Gilbert, Douglas R. (2000). The Piano Book: Buying & Owning a New Or Used Piano. Brookside Press. pp. 102–103.
ISBN978-1-929145-01-0.
^Fine, Larry (2010). Acoustic and Digital Piano Buyer. Brookside Press. p. 82.
ISBN978-1-929145-35-5.