American Piano Company

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Ampico reproducing piano in the Bayernhof Music Museum

American Piano Company (Ampico) was an American piano manufacturer located in East Rochester, New York. The company bought the William Knabe Co. of Baltimore in 1908 to add to their roster of fine piano companies. They had previously acquired Chickering Piano of Boston as well as Haines Brothers, Marshall & Wendell, and Foster, Armstrong & Company, all of East Rochester. They later purchased the Mason and Hamlin piano company as their flagship piano.

Reproducing pianos[]

From 1914 American Piano was one of the leading producers of player pianos, most notably their reproducing player known as the Ampico. The Ampico reproducing player piano was able to capture all the expression of the original performance, with dynamics and fine nuances other devices could not reproduce. Their main competitors in reproducing players were the Aeolian Duo-Art (1913) and Welte-Mignon (1905). The player piano and reproducing Ampico mechanism was originally designed by Charles Fuller Stoddard (1876–1958) with Dr. Clarence Hickman joining the company in the mid 1920s.[1][2]

A great number of distinguished classical and popular pianists, such as Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943), Leo Ornstein (1892–2002), Ferde Grofé (1892-1972), Winifred MacBride, and (1886–1951),[3] Adam Carroll, Frank Milne, and other prominent pianists of the era recorded for Ampico, and their rolls are a legacy of 19th and early 20th century aesthetic and musical practice. By the end of 1929 Ampico suffered economic difficulties and was finally taken over by the Aeolian Company, manufacturer of player pianos and organs. The combined company, known as Aeolian-American Corp., went through several ownership changes before declaring bankruptcy in 1985.

The Ampico reproducing player piano system was discontinued in 1941. The last model introduced was the Ampico Spinet Reproducing Piano, which had all the functionality of a reproducing piano, and although having a low cost of $495, had modest sales.

The first piano rolls specially coded for the Ampico were made by Rythmodik Music Corporation.

History[]

Originally named Despatch after the transportation company that spawned several dozen car shops in the area, the town was also home to a musical manufacturing giant for the better part of the 20th century. Nestled in between the New York Central Railroad tracks and Commercial Street, the 250,000 square-foot edifice designed by Henry Ives was the first industrial building in the United States to be constructed from reinforced concrete.

Renowned for its fine craftsmanship, the American Piano Company was the largest distributor and manufacturer of pianos in the world by the mid-1920s. The instrument’s popularity reached its peak that decade thanks to a growth in prosperity and an increased interest in music stimulated by phonographs and radio. Piano producers across the country would not fare as well the following decade. Over 347,000 pianos were purchased in the United States in 1923, .[4] References

Legacy[]

Ampico reproducing pianos, and their associated piano rolls were rediscovered by collectors in the 1960s who formed the Automatic Musical Instruments Collector's Association.

References[]

  1. ^ Biography Index, A Cumulative Index to Biographical Material in Books and Magazines, Volume 4: September 1955–August 1958, New York: H. W. Wilson Company, 1960
  2. ^ Obituaries on File, two volumes, compiled by Felice D. Levy (1917–1990), New York: Facts on File, 1979
  3. ^ Who Was Who in America, Volume 7, 1977–1981, Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1981
  4. ^ "The American Piano Company". democratandchronicle.com.

General references


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