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Samick SC300NST 119cm traditional upright piano walnut satin secondhand c1997 M31589

from Robert Morley & Company Ltd.

Overview

Price: £2,790.00

Date: 14-06-2024 09:44AM

Expiration Date: 14-06-2025 09:41AM

Description

Samick SC300NST 119cm traditional upright piano walnut satin secondhand c1997 M31589

Full compass - 7¼ octaves – 88 notes
3 pedals (Practice pedal)

Rent this piano on our home rental scheme for only £50.00 per month with an initial payment of £350.00 before delivery to a ground floor location in London (this includes delivery, collection, first months rental and setup/admin charge).
Price on rental agreement will be the list price before not including any special offers
Terms and conditions apply, please ask for full details.

Dimensions :150.00cm wide 119.00cm high 61.00cm deep

Image(s)

Samick SC300NST 119cm traditional upright piano walnut satin secondhand c1997 M31589

Contact Owner

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Did You Know Piano Facts

1709
The year 1709 is the one most sources give for the appearance of aninstrument which can truly be called a "Pianoforte." The writer Scipione Maffei wrote an article that year about the pianoforte created by Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655-1732), who had probably produced four "gravicembali col piano e forte" or harpsichords with soft and loud. This instrument featured the first real escapement mechanism and is often called a "hammer harpsichord." The small hammers were leather covered. It had bichords throughout, and all the dampers were wedge-shaped. By 1726 he seems to have fitteda stop for the action to make the hammers strike only one of twostrings. He had produced about twenty pianos by this time and thenhe is presumed to have gone back to making harpsichords,probably from the lack of interest in his pianos. Three of hispianos remain extant today: one with four octaves, dated 1720, is in NewYork; one with four and a half octaves, from 1726, is in Leipzig,Germany; and there is one in Rome from 1722. There are approximately ten plucked instruments surviving today with the name Cristofori on them.