Ignace Pleyel e C.

(1850)
Ignace Pleyel & Comp.ie Paris
Médaille d’or 1827 – 39 – 44 hors de Concours 1849

The Pleyel pianoforte is inseparably linked with the name of Chopin. He, the greatest composer ever of music for pianoforte, held this instrument to be the “non plus ultra” (the most excellent), saying that it suited his artistic demands better than Erard’s instrument.

The characteristic sound of the Pleyel piano in the Romantic period is determined by the delicacy and clarity of its sonority.

The action of this instrument follows the lines of the English model, but with different parameters and ratios between the various elements; and – unlike the pianos built in England during the same period – it is lighter and more sensitive.

When pressing the keys of an instrument with English or Viennese action, the pianist has the clear and immediate sensation of pushing the hammer against the string, while in modern Erard-derived piano action this sensation is less noticeable.

n. 16058
style: grand
lenght: cm. 212,5
width: cm. 130
height (floor to keyboard): cm. 71
compass: CC-a””
octave size: cm. 16,35
strings: (CC / C bichord  brass winding)   C# / E (trichord brass winding) F# / a”” (iron)
bridge: divided E/F
capotasto: g”’ / a””
action: Anglo-French
hammer covering: Felt, two underfelt layers
wrest pins: square
pedals: shift, dampers
structure: Hitchpin Rail and 4 bars in metal
case: Thuja