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13 Jan 11 - 05:29 AM (#3073584) Subject: Re. The Toy Piano From: WalkaboutsVerse After - the other night at a poetry club - introducing the tune for "Walkabout with my Pen" (here) on tenor-recorder, then doubling the melody with a tiny "lap-top" Casio, I began thinking again about an acoustic alternative: the "toy piano" (mini-celesta, more like it). Having only heard them on YouTube, I'm wondering if anyone here has tried playing one and, if so, how is the volume, etc., please? Also, does anyone know of a retail outlet in (North East) England where I might try-before-I-buy a Shoenhut, e.g.? |
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13 Jan 11 - 08:49 AM (#3073678) Subject: RE: Re. The Toy Piano From: s&r Some here Stu |
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13 Jan 11 - 09:37 AM (#3073697) Subject: RE: Re. The Toy Piano From: WalkaboutsVerse Or here's the 25-key Shoenhut that I'd like to try...somewhere? |
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13 Jan 11 - 11:41 AM (#3073753) Subject: RE: Re. The Toy Piano From: GUEST,Grishka We should not fail to mention John Cage, the eminent composer for toy piano (See here for an example). You may find other works by this composer inspiring as well. |
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13 Jan 11 - 01:15 PM (#3073813) Subject: RE: Re. The Toy Piano From: Jack Campin One feature of the toy piano that affected what Cage did with it: you can only play it very slowly. Its big brother, the dulcetone, isn't a whole lot more responsive - you aren't going to play Bach fugues on it. A cheap electronic keyboard from a pawnbrokers is a lot more flexible. |
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13 Jan 11 - 01:27 PM (#3073820) Subject: RE: Re. The Toy Piano From: WalkaboutsVerse ...here's the electronic keyboard mentioned atop, but I'd still like to try a toy piano. |
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13 Jan 11 - 05:23 PM (#3073951) Subject: RE: Re. The Toy Piano From: WalkaboutsVerse Thanks for that, Grishka, I've put it on my YouTube favourites. |