a Yamaha Disklavier...Someone suggested this.
Anyone really know?
"Disklavier" is a Yamaha acoustic piano with a built-in player system. I suppose it might be a good pedagogic tool to record the students playing keystroke by keystroke and then have it played back on the acoustic piano so that student can take a 3rd party view to critique his own playing... but you need big bucks to buy a piano with such a system, and I do not know of any piano teacher that actually uses one for teaching.
Oh... I like the Baldwin Hamilton too, the old ones... they sound nice and they seem to last forever. Though I have not seriously played any new Hamilton since Gibson took over Baldwin, so I have no idea what the new ones are like.
I was hoping you'd tell me what
level of competition you have in mind to define "advanced." Be that as it may, I'd say big tall Yamaha (e.g., the 52 inch tall U3 or U5) for three simple reasons: (1) the U-series uprights are perhaps the most widely used and time-tested upright line of piano that is in current production, the archetypical "workhorses" with a track record to show that it is reliable and can withstand constant heavy use over a wrong period of time, (2) big enough to give decent tone and house a decent action, (3) usually much cheaper than the German uprights of comparable size.
Now, between the U3 and the U5, aside from the tonal difference that you have to listen for yourself, though they are of the same height, the U5 spots a true sostenuto pedal that the U3 doesn't have. (Same situation with Kawai's K-80 vs. K-60, both 52", one with true sostenuto, one without.) But my view is that students would need true grand piano action before they need sostenuto, and they would need the grand piano's
una corda ebefore they need sostenuto... so unless you really cannot live without the tone of the U5 (or K-80), I'd just stop at the U3/K-60 with uprights or go straight for the grands, even if it's a 5'6" small grand.
Which is also why I am only luke-warn about the even more expensive uprights (e.g., Steinway, European/German) -- because with that kind of money, for students, I think a small grand piano gives better bang for the buck -- true grand piano action, true shifting
una-corda, and most likely a true sostenuto, things that advanced pianists should learn to use well anyway.
Anyway, that's just my thinking if I were the one to stock up my teaching studio.
