To whom it may concern, I'm beginning my piano search with a lot of resources on hand (The Piano Book, internet forums, etc.) but only about $3000 to spend on a vertical. I'm 17 and have been playing for ten years, working on Chopin's etudes and a lot of demanding repertoire. Our current piano is a 1970s Kimball spinet that hasn't been tuned in 4 years and the more I learn about it in relation to other pianos ("It's a spinet? What's that?") the more I'm convinced that tuning it won't revive the sound quality.
My parents already have enough financial hassles (braces for me and my bro, cars for each, and college) to worry about this sudden need for a decent upright, so I figure I can sell the Kimball for $600 (can it be more than that? Can't find the serial number), spend $1500 of my own money on a piano unless my parents feel lenient, and let them cover the rest.
My question is, what is my range and how do I start? Are used pianos better than new Pearl Rivers or other cheap Chinese ones? I live in the DFW area so I have a lot of dealers I can check out, but I'm uncomfortable playing in front of people (especially hovering people) and might make swift decisions because they're around. I know I need to find "my sound" but it's gonna have to be a cheap one. I think I'm much easier to please than the dissatisfied tone-searcher who wrote "Piano Obsession". Unless I make myself that way. The best piano I've played on so far is a Wurlitzer baby grand made by Young Chang in the 90s (my aunt's piano).
How do I handle shopping for a new piano? The newspaper has unlimited used piano ads, the dealers might trick me, you can't hear something over Ebay, and I'm only worth $3000.
Any help is appreciated, thank you so much!
~Sarah
P.S. I already discontinued my piano teacher of ten years (thanks pianostreet) and previously wanted to spend my money on lessons, but now I'm thinking a new piano (or used piano new to me) is more important for now so I'm putting a teacher on hold. What comes first? The piano? I can teach myself for now, but should I always have someone to guide me?