Now it is important to understand that I have not inspected this instrument in person. I am going on what you have stated in general terms.
There's an old 1896 Upright Steinway nearby that I am about to purchase. It needs work. It hasn't been maintained much over the years, and it's not been moved in about 50. It hasn't been tuned in 20. My plan was to buy it, play it for now, and eventually get it restored.
Well, I’m not wanting to be too objective but for a 116 yr old upright piano why would there be any purchase price at all? An instrument of this sort, of this age, even a brand name like Steinway that has been neglected for a couple of decades, will be in rough shape. The financial value is zero or close to zero; perhaps the cost of the move only.
I had a technician over to the seller's house to go through it with me an provide an estimate. He doesn't agree with my plan to just attempt a "light" tuning (ie, not up to concert pitch, but in tune with itself) and in fact won't touch it in this weather. (dry and cold) The pegs are slipping and some have already been tapped in.
So while I understand his concern and him not wanting to be responsible for slipping tuning and possibly breaking strings when it's brought up to tune slowly, I have a conundrum.
I would concur with your technician; once again for a 116 yr old instrument that has not been tuned for 20 years with loose tuning pins, one can tune this instrument all day long; as soon as it is used the loose pins become a factor. The only reason the instrument may appear stable for the moment is most likely because the pitch is low and nobody is playing. Raising the pitch will bring expose more tuning pins that have failed. Play this instrument regularly and it will run out of tune quickly…….
A) I am a music student at the local university. They have practice rooms filled with Steinways. However, I am 30 minutes away from campus and also working full time, so my schedule doesn't really allow me the freedom to get into those practice rooms. This is why I decided to purchase a real piano (versus the midi controller - without sounds - I've been using) I would like to have this piano IN my house (versus the studio in a separate building I've built on my property, the location of the midi controller) so when I'm working through Theory exercises and counterpoint, I can actually play it on a real piano.
I am going to be a little more direct here. In this paragraph you kindly state you have decided to purchase a real piano. Well that may be the case but this one is not it. An instrument of 116 yrs of age will require a complete rebuild. What you have discovered is a “project piano” a name brand upright instrument from yesterday’s world. I guess you will have to decide whether or not you are a student of music or a student of piano restoration. I can tell you which one you will become with this instrument…….
B) I don't want a low end piano. I don't want a furniture piece. I want a quality instrument, and I like the look and feel of this Steinway. I know there's other pianos I could get into for roughly the same amount of money, but like the piano tech said - it won't be a Steinway. He mentioned this particular model is in high demand right now, and they actually have another of the same in their shop right now going through a full restore.
Understood. Unfortunately right now you are looking at a piece of furniture; it has been sitting there for 20 years as you stated right? Yes it is an old Roll- Royce of the piano industry but once again requires a complete restoration in order to be a viable instrument for regular use.
So what's the problem? It will take 4 months to restore. They are that backed up. And - it will cost $2700 + tax on top of the cost of the piano. Granted, this will still get me into the Steinway for roughly $3500. The rebuild includes all new strings, pins, hammers, dampers, replacing the ivories with plastic, regulating the action and pedals and 2 moves. I won't have it refinished because I said, I'm not looking for a furniture piece and it's really not that bad. Maybe one day down the road, but not now. It's more than I wanted to spend (was hoping to come in at about $1500 for the repair work) but the tech insists that the piano is in great shape otherwise and would be a worthwhile investment for a rebuild, not to mention immediately being worth more than I put into it.
No problem at all here; I don’t think you will get any objection from members about how you spend your disposable funds. Just so you are aware, I have been completing restorative work on piano for 39 years this year. While I am not aware of your location and am not privy to the pricing in your locale here is an example of the fee I would charge for the same work listed:
Re-stringing with all tuning pins, block preparation, under felt, cleaning of bridges, sounding board, disposal of old wire, tuning to zero tension and back to A440,etc etc. $5000.00
Action/keyboard restoration with new felt replacement, new hammer set, new damper plates, and complete regulation of all motion flanges.$3500.00-4000.00
Ivory to plastic replacement $450.00 For moving charges 250 X 2 = $500.00 For pedal plating $175.00
Also count on what is termed as “hidden damage” sometimes when you get deep into a project there is hidden wear or problems that cannot be discovered until he instrument is dismantled, so add another $1000.00 perhaps.
So far we are up past 10K…
But... it will be 4 months to get it back. So that means no piano for this entire semester.
Time is only a measurement.
So, if you've gotten down this far:
1) Should I just get the piano, move it to my house (for an additional $280) and bring it up to some sort of tune (I believe it will hold a moderately ok tune, not concert, but fine for practice) for the semester and then send it out for restore over the break? (the wait time during the summer could be as short as 8 weeks instead of 16) This is not a sure thing. It's possible it won't hold any tune. A good 1/2 of the instrument is still in decent tune even after 20 years though, so I think it could hold somewhat of a decent tune for a few months.
2) Should I just send it out and deal without a piano for the whole semester? (which negates the whole point of getting a real piano again to begin with)
3) Forget the whole thing and stick with my midi controller?
4) Forget the Steinway and try to find another decent piano, but without the mojo of the Steinway?
Opinions are appreciated, if you've made it this far.
Yes I can see that this could be a bit of an ego purchase with the “mojo of a Steinway” remark. No problem, we all have desires…..something to think about for the final thought:
I have a pizza shop and I make pizza all day long. I have 4 drivers that deliver the pizzas to your door. I need 4 dependable cars for them to use. Easy on the fuel, easy to park, relatively no maintenance, dependable transportation for buzzing around the city.
Should I get the small Honda Civic, or the small Toyota Echo or some other small dependable units or should I go and purchase those 4 old 1964 convertible Mustangs with the worn-out brakes and worn-out transmissions, steering that pulls to the left while braking, leaking and ripped tops,…..I mean what am I doing here? Am I in the pizza business or am I in the business of keeping old machinery on the road?
How many tow trucks will I need going with the second choice? This is the unknown…….
You are a student of music. Let’s keep it that way for the moment. There are plenty of Steinways to discover all over the place. When the time is right you will find another…….