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1935 kimball baby grand piano
1935 kimball baby grand piano









Because almost nobody has a parlor anymore – the Model A is now considered a recital grand. The Model M took over the baby grand moniker in 1927 before finally handing the title over to the Model S in 1935. In 1916, Steinway & Sons began calling their 5’10 Model O the baby grand because it was smaller than the Model A, which they then began calling a Parlor Grand. The modern version of this piano is only two inches longer, but because modern baby grand pianos can perform like a 6′ piano did a century ago, we now call 6′ pianos recital grands. And yes, it does follow suit that today’s best designed 6′ pianos can outperform yesteryear’s 7′ pianos and 7′ pianos can outperform 9′ pianos from the past.Īs Steinway developed the modern grand piano to keep up with demand, they kept finding ways to make it work really well in a smaller cabinet. The world’s first baby grand piano was the Steinway & Sons Model A, invented in 1905, that settled in at 6′ long – nearly a foot longer than a baby grand piano today. Because of that, the scale shrunk and the names changed. Similar to how cell phones have changed, the performance of smaller pianos has shown the most dramatic improvement. During that time, pianos became more dynamic, shorter, and began to last longer than a few years. The instrument we know today as the piano developed between the late 1860’s and the mid-1960’s. The first pianofortes had fewer keys, fewer strings, and lacked iron plates.

1935 kimball baby grand piano

Piano technology has changed a lot over the centuries. Semi-Concert Grand Pianos – 6’10” to almost 9′Ĭoncert Grand Pianos – anything over 8’10” Petite Grand Pianos are shorter than 4′ 11″ (sometimes called miniature)Ĭlassic or Medium Grand Pianos – 5’2″ to 5’8″ From baby grand to concert grand, pianos have been built in virtually every size over the past three hundred years, ranging from around 4 1/2′ to 10′ long.











1935 kimball baby grand piano