Dieses ist das beste Cembalo mit einer fantastischen Aufnahme des La Folia C.P.E Bachs von Robin Bigwood, das ich je gesehen habe. Danke fürs Mitteilen!
Here is another triple manual harpsichord, built in about 1983, by Keith Hill and Philip Tyre, then of Grand Rapids, MI. It, too, is a magnificent instrument: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-UNQ-sUvSiV8.html
Beautiful!! Incredible talent........I shouldn't comment about this but....wow. in the close up at 0:38 I could see Gene Wilder back in 1971...Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. LOL Sorry.
My instant reaction to this is that I vastly prefer the sound of the Goble/Gotto instrument to the Hass. Beautiful job. I wish that Mr. Puyana could have lived to play this instrument.
What a special instrument. I never knew three manuals existed. Just lovely. I played in college and would love to get back to it ❤ Thank you for sharing 😊
its a good advance for the limitated dynamics of the clavichord, but i dont understand very much of this.. the first keyboard is Forte, the second piano and the third is pianissimo?
It seems to be theoretically possible, then, to have an GGGGGGGG 256' @@organist1982, which gets us into the range of Richard Bobo's "Gigarackett" joke-instrument.
This is fascinating but I'm still wondering about the decoration of the sharp keys. Is this copied from the original Hass instrument? Does anyone know what it represents, if anything?
The story I heard from Andrea Goble himself, is that Puyana ordered the harpsichord but then couldn’t pay for it. That one was bought by Henry Hood in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Imagine having to tune and regulate this instrument. I'd be too exhausted to play after that. I'm happy with my single manual Flemish with its 1x8 and 1x4 stops. I assume Robin has someone, perhaps Alan Gotto to tune it . I love the nasard and lute stops. The original Haas instrument was owned by Rafael Puyana.