The Piano: The Pianofortes of Bartolomeo
Cristofori (1655–1731)
The Importance of the Piano
The pianoforte, more commonly called the
piano, became, by the last quarter of the eighteenth century, a leading
instrument of Western art music, for both professionals and amateurs. The
modern piano is a highly versatile instrument capable of playing almost
anything an orchestra can play. It can sustain pitches in a lyrical fashion,
creating all musical styles and moods, with enough volume to be heard through
almost any musical ensemble. Broadly defined as a stringed keyboard instrument
with a hammer action (as opposed to the jack and quill action of the
harpsichord) capable of gradations of soft and loud, the piano became the
central instrument of music pedagogy and amateur study. By the end of the
nineteenth century, no middle-class household of any stature in Europe or North
America was without one. Almost every major Western composer from Mozart onward
has played it, many as virtuosi, and the piano repertory—whether solo, chamber,
or with orchestra—is at the heart of Western classical professional
performance.
Cristofori and the First Pianofortes
The quiet nature of the piano's birth
around 1700, therefore, comes as something of a surprise. The first true piano
was invented almost entirely by one man—Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655–1731) of
Padua, who had been appointed in 1688 to the Florentine court of Grand Prince
Ferdinando de' Medici to care for its harpsichords and eventually for its
entire collection of musical instruments. A 1700 inventory of Medici
instruments mentions an "arpicimbalo," i.e., an instrument resembling
a harpsichord, "newly invented by Bartolomeo Cristofori" with hammers
and dampers, two keyboards, and a range of four octaves, C–c'''. The poet and
journalist Scipione Maffei, in his enthusiastic 1711 description, named
Cristofori's instrument a "gravicembalo col piano, e forte"
("harpsichord with soft and loud"), the first time it was called by
its eventual name, pianoforte. A contemporary inscription by a Florentine court
musician, Federigo Meccoli, notes that the "arpi cimbalo del piano e' forte"
was first made by Cristofori in 1700, giving us a precise birthdate for the
piano.
Cristofori was an artful inventor,
creating such a sophisticated action for his pianos that, at the instrument's
inception, he solved many of the technical problems that continued to puzzle other
piano designers for the next seventy-five years of its evolution. His action
was highly complex and thus expensive, causing many of its features to be
dropped by subsequent eighteenth-century makers, and then gradually reinvented
and reincorporated in later decades. Cristofori's ingenious innovations
included an "escapement" mechanism that enabled the hammer to fall
away from the string instantly after striking it, so as not to dampen the
string, and allowing the string to be struck harder than on a clavichord; a
"check" that kept the fast-moving hammer from bouncing back to re-hit
the string; a dampening mechanism on a jack to silence the string when not in
use; isolating the soundboard from the tension-bearing parts of the case, so
that it could vibrate more freely; and employing thicker strings at higher
tensions than on a harpsichord.
Cristofori's Surviving Pianos
Three pianos by Cristofori survive, at
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City (1720, 89.4.1219); at the Museo
Strumenti Musicali in Rome (1722); and at the Musikinstrumenten-Museum of
Leipzig University (1726). The Metropolitan's Cristofori, the oldest surviving
piano, is in a plain wing-shaped case, outwardly resembling a harpsichord. It
has a single keyboard and no special stops, in much the same style as Italian
harpsichords of the day. (The keyboards of the two other surviving pianos by
Cristofori can be shifted slightly so that only one of the two strings of each
pitch will be struck, i.e., una corda, thereby quieting the entire instrument.)
The sound of the Museum's 1720
Cristofori differs considerably from the modern grand piano. Its range is
narrower—54 rather than 88 keys—and its thinner strings and harder hammers give
it a timbre closer to a harpsichord than a modern Steinway. Maffei commented
that, because of its somewhat muted tone, Cristofori's piano was best suited
for solos or to accompany a voice or single instrument, rather than for larger
ensemble work. Indeed, a contemporary harpsichord was a louder and more
brilliant instrument, but lacked the ability to respond to the strength of the
player's touch, and so could achieve no significant gradations in dynamic
expression. Like the piano, the clavichord (1986.239) is also capable of
detailed gradations of loud and soft controlled by the player's touch, but this
intimate stringed instrument is overall so soft that it can barely be heard a
few feet away, and so is useless in ensembles or in concert.
Cristofori's invention was initially
slow to catch on in Italy, but five pianos by Cristofori or his pupil Giovanni
Ferrini were purchased by Queen Maria Barbara de Braganza of Spain, patron and
student of Domenico Scarlatti (1685–1757). Hundreds of Scarlatti's more than
500 single-movement keyboard sonatas may have been intended for piano, rather
than harpsichord as has long been assumed. The earliest music definitely
written and published specifically for the piano were twelve Sonate da cimbalo
di piano e forte detto volgarmente di martelletti (Florence, 1732) by Lodovico
Giustini (1685–1743), dedicated to Don Antonio of Portugal, uncle of Maria
Barbara and another student of Scarlatti. The sonatas contain nuanced
expressions such as più forte and più piano, fine dynamic gradations impossible
to execute on a harpsichord.
Maffei's description, which includes a
diagram of Cristofori's action, was translated into German and included in
Johann Mattheson's Critica musica of 1725, where it was probably read by
Gottfried Silbermann (1683–1753), the important Saxon court organ builder.
Based on Cristofori's design, Silbermann began work on his own pianos in the
1730s. An early model was dismissed by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750) as
possessing too heavy a touch and too weak a treble. With actual first-hand
experience of one of Cristofori's instruments and subsequent improvements,
Silbermann's pianos were more successful, leading to the purchase of several by
Frederick the Great, king of Prussia (r. 1740–86). Bach later praised
Silbermann's pianos, going so far as to become a sales agent for his
instruments, thereby extending the influence of Cristofori's creation in
central Europe during the years following the Paduan instrument maker's death.
El creador del piano que revolucionó la música
Se puede entender la música actual sin un piano? Ni la actual ni la pasada
y eso se lo debemos a Bartolomeo Cristofori, que, a principios del siglo XVIII,
pasó de construir clavecines a inventar el piano. Aunque desconocido por
muchos, fue uno de los hombres que cambió la historia de la música con sus
inventos.
Italiano, de Padua, y, según cuenta la leyenda sin confirmar, aprendiz del
constructor de violines Nicolò Amati. De él podría haber sacado su interés por
la música, aunque apostó más por los instrumentos de teclado. Tanto que acabó
inventando uno que ha llegado a nuestros días como un básico de la cultura.
Desde bien joven supo que quería ser alguien el mundo de la música. No como
compositor, sino como creador. Antes del piano fueron dos sus invenciones,
aunque no consiguieron el mismo éxito. La espineta era una especie de
clavicordio con las cuerdas inclinadas para ahorrar espacio, algo muy preciado
en los pequeños huecos en los que se colocaba la orquesta en las
representaciones teatrales. Poco después, Bartolomeo Cristofori sorprendió con
la original espineta oval, una especie de virginal con las cuerdas más largas a
mitad de la caja.
Pero su gran éxito llegaría algo más tarde. En 1698 empezó a trabajar en el
piano, aunque algunos registros lo fechan dos años después, en 1700. En esa
época trabajaba contratado por el príncipe Fernando II de Médici como
conservador de instrumentos, construyendo clavicémbalos, en gran parte. Le dio
una gran soltura con las piezas de cuerda y teclado, hasta el punto que se
atrevió a dar el paso.
Bartolomeo Cristofori veía un problema en los clavicémbalos y acabó
encontrando la forma de resolverlo. No ser podían tocar sonidos suaves y
fuertes a la vez, así que se le ocurrió una idea y la llevó a cabo. Tardó 16
años en hablar de un «arpicémbalo» que tenía dos juegos de cuerdas y una caja
de resonancia que podía producir suaves y fuertes o, en italiano «piano e
forte» –de ahí el nombre con el que se acabó conociendo al instrumento–.
Cristofori creó tres pianos, todos en la década de 1720. El primero se
encuentra hoy en el Museo Metropolitan de Nueva York con la inscripción
original en latín del inventor: «BARTHOLOMAEVS DE CHRISTOPHORIS PATAVINUS
INVENTOR FACIEBAT FLORENTIAE», –Bartolomeo Cristofori, inventor de Padua, hizo
esto en Florencia– seguido de la fecha, en números romanos. Las mismas palabras
que recogen sus pianos de 1722 y 1726, que se guardan en Roma y Leipzig.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario