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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Kaleidoscope -> 
Latvia unveils largest piano
    2019-07-30  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

SOARING to new musical heights, a German-born innovator has crafted what is believed to be the world’s largest grand piano.

It is without question one of a kind: attached high on the wall of a concert hall in Latvia, the steel-framed vertical grand piano hangs as if in mid-air some three storeys above the audience.

To play it, pianists must climb a steep flight of steel stairs to a balcony.

Although the Guinness Book of World Records has not yet measured the new instrument, it was made by David Klavins, whose Model 370 piano unveiled in 1987 is currently regarded as being among the world’s largest.

Klavins’ standard new model, the 450i Vertical Concert Grand piano, is 4.5 meters high, making it 1 meter taller than its predecessor.

The custom-built 450i piano installed at a new concert hall in the Baltic seaside port and resort town of Ventspils is even larger; its imposing navy blue-painted steel frame is 6 meters high.

With some strings measuring almost 5 meters, the instrument emits bold, sonorous music.

“The most suitable music for this instrument would be all the very expressive works, for example Rachmaninoff [and] Scriabin ... Beethoven’s sonatas would sound totally different on this instrument,” Klavins told AFP.

The innovator, who has Latvian roots, has worked on pianos nearly all his life, driven by a desire to push the boundaries of the instrument first created by Italian Bartolomeo Cristofori around the year 1700.

“Since I was 16 years old and dropped out of school to become a piano restoration apprentice, I have been trying to explore new designs and principles, which deviate from the 140-year-old construction of the traditional grand piano,” Klavins, now 65, told AFP while sitting at the 450i.

He crafted his first vertical piano in 1985. Now at his workshop, the Klavins Piano Manufaktura based in the town of Vac just north of the Hungarian capital Budapest, he dreams up his signature vertical designs.

It is not just his new instrument’s mammoth size that makes it stand out; having no wooden casing means that audiences seated in the concert hall can see its long, steely strings.

“The size of the piano and length of strings do not set records for a record’s sake: the idea is to create the best imaginable sound for all the performers and listeners who come to this particular hall,” he added.

(SD-Agencies)

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