Toronto Star

Parting with your piano won’t be easy

These instrument­s are no longer the status symbols they used to be a century ago

- JURA KONCIUS

WASHINGTON— Taking a shortcut through an alley on Capitol Hill last month, Amy Moore was both amused and crestfalle­n to come across an old upright piano pushed up against a brick wall with the sign “Free Piano.”

“I know it’s super-duper expensive to move a piano,” says Moore, executive director of the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop. “What immediatel­y went through my mind were visual images of how this piano might have been used. Maybe a family once sat around it or a kid took lessons on it? Why was it discarded? Pianos bring people together, they are part of celebratio­ns. It kind of made me sad to see it out there in the alley.”

The piano, once the pride of many American living rooms, seems out of tune with a growing number of households. People who own old uprights, especially the oak and walnut ones, often have the same problem as those with homes full of traditiona­l brown furniture: when you need to get it out of your house, you can’t sell it or even give it away.

Although this will make music lovers cringe, the reality is that some pianos have become disposable. There are lots of them around, some not in great shape. Although memories of an instrument may spark joy, sometimes circumstan­ces dictate that a piano be let go. Downsizing boomers often don’t have room for them; millennial­s can’t (or won’t) squeeze them into urban quarters; teens often learn to play on electric keyboards.

“They often just won’t fit,” says Libby Kinkead, one of the owners of Potomac Concierge, which offers downsizing and moving services. Sometimes “people have to choose between their couch and their piano.”

Their sheer weight — 500 to 1,200 pounds — makes them difficult and costly to move: fees can start at $200 for uprights and $300 for baby grands, plus extra for stairs and distance. Then there are tuning costs. But anyone looking for a piano is in luck: plenty are available free if you pay for the move. The downside: many more old pianos end up in landfills, some after being chopped up so they’ll fit in a truck.

It can be painful to see a precious family instrument relegated to a dump when all other efforts to rehome it have failed. Mark Rubin, who owns 12 franchises of 1-800-GOT-JUNK, says his employees have seen customers in tears as their pianos are hauled away. “Pianos are something very hard to get rid of. They hold a lot of memories.”

There are many reasons there is an excess of pianos. A century ago, they were a must in a fashionabl­e home, but New York design historian Emily Eerdmans says they are no longer status symbols. “Pianos started in the place of honour in the living room, and gradually they moved to the family room,” she says. “Today people don’t gather around a piano, they gather around a screen.”

Fewer people are buying pianos. In 2018, 30,516 new pianos were shipped to retailers in the United States, down 3.2 per cent from 2017, according to Industry Census of Music Trades, a magazine that covers music products. The postwar peak for the piano industry was 1978, when 282,000 units were shipped, according to Brian Majeski, editor of Music Trades. “A piano was part musical instrument and part aspiration­al item. You can trace this back to Jane Austen novels,” Majeski says. “Now it’s just a musical instrument. The people who buy it are the people who play, and this is a smaller set of the population.”

Nick Margaritas owns two Piano Man stores in Maryland and has endured the ups and downs of the business for 45 years. He’s in the midst of a store-closing sale in College Park. In addition to used pianos, he offers moving services. Margaritas has a roll-off dumpster for depositing what’s know in the business as “removals.”

“It’s not a glamorous part of the piano industry,” Margaritas says. “A dozen pianos can fit in one.”

There are various ways to deaccessio­n a piano. None are easy. Many an owner has envisioned a loving second home for their prized instrument — or at least a hefty sale price. Most will find neither.

Ebonized pianos by Steinway, Yamaha and Kawai are models that sell best at Weschler’s Auctioneer­s and Appraisers in suburban Rockville, Maryland, says vice-president Mark Weschler. When clearing out estates, Weschler often advises clients that old dark wood pianos are not worth auctioning and are best donated. If in bad condition, a removal service is suggested.

Many churches, schools and senior centres already have as many as they need. Goodwill stores in the Washington area don’t accept them, a spokespers­on said. At Levine Music, a centre for music instructio­n and education with 300 Steinway pianos on five local campuses, a piano might be accepted for donation if it’s in good condition and passes an assessment by a Levine piano technician. Steinways will be put to use in teaching studios; other uprights or spinets might go to the school’s piano loaner program, according to Stan Spracker, Levine’s president.

But in many cases, the instrument­s end up in places like Margaritas’s trash bin. “First they call to try and sell you the piano,” he says.

“That doesn’t work. They ask if they can give you the piano. When that doesn’t work, you have to quote them the basic $295 moving fee for an upright plus $4 per stair step.” Finally, they agree to have you pick it up, “if they don’t hang up on you or tell you they would rather burn the piano than have you remove it,” he says.

The glut of free pianos is a blessing for some.

Last December, Washington artist Carolina Mayorga needed a pink piano for her interactiv­e installati­on at Art Museum of the Americas. A Craigslist search for “free piano” turned up one in suburban Maryland. It was pink.

“It was crazy, but it was exactly the piano I needed,” she says. “I just had to pay for the movers.”

She transferre­d it to a storage space and then to the museum. Total moving tab: $708. Her installati­on is now going to be shown at the Smithsonia­n Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.

Some pianos don’t come and go so easily. Margo Prator reluctantl­y scheduled a pickup last month with 1-800-GOTJUNK to remove the cherry upright her parents bought in the 1950s. But she cancelled. “I just wasn’t ready,” she says. She had offered it to a school, posted it on an internet mailing list and tried to get her brother to put it in his beach house.

“It makes me sad they will take it to the dump,” Prator says, “not only because it’s a piece of history, but it’s a musical instrument.” She has to get it out of her house by next month; a family credenza is arriving to fill that spot in the living room.

“The closer we get to July, I realize that I’m going to have to pick up the phone and call them again to take it away,” Prator says.

“I can’t believe nobody wants this free piano. Do you want a piano?”

 ?? KATHERINE FREY THE WASHINGTON POST ?? People often have the same problem with pianos as with traditiona­l brown furniture: when you need to get it out of your house, you can’t sell it or even give it away.
KATHERINE FREY THE WASHINGTON POST People often have the same problem with pianos as with traditiona­l brown furniture: when you need to get it out of your house, you can’t sell it or even give it away.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada