Saturday, May 10, 2014

West Side plays host to sweet piano sounds

By Jeff Pawlak and Brittney Singletary
Bengal News West Reporters
Not only will May bring sunshine and warmer weather back to the West Side, it will also bring two new colorful pianos for the public to enjoy.
For the second year, local musician and singer Mark Weber is breathing new life into a number of worn down pianos to put out on display in select spots of the West Side and other locations in Buffalo. These pianos are more than just eye candy—they’re fully functional instruments that anyone can play.
Pianos like this one will grace the West Side soon.
This year, he’s readying seven to set up, one of which will be outside the Mansion on Delaware, and another outside the Brisbane Building.
There could be even more than that, Weber said, depending on how much money he receives in donations in the coming weeks.
“It was a lot of work to make it happen, I wasn't sure if I'd do it again in 2014, but enough people are asking for it to happen again, and that encourages me to do it,” said Weber. “I'd estimate the pianos were seen by well over 200,000 people last summer. One of the pianos, on Grant Street, was played by a man who regularly performs at Carnegie Hall in New York City. A lot of little kids also liked trying out their skills on the pianos. I was told that sometimes the pianos would be used non-stop by various people for four hours straight.”
Jeannene  Petri, one of the owners of the Westside Stories used bookstore on Grant Street, was as enthusiastic as anyone about the piano that sat outside her shop last summer before Weber brought it indoors for the winter.
“It was a really nice fixture in the neighborhood,” said Petri. “It’s the same as all of the public art displays—the murals, and as people fix up their store fronts, it adds to the general sense that this is a community that is vibrant, and it’s a community that is cohesive, and that invites people to come and experience not just their house, but their neighborhood.”

Jeannene Petri, on having a public piano outside her bookstore:


Weber gets these pianos from anyone willing to donate them, and as an independent singer and songwriter, he knows more than enough people who own one.
“Everybody and their brother either has or knows someone who has an old upright piano they want to get rid of,” said Weber. “I think I could literally collect 100 pianos in one month's time from people around Buffalo who would be more than happy to give me their pianos just to get those 500-pound heavy beasts out of their house.”
Acquiring the pianos is the easy part. Weber also refinishes, paints and retunes the pianos. Then there’s the issue of protecting them from the weather, which Weber learned the hard way after two pianos were ruined by rain last year. This year, Weber plans to place most of the pianos underneath roofs and awnings, while those that are more exposed will have attendants to cover them as needed.
Moisture can be a problem for more than just the outside of the pianos.
“I also buy dehumidifiers to stick in the piano to suck up the moisture, and then replace as needed,” said Weber. “I go to the laundry/closet section of Super Wal-Mart and buy these small boxes that can be placed in the pianos to absorb excess moisture. They help because pianos and high humidity don't get along, so anything to reduce the humidity helps.”
One person who truly appreciates Weber’s hard work is Geno Principe, the owner of the Mansion on Delaware, where one of this year’s pianos will be located.
“Mark called me, and it sounded like fun,” said Principe. “It’ll be fun to have it in front of the mansion and fun for people to play it.”
Of course, no one is more excited by this year’s set of pianos than Weber, himself.
“My goal is to help change people's perceptions that Buffalo is old, worn out, ugly and ‘nothing good ever happens here’,” said Weber. 
“If old pianos can be loved thanks to paint and placement in unexpected places, Buffalo, too, can be loved as more and more creative types bring their fresh vision and ideas to the area, transforming it for the better."

2 comments:

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  2. Pianos in Public almost never happened. According to Weber, when he first tried to jumpstart the project, he looked to friends on Facebook to donate money for the expenses. No one ever did. It was only was when Newell Nussbaumer of Buffalorising.com suggested to Weber to use kickstarter.com that he was able to accrue the necessary funds. Almost 100 people donated, and Weber secured almost $4,000, which he was able to use for paint, insurance and to have the pianos professionally moved between places to paint them, people’s homes and the public locations.

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