When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Brainkiller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brainkiller

    Brainkiller (an amalgam of their nicknames) formed in 2000 when Texas-based Allen and Phoenix native Koller met in a Canadian airport. They recorded their first album, a self-titled, self-released CD of original acoustic trombone and piano duo compositions, in 2001. [2]

  3. Kieselhorst Piano Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kieselhorst_Piano_Company

    By 1902, Edwin had doubled the company's annual sales and expanded its workforce to 26 people. One younger brother, Henry, [6] became the manager in the player-piano department; another, John, became the foreman in the electric piano department. The company also developed a self-playing attachment for use on pianos and organs.

  4. List of piano manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_piano_manufacturers

    Company Place Country Years active Acquired by Notes Atlas [1] [2]: Hamamatsu→Liaoning: Japan→China 1943–1986 2004–present. Atlas Piano and Instrument Manufacturing (Dalian) Co. Ltd is a musical instrument manufacturing company that Japan atlas piano manufacturing Co., Ltd. whole moved to China and invested and registered in Dalian Free Trade Zone.

  5. Cunningham Piano Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cunningham_Piano_Company

    After the Second World War, Louis Cohen, a young piano technician who had worked for Patrick J. Cunningham, took over Cunningham Piano Company. Cohen determined that building a small number of pianos by hand without the national recognition of companies like Mason & Hamlin , Steinway , or Baldwin was difficult in the economic climate of the ...

  6. Crumar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crumar

    Crumar started out manufacturing electronic pianos and string synthesizers, such as the Compac-piano (1972/1973), Compac-string (1973), Pianoman (1974) and Stringman (1974), the functions of which were combined in 1975 with the Multiman (also known as the Orchestrator), and in 1977 with the Multiman-S. [1] The company was also known for "clonewheel" organs made in the 70's and 80's, such as ...

  7. Walter Piano Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Piano_Company

    Run by the Walter family, to which many of the workers belong, [1] [2] the company hand-crafts its pianos in an Elkhart factory. [3] In 1969, Charles Walter, formerly the head of Piano Design and Developmental Engineering at C.G. Conn, [4] bought the Janssen piano name from Conn. He founded a company to make pianos under the Janssen name. [5]

  8. The Cable Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cable_Company

    On December 1, 1945, the Schiller Cable Manufacturing Co. was renamed the Conover-Cable Piano Co. [17] [84] In 1947, it was one of just seven piano manufacturers left in Illinois. [ 73 ] In 1950, [ 85 ] Winter & Co. was merged into the Aeolian Company , which sold pianos under the Cable brand until 1958, the Conover brand from 1960 to 1965, and ...

  9. Behr Brothers & Co. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behr_Brothers_&_Co.

    Behr Brothers was a New York based piano company founded in 1880 and hailed as a major contributor to the piano industry of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Henry Behr of Hamburg , Germany initially established a piano company in New York alongside Leopold Peck (of "Hardman Peck Piano Company") in 1877, named "Behr & Peck ...