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What do the pedals on grand pianos do?


Should pedals be used when playing classical piano music?Is it easier to play “softly” on a grand piano?Tension in hand while playing tetrads (4 notes chords)How often is the soft pedal used in piano scores?playing softly - full grand pianoWhat is the standard location of piano pedals?Me and the grand staff: how to achieve pacific coexistencePedals in Chopin's Nocturne in e minorAre acoustic pianos too loud?History of the baby grand piano













15















I have been playing the piano for some time now, and have recently switched from the electric piano to the grand piano. My grand piano has three pedals. What does each of the three pedals do?










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  • 13





    Open up the top, and have a look at what happens when each pedal is pressed. It's fascinating.

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • In my experience the left pedal usually does nothing.

    – AndreKR
    8 hours ago











  • @AndreKR - you're probably pressing the keys harder than you're pressing the pedal. Or, check inside for a missing rod.

    – Tim
    7 hours ago
















15















I have been playing the piano for some time now, and have recently switched from the electric piano to the grand piano. My grand piano has three pedals. What does each of the three pedals do?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Xilpex is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 13





    Open up the top, and have a look at what happens when each pedal is pressed. It's fascinating.

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • In my experience the left pedal usually does nothing.

    – AndreKR
    8 hours ago











  • @AndreKR - you're probably pressing the keys harder than you're pressing the pedal. Or, check inside for a missing rod.

    – Tim
    7 hours ago














15












15








15


3






I have been playing the piano for some time now, and have recently switched from the electric piano to the grand piano. My grand piano has three pedals. What does each of the three pedals do?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Xilpex is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have been playing the piano for some time now, and have recently switched from the electric piano to the grand piano. My grand piano has three pedals. What does each of the three pedals do?







piano keyboard-pedals






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Xilpex is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







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Xilpex is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









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asked 20 hours ago









XilpexXilpex

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Xilpex is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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  • 13





    Open up the top, and have a look at what happens when each pedal is pressed. It's fascinating.

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • In my experience the left pedal usually does nothing.

    – AndreKR
    8 hours ago











  • @AndreKR - you're probably pressing the keys harder than you're pressing the pedal. Or, check inside for a missing rod.

    – Tim
    7 hours ago














  • 13





    Open up the top, and have a look at what happens when each pedal is pressed. It's fascinating.

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • In my experience the left pedal usually does nothing.

    – AndreKR
    8 hours ago











  • @AndreKR - you're probably pressing the keys harder than you're pressing the pedal. Or, check inside for a missing rod.

    – Tim
    7 hours ago








13




13





Open up the top, and have a look at what happens when each pedal is pressed. It's fascinating.

– Tim
18 hours ago





Open up the top, and have a look at what happens when each pedal is pressed. It's fascinating.

– Tim
18 hours ago













In my experience the left pedal usually does nothing.

– AndreKR
8 hours ago





In my experience the left pedal usually does nothing.

– AndreKR
8 hours ago













@AndreKR - you're probably pressing the keys harder than you're pressing the pedal. Or, check inside for a missing rod.

– Tim
7 hours ago





@AndreKR - you're probably pressing the keys harder than you're pressing the pedal. Or, check inside for a missing rod.

– Tim
7 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















24














On just about every piano, studio (upright) or grand, the right hand pedal (?!) moves the felt dampers away from all the strings. This allows all strings to vibrate in sympathy when a note relating to them is played. Press pedal, play G - other G strings will also sound, giving a richer sound, which will sustain longer. Hence sustain or damper pedal.



The left hand pedal on grands moves the hammers sideways, so they hit fewer strings, or hit with the softer edge of the hammer. Thus una corda or soft pedal. Now somewhat of a misnomer, as the upper strings, once in pairs, now have three per note, and the hammers may hit two out of the three, creating an ethereal sound. Unlike on most uprights, where the hammers are moved closer to the strings, giving less movement to the hammers, making the playing quieter.



The middle pedal is usually used for sustaining notes that are played while the pedal is pressed. A sort of pinpointing sustain pedal. Called the sostenuto pedal. On other pianos with a middle pedal, it's used as a practice pedal, as it brings a curtain of material between the hammers and the strings, making it much quieter than the una corda. That's the practice pedal. Sometimes called the moderator or celeste pedal, generally found on uprights rather than grands.



It's certainly worth a look at what happens inside the piano, when you can experiment with half-pedalling as well.






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

    – David Richerby
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    "left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

    – chepner
    8 hours ago











  • @chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

    – Tim
    7 hours ago











  • "Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

    – Kyle W
    4 hours ago











  • @KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

    – Tim
    3 hours ago



















3














For almost all pianos:




  • right pedal = sustaining or damper pedal. The dampers are disabled so all strings you hit will continue resonating until you lift your foot from that pedal.

  • left pedal = una corda or soft pedal. It will allow you to play softly. On grand pianos, this works by shifting the keyboard so that the hammers hit one (hence "una corda") or two strings while on uprights, this works by bringing the hammers closer to the strings, so they do not gain as much speed when you play the notes.


For most uprights:




  • middle pedal = practice pedal. It drops a felt between the hammer and the strings and the sound is significantly attenuated. No score will call for the use of that pedal: it is just to practice and not bother people around you as much.


For most grand pianos and all digital pianos with 3 pedals:




  • middle pedal = sostenuto pedal. It takes some practice to use: First you press some notes with your fingers. Then you press that pedal while still holding these notes. Then you play whatever else you want while still holding that pedal. Only the keys you were holding down while you pressed on the pedal will have their dampers disabled.


Much more rarely, you will find some uprights and cheaper or older grand pianos where the middle pedal sustain only the bass register.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

    – replete
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

    – Tim
    13 hours ago











  • @Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

    – replete
    5 hours ago











  • @replete - as the edit in my answer says.

    – Tim
    4 hours ago











  • @replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

    – Lolo
    3 hours ago



















0














On Steinway and other American built (or designed) grand pianos they work as follows.



Left Pedal: (damper pedal) Raises the dampers so that any note played will reverberate.
Middle Pedal: (sostenuto) Raises the dampers on the notes currently pressed.
Right Pedal: (soft pedal) Shifts the hammers sideways to strike fewer stings and put a softer part of the hammer on the string.



The middle pedal acts otherwise on uprights and some European grand pianos.






share|improve this answer



















  • 9





    Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago








  • 1





    @AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

    – Tim
    17 hours ago











  • And if you press the right pedall it costs?

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

    – jdv
    8 hours ago











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









24














On just about every piano, studio (upright) or grand, the right hand pedal (?!) moves the felt dampers away from all the strings. This allows all strings to vibrate in sympathy when a note relating to them is played. Press pedal, play G - other G strings will also sound, giving a richer sound, which will sustain longer. Hence sustain or damper pedal.



The left hand pedal on grands moves the hammers sideways, so they hit fewer strings, or hit with the softer edge of the hammer. Thus una corda or soft pedal. Now somewhat of a misnomer, as the upper strings, once in pairs, now have three per note, and the hammers may hit two out of the three, creating an ethereal sound. Unlike on most uprights, where the hammers are moved closer to the strings, giving less movement to the hammers, making the playing quieter.



The middle pedal is usually used for sustaining notes that are played while the pedal is pressed. A sort of pinpointing sustain pedal. Called the sostenuto pedal. On other pianos with a middle pedal, it's used as a practice pedal, as it brings a curtain of material between the hammers and the strings, making it much quieter than the una corda. That's the practice pedal. Sometimes called the moderator or celeste pedal, generally found on uprights rather than grands.



It's certainly worth a look at what happens inside the piano, when you can experiment with half-pedalling as well.






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

    – David Richerby
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    "left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

    – chepner
    8 hours ago











  • @chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

    – Tim
    7 hours ago











  • "Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

    – Kyle W
    4 hours ago











  • @KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

    – Tim
    3 hours ago
















24














On just about every piano, studio (upright) or grand, the right hand pedal (?!) moves the felt dampers away from all the strings. This allows all strings to vibrate in sympathy when a note relating to them is played. Press pedal, play G - other G strings will also sound, giving a richer sound, which will sustain longer. Hence sustain or damper pedal.



The left hand pedal on grands moves the hammers sideways, so they hit fewer strings, or hit with the softer edge of the hammer. Thus una corda or soft pedal. Now somewhat of a misnomer, as the upper strings, once in pairs, now have three per note, and the hammers may hit two out of the three, creating an ethereal sound. Unlike on most uprights, where the hammers are moved closer to the strings, giving less movement to the hammers, making the playing quieter.



The middle pedal is usually used for sustaining notes that are played while the pedal is pressed. A sort of pinpointing sustain pedal. Called the sostenuto pedal. On other pianos with a middle pedal, it's used as a practice pedal, as it brings a curtain of material between the hammers and the strings, making it much quieter than the una corda. That's the practice pedal. Sometimes called the moderator or celeste pedal, generally found on uprights rather than grands.



It's certainly worth a look at what happens inside the piano, when you can experiment with half-pedalling as well.






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

    – David Richerby
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    "left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

    – chepner
    8 hours ago











  • @chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

    – Tim
    7 hours ago











  • "Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

    – Kyle W
    4 hours ago











  • @KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

    – Tim
    3 hours ago














24












24








24







On just about every piano, studio (upright) or grand, the right hand pedal (?!) moves the felt dampers away from all the strings. This allows all strings to vibrate in sympathy when a note relating to them is played. Press pedal, play G - other G strings will also sound, giving a richer sound, which will sustain longer. Hence sustain or damper pedal.



The left hand pedal on grands moves the hammers sideways, so they hit fewer strings, or hit with the softer edge of the hammer. Thus una corda or soft pedal. Now somewhat of a misnomer, as the upper strings, once in pairs, now have three per note, and the hammers may hit two out of the three, creating an ethereal sound. Unlike on most uprights, where the hammers are moved closer to the strings, giving less movement to the hammers, making the playing quieter.



The middle pedal is usually used for sustaining notes that are played while the pedal is pressed. A sort of pinpointing sustain pedal. Called the sostenuto pedal. On other pianos with a middle pedal, it's used as a practice pedal, as it brings a curtain of material between the hammers and the strings, making it much quieter than the una corda. That's the practice pedal. Sometimes called the moderator or celeste pedal, generally found on uprights rather than grands.



It's certainly worth a look at what happens inside the piano, when you can experiment with half-pedalling as well.






share|improve this answer















On just about every piano, studio (upright) or grand, the right hand pedal (?!) moves the felt dampers away from all the strings. This allows all strings to vibrate in sympathy when a note relating to them is played. Press pedal, play G - other G strings will also sound, giving a richer sound, which will sustain longer. Hence sustain or damper pedal.



The left hand pedal on grands moves the hammers sideways, so they hit fewer strings, or hit with the softer edge of the hammer. Thus una corda or soft pedal. Now somewhat of a misnomer, as the upper strings, once in pairs, now have three per note, and the hammers may hit two out of the three, creating an ethereal sound. Unlike on most uprights, where the hammers are moved closer to the strings, giving less movement to the hammers, making the playing quieter.



The middle pedal is usually used for sustaining notes that are played while the pedal is pressed. A sort of pinpointing sustain pedal. Called the sostenuto pedal. On other pianos with a middle pedal, it's used as a practice pedal, as it brings a curtain of material between the hammers and the strings, making it much quieter than the una corda. That's the practice pedal. Sometimes called the moderator or celeste pedal, generally found on uprights rather than grands.



It's certainly worth a look at what happens inside the piano, when you can experiment with half-pedalling as well.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 13 hours ago

























answered 17 hours ago









TimTim

102k10104259




102k10104259








  • 5





    OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

    – David Richerby
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    "left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

    – chepner
    8 hours ago











  • @chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

    – Tim
    7 hours ago











  • "Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

    – Kyle W
    4 hours ago











  • @KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

    – Tim
    3 hours ago














  • 5





    OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

    – David Richerby
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    "left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

    – chepner
    8 hours ago











  • @chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

    – Tim
    7 hours ago











  • "Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

    – Kyle W
    4 hours ago











  • @KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

    – Tim
    3 hours ago








5




5





OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

– David Richerby
9 hours ago





OK, now I know what to do with the hand pedals. What should I do with the foot keys? 😁

– David Richerby
9 hours ago




1




1





"left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

– chepner
8 hours ago





"left-hand pedal", not "left hand pedal", etc.

– chepner
8 hours ago













@chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

– Tim
7 hours ago





@chepner - it was a little joke! On the other hand...

– Tim
7 hours ago













"Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

– Kyle W
4 hours ago





"Play G - other G strings will also sound" - Is this suggesting that if you hit one octave of a G, another octave of a G will also be struck? The pedal just moves the dampers away so that they aren't quieted when you let go of the key

– Kyle W
4 hours ago













@KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

– Tim
3 hours ago





@KyleW - not at all. The other G strings will be free to vibrate in sympathy, as that pitch will excite them. No other strings will be hit. That's far too complicated mechanically.

– Tim
3 hours ago











3














For almost all pianos:




  • right pedal = sustaining or damper pedal. The dampers are disabled so all strings you hit will continue resonating until you lift your foot from that pedal.

  • left pedal = una corda or soft pedal. It will allow you to play softly. On grand pianos, this works by shifting the keyboard so that the hammers hit one (hence "una corda") or two strings while on uprights, this works by bringing the hammers closer to the strings, so they do not gain as much speed when you play the notes.


For most uprights:




  • middle pedal = practice pedal. It drops a felt between the hammer and the strings and the sound is significantly attenuated. No score will call for the use of that pedal: it is just to practice and not bother people around you as much.


For most grand pianos and all digital pianos with 3 pedals:




  • middle pedal = sostenuto pedal. It takes some practice to use: First you press some notes with your fingers. Then you press that pedal while still holding these notes. Then you play whatever else you want while still holding that pedal. Only the keys you were holding down while you pressed on the pedal will have their dampers disabled.


Much more rarely, you will find some uprights and cheaper or older grand pianos where the middle pedal sustain only the bass register.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

    – replete
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

    – Tim
    13 hours ago











  • @Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

    – replete
    5 hours ago











  • @replete - as the edit in my answer says.

    – Tim
    4 hours ago











  • @replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

    – Lolo
    3 hours ago
















3














For almost all pianos:




  • right pedal = sustaining or damper pedal. The dampers are disabled so all strings you hit will continue resonating until you lift your foot from that pedal.

  • left pedal = una corda or soft pedal. It will allow you to play softly. On grand pianos, this works by shifting the keyboard so that the hammers hit one (hence "una corda") or two strings while on uprights, this works by bringing the hammers closer to the strings, so they do not gain as much speed when you play the notes.


For most uprights:




  • middle pedal = practice pedal. It drops a felt between the hammer and the strings and the sound is significantly attenuated. No score will call for the use of that pedal: it is just to practice and not bother people around you as much.


For most grand pianos and all digital pianos with 3 pedals:




  • middle pedal = sostenuto pedal. It takes some practice to use: First you press some notes with your fingers. Then you press that pedal while still holding these notes. Then you play whatever else you want while still holding that pedal. Only the keys you were holding down while you pressed on the pedal will have their dampers disabled.


Much more rarely, you will find some uprights and cheaper or older grand pianos where the middle pedal sustain only the bass register.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

    – replete
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

    – Tim
    13 hours ago











  • @Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

    – replete
    5 hours ago











  • @replete - as the edit in my answer says.

    – Tim
    4 hours ago











  • @replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

    – Lolo
    3 hours ago














3












3








3







For almost all pianos:




  • right pedal = sustaining or damper pedal. The dampers are disabled so all strings you hit will continue resonating until you lift your foot from that pedal.

  • left pedal = una corda or soft pedal. It will allow you to play softly. On grand pianos, this works by shifting the keyboard so that the hammers hit one (hence "una corda") or two strings while on uprights, this works by bringing the hammers closer to the strings, so they do not gain as much speed when you play the notes.


For most uprights:




  • middle pedal = practice pedal. It drops a felt between the hammer and the strings and the sound is significantly attenuated. No score will call for the use of that pedal: it is just to practice and not bother people around you as much.


For most grand pianos and all digital pianos with 3 pedals:




  • middle pedal = sostenuto pedal. It takes some practice to use: First you press some notes with your fingers. Then you press that pedal while still holding these notes. Then you play whatever else you want while still holding that pedal. Only the keys you were holding down while you pressed on the pedal will have their dampers disabled.


Much more rarely, you will find some uprights and cheaper or older grand pianos where the middle pedal sustain only the bass register.






share|improve this answer















For almost all pianos:




  • right pedal = sustaining or damper pedal. The dampers are disabled so all strings you hit will continue resonating until you lift your foot from that pedal.

  • left pedal = una corda or soft pedal. It will allow you to play softly. On grand pianos, this works by shifting the keyboard so that the hammers hit one (hence "una corda") or two strings while on uprights, this works by bringing the hammers closer to the strings, so they do not gain as much speed when you play the notes.


For most uprights:




  • middle pedal = practice pedal. It drops a felt between the hammer and the strings and the sound is significantly attenuated. No score will call for the use of that pedal: it is just to practice and not bother people around you as much.


For most grand pianos and all digital pianos with 3 pedals:




  • middle pedal = sostenuto pedal. It takes some practice to use: First you press some notes with your fingers. Then you press that pedal while still holding these notes. Then you play whatever else you want while still holding that pedal. Only the keys you were holding down while you pressed on the pedal will have their dampers disabled.


Much more rarely, you will find some uprights and cheaper or older grand pianos where the middle pedal sustain only the bass register.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago

























answered 17 hours ago









LoloLolo

1,550711




1,550711








  • 1





    The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

    – replete
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

    – Tim
    13 hours ago











  • @Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

    – replete
    5 hours ago











  • @replete - as the edit in my answer says.

    – Tim
    4 hours ago











  • @replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

    – Lolo
    3 hours ago














  • 1





    The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

    – replete
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

    – Tim
    13 hours ago











  • @Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

    – replete
    5 hours ago











  • @replete - as the edit in my answer says.

    – Tim
    4 hours ago











  • @replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

    – Lolo
    3 hours ago








1




1





The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

– replete
16 hours ago





The description of the left pedal applies to the historical una corda, but this is not what we have today.

– replete
16 hours ago




1




1





@replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

– Tim
13 hours ago





@replete - so what does the left pedal actually do on modern grands?

– Tim
13 hours ago













@Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

– replete
5 hours ago





@Tim, we haven't had a genuine una corda for many years. The strings are too closely placed. The hammer strikes two not one.

– replete
5 hours ago













@replete - as the edit in my answer says.

– Tim
4 hours ago





@replete - as the edit in my answer says.

– Tim
4 hours ago













@replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

– Lolo
3 hours ago





@replete Thank you. I didn't know about that fact and made the correction.

– Lolo
3 hours ago











0














On Steinway and other American built (or designed) grand pianos they work as follows.



Left Pedal: (damper pedal) Raises the dampers so that any note played will reverberate.
Middle Pedal: (sostenuto) Raises the dampers on the notes currently pressed.
Right Pedal: (soft pedal) Shifts the hammers sideways to strike fewer stings and put a softer part of the hammer on the string.



The middle pedal acts otherwise on uprights and some European grand pianos.






share|improve this answer



















  • 9





    Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago








  • 1





    @AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

    – Tim
    17 hours ago











  • And if you press the right pedall it costs?

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

    – jdv
    8 hours ago
















0














On Steinway and other American built (or designed) grand pianos they work as follows.



Left Pedal: (damper pedal) Raises the dampers so that any note played will reverberate.
Middle Pedal: (sostenuto) Raises the dampers on the notes currently pressed.
Right Pedal: (soft pedal) Shifts the hammers sideways to strike fewer stings and put a softer part of the hammer on the string.



The middle pedal acts otherwise on uprights and some European grand pianos.






share|improve this answer



















  • 9





    Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago








  • 1





    @AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

    – Tim
    17 hours ago











  • And if you press the right pedall it costs?

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

    – jdv
    8 hours ago














0












0








0







On Steinway and other American built (or designed) grand pianos they work as follows.



Left Pedal: (damper pedal) Raises the dampers so that any note played will reverberate.
Middle Pedal: (sostenuto) Raises the dampers on the notes currently pressed.
Right Pedal: (soft pedal) Shifts the hammers sideways to strike fewer stings and put a softer part of the hammer on the string.



The middle pedal acts otherwise on uprights and some European grand pianos.






share|improve this answer













On Steinway and other American built (or designed) grand pianos they work as follows.



Left Pedal: (damper pedal) Raises the dampers so that any note played will reverberate.
Middle Pedal: (sostenuto) Raises the dampers on the notes currently pressed.
Right Pedal: (soft pedal) Shifts the hammers sideways to strike fewer stings and put a softer part of the hammer on the string.



The middle pedal acts otherwise on uprights and some European grand pianos.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 20 hours ago









ttwttw

8,318930




8,318930








  • 9





    Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago








  • 1





    @AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

    – Tim
    17 hours ago











  • And if you press the right pedall it costs?

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

    – jdv
    8 hours ago














  • 9





    Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

    – Tim
    18 hours ago











  • So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago








  • 1





    @AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

    – Tim
    17 hours ago











  • And if you press the right pedall it costs?

    – Albrecht Hügli
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

    – jdv
    8 hours ago








9




9





Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

– Tim
18 hours ago





Have you swapped left and right? Surely every piano has the damper ('loud') pedal on the right?

– Tim
18 hours ago













So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

– Albrecht Hügli
17 hours ago







So it’s like in car: The right pedal is for the gas and the left pedal for slowing down? ;)

– Albrecht Hügli
17 hours ago






1




1





@AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

– Tim
17 hours ago





@AlbrechtHügli - not always. I press the left pedal in my car, and it coasts, not slowing down as much ! And as for slowing down, I put some difficult music in front of me...

– Tim
17 hours ago













And if you press the right pedall it costs?

– Albrecht Hügli
17 hours ago





And if you press the right pedall it costs?

– Albrecht Hügli
17 hours ago




2




2





I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

– jdv
8 hours ago





I'm still looking for the talent-booster pedal. Guitarists have them, why not pianists?

– jdv
8 hours ago










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