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The Music of Life: Bartolomeo Cristofori and the Invention of the Piano

The Music of Life details the creation of the first piano. Bartolomeo Cristofori was an instrument maker in Italy who worked on both clavichords which only played piano (softly) and the harpsichord which only played forte (loudly).  While working in Florence for Prince Ferdinand de Medici, Cristofori ponders the problem of creating an instrument that can play both piano and forte. Cristofori’s perseverance to pay off as he experiments with different materials and different constructions to create his new keyboard.  Cristofori’s masterpiece is named the pianoforte since it plays both loudly and softly.  During his life, the piano was not widely used.  It was only 20 years after his death as Joseph Haydn then later Johann Christian Bach and Wolfgang Mozart compose for and play on the piano that it emerges as an instrument that captures the music of life.

Large ornately formed Latin musical terms (with English translations) decorate the top of each page, acting as an accompaniment to the story.  The timeline of the story is punctuated by quotes from historical record of the time.

Endpapers include a timeline of the life of Cristofori and the piano, a comparison to Cristofori’s pianoforte and the modern piano, a list of famous piano composers, a description of how the author researched Cristofori, Bibliography, and Grazie.