


Top Action ViewsĬlick on thumbnail image to see a larger picture A listing of the articles can be accessed by clicking on this link - click here!Ĭlick on the image to see a larger picture.Įarly 64-Note "Pianola" by Aeolian Corp. I have also written a number of articles about the modern Aeolian players for the Mechanical Music Digest.

Therefore, I have listed a number of links below which lead to various webpages that contain information about the instruments. However, the mechanism was not made of very high quality materials and as a result there have been numerous problems with Aeolian players over their relatively short lifetime. Since there were tens of thousands of Aeolian players produced, many of them are still in existence and a fair number of them still work. However, there is one very unique feature about the Aeolian players that makes them extremely easy to identify, and that is the placement of the 5-bellow Wind Motor, which is ALWAYS to the left of the Spoolbox (in the upper half of the piano). There are a few production changes over the years as Aeolian struggled to perfect the Automatic Rewind and Shut-Off sequences. While the cabinet styles were all different, the internal workings of the player mechanism were virtually identical (except in the 64-note model). Made for a period of some 26 years between 1960-1986, the Aeolian Company had eight basic models Duo/Art, Pianola, Musette, Hardman, Cabaret, Sting, Sting II, and Keepsake. AEOLIAN 64 & 88 Note (MODERN) Player Piano Mechanism.
