A few months ago, I started a new hobby - piano tuning. It's since blossomed into mild insanity, and I now want to see if it's possible to build a piano in Rwanda. Yesterday, we started making the Indiegogo video by interviewing everyone involved and taking a look at the workshops where our piano will be born.
I've copied the post direct from my project blog, Kigali Keys. You can sign up to follow along by e-mail. I'm hoping that the video will be ready by the end of next week, and I'd hugely appreciate people sharing it once it is.
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Meet Gaston.
We've just spent the entire day racing around Kigali filming the team who are going to try to build the first Rwandan piano.
It's been a long road to get here. My friends who were going to help me make the fundraising video suddenly found themselves in the centre of a personal housing crisis, so didn't have any free time. I met a fantastic guy from South Africa who's a really accomplished film maker, but he was a bit out of my price range. Then Gaston was recommended to me as he'd done an Indiegogo film for someone else. I was really impressed by his work and he was within my budget, so we're making it happen.
We started out with a return performance by Paco, who is one of Rwanda's foremost pianists. I asked him to come along to show what a piano is capable of. Even a fifty-year-old upright. Lirika is a 1968 Russian instrument, and she will provide the template for our own model, effectively becoming the mother of all Rwandan pianos.
It was a blazing hot day, so we were all sweating by the end of the interview. I slathered on sun lotion and we hopped motos (public motorbikes - main form of transport in Kigali) over to Karabona's workshop.
Alex Karabona is a Rwandan metal worker with a small foundry. Essentially, everything rests on him, because if we can't forge a string frame, we can't build a piano. All pianos have a string frame, or harp frame, inside, and some hold up to twenty tons of string tension. If it bends even a fraction, everything is lost. The first thing we'll do if we raise the money is take Lirika apart and give the frame to Alex to see whether he can recreate it. He's feeling confident, and he smiles all the time, so I'm confident that he's confident.
From there, we continued on to Desiré's workshop on the other side of town. Desiré is the carpenter who is going to try to figure out the piano action. If we can build both string frames and actions in Rwanda, we might be able to produce an affordable instrument. For every part we need to import, the price goes north. But along with the string frame, the action is extremely complicated. We won't know for sure that we can do it until we take Lirika's action apart.
We had a very funny conversation when I asked whether Desiré had any jacaranda wood we could show, because I was hoping we could make the piano from jacaranda. It's very strong and very light in colour, which would make for naturally white keys without having to resort to plastic coverings.
Desiré looked at me and said he didn't know what jacaranda was, but suggested we use umusave.
I didn't know what umusave was, but it looked right.
I said I liked it.
Gaston smiled and explained 'umusave and jacaranda are the same thing.'
Always reassuring when two people speak different languages but still understand what the other is thinking.
Umusave/Jacaranda (left), Pine (right) Both Locally Sourced |
Finally there was me. Mostly I'll be trying to stay out of everybody's way, but I hope to rock up at the end to string and tune the new piano. I hate being in front of the camera, so we did my interview last, racing against the setting sun so that I didn't have too much time to think about it. Hopefully it'll be okay. We've got a few last things to shoot in town tomorrow to provide some filler for the video - make it recognisably Kigali. Hoping to have the finished short ready to roll next week. Watch this space.
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