Doppio Borgato is a Pedal piano made by joining a regular concert grand (Model L 282) with a second piano, activated by a pedal board with 37 pedals (A0 to A3), similar to that of the organ (P 398). Designed and manufactured by Luigi Borgato, it was patented in 2000.
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Compositions for Doppio Borgato
editSpecifically for Doppio Borgato are composed:
- Cristian Carrara
- "Magnificat, Meditation" for piano with pedalboard and orchestra (2011)
- Giuseppe Lupis
- Gounod-Lupis "Marche funèbre d'une marionnette" (2011)
- Nimrod Borenstein
- "Fireworks" Op. 57 (2011)
- Grieg-Borenstein "In the hall of the mountain-king" arranged for piano with pedalboard (2011)
- Michael Glenn Williams
- "Tip Tap" (2011)
- Ennio Morricone (1928–2020)
- "Quarto Studio Bis" (2011)
- Andrea Morricone (born 1964)
- "Omaggio a J.S.B." (2011)
- Franco Oppo (1935–2016)
- "Freu dich sehr o meine Seele" (2000)
- Fabrizio Marchionni (born 1976)
- "S’Indàssa" (2000)
- Charlemagne Palestine (1945 or 1947-)
- Compositions for pedal piano (2005)
- Jean Guillou (1930–2019)
- "Epitases" (2001)
- Anything written for Pipe Organ can also be played on the Doppio Borgato Pedal piano.
Further reading
edit- Jean Guillou, La Lettre de l'Argos, Paris, December 2001.
- Brian T. Majeski, The Music Trades, November 2000, p. 86.
- Pianist Magazine, April May 2006 UK.
- Honka Verdurmen, Piano Wereld, Netherlands, August–September 2005.
- Larry E. Ashley, Pierce Piano Atlas, 12th edition, Larry E. Ashley Publisher, Albuquerque NM U.S.A., 2008, p. 58.
- Géreard Gefen, Piano, Editions du Chêne – Hachette Livre, 2002 p. 59, 166, 170, 180.
- Atanasio Cecchini, Piano Dream. History of the Piano, Mosè Edition, 2007 p. 170-171.
- Dario Miozzi, in Musica Rivista di cultura musicale e discografica, Zecchini Editions, December 2010 – January 2011 p. 54, 59–60.
- Luca Segalla, in Musica, Rivista di cultura musicale e discografica, Zecchini Editore, n°224 March 2011 p. 68
- Stuart Isacoff, on the book A Natural History of the Piano, The Instrument, the Music, the Musicians—from Mozart to Modern Jazz and Everything in Between, edited by Alfred A. Knopf, New York 2011, p. 48