In the early 1700s, an Italian instrument maker in Florence was dissatisfied with the lack of control over the volume level that harpsichords offered musicians. Bartolomeo Cristofori decided to replace the mechanism that plucked the strings in a harpsichord with a hammer system, calling his new instrument the “gravicembalo col piano e forte”, or “harpsichord with soft and loud”.
Over the years that followed, the piano hammer evolved; Cristofori originally wrapped his hammers with deer leather. Eventually, he incorporated a way to catch the hammer on the rebound to prevent its bouncing off the strings, after escapement. Then, Johann Andreas Stein developed the Viennese/German hammer action that improved the player’s control with the addition of a damper pedal. The improved sound and dynamics inspired Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven to write compositions that thrill audiences to this day.