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Francois Blanchet François-Étienne Blanchet
(1695-1761) was the most famous member of a family, which
decisively influenced harpsichord making in France in the 18th
century. His father Nicolas Blanchet (born in 1660), a native of
Reims, set up his workshop in Paris and started making
harpsichords and spinets, with the highest reputation being
gained under the direction of his son François-Étienne II.
François-Étienne Blanchet was also the
master of Pascal Taskin, the most eminent French harpsichord
maker during the second half of the 18th century. After the
death of François-Étienne's son in 1766, Pascal Taskin married
his widow and led the family tradition of harpsichord making to
its last climax.
Among the surviving harpsichords of
Blanchet, the J.C. NEUPERT
workshops had access to a single manual harpsichord, made in
1737 by François-Étienne, which was the model for our copy. The
sound of this single manual harpsichord was so convincing that
J.C. NEUPERT decided to
develop a double manual version of this outstanding instrument.

source: http://www.jc-neupert.de/e/instr_2/blanchet2.htm |