local tuner for a historical tuning
Moderators: Feg, Gill the Piano, Melodytune
-
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 254
- Joined: 09 Dec 2011, 16:37
local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Jonathan the 2nd »
Re: Supplier apathy
-
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 254
- Joined: 09 Dec 2011, 16:37
- sussexpianos
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 363
- Joined: 19 Aug 2006, 17:01
- Location: East Sussex
- Contact:
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by sussexpianos »
Members of the PTA & I.M.I.T., MIA and Trading Standards Approved. C&G qualified and N&S Diploma. PTD(Precision Touch Design) Technician.
- Colin Nicholson
- Executive Poster
- Posts: 1704
- Joined: 04 Jul 2010, 19:15
- Location: Morpeth, Northumberland
- Contact:
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Colin Nicholson »
Jonathan the 2nd wrote:I e mailed a local tuner for a historical tuning and he said he only did Equal Temperaments. .
...... what happened to the original piano tuner who did your Kirnberger temperament on 13th January?????? How many tuners do you have ??
Did you not ask YOUR previously booked tuner for this info? (I would have done)
Personally.... my favourite saying is that it takes time for a customer to trust a tuner, and even longer for the tuner to trust the customer.....
Stick to the one tuner - good policy.
Colin Nicholson Dip. Mus. CMIT CLCM PTLLS
Piano tuning & repairs. Full UK restoration service
http://www.aatuners.com
Tuition ~ Accompaniment ~ Weddings
http://www.pianotime1964.com
Member of The Guild of Master Craftsmen
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 4032
- Joined: 25 Oct 2003, 19:39
- Location: Thames Valley
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Gill the Piano »
Colin Nicholson wrote: Stick to the one tuner - good policy.
I have a customer who alternates me with another local tuner. She likes to 'spread the business around'. Never mind us poor souls who have to change eachother's scale each time - no 2 tuners tune exactly alike.
-
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 71
- Joined: 22 Feb 2011, 19:55
- Location: Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
So who's right, then??Gill the Piano wrote:Colin Nicholson wrote: Stick to the one tuner - good policy.
I have a customer who alternates me with another local tuner. She likes to 'spread the business around'. Never mind us poor souls who have to change eachother's scale each time - no 2 tuners tune exactly alike.
Junior Piano Technician
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
I asked her politely to leave me out of the rotation.
- Johnkie
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 189
- Joined: 14 Jan 2011, 16:15
- Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
- Contact:
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
..... and that is exactly what I would do too RxD - The ONLY time I would accept another tuner doing "my" client's piano is if it were for a concert and I couldn't arrange time to do it ... and even then it would have to be on the understanding that I approve of the other tuner's ability.rxd wrote:I used to tune a Hamburg C for the local 'lady Bountiful'. I happened to mention I had trouble building stability into the instrument and that it was going out of tune in a rather strange way. it was then she told me that there were two other tuners rotating tunings with me.
I asked her politely to leave me out of the rotation.
-
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 254
- Joined: 09 Dec 2011, 16:37
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Jonathan the 2nd »
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 4032
- Joined: 25 Oct 2003, 19:39
- Location: Thames Valley
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Gill the Piano »
- Colin Nicholson
- Executive Poster
- Posts: 1704
- Joined: 04 Jul 2010, 19:15
- Location: Morpeth, Northumberland
- Contact:
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Colin Nicholson »
or.... Clavecin Bien Tempere (French)
Colin Nicholson Dip. Mus. CMIT CLCM PTLLS
Piano tuning & repairs. Full UK restoration service
http://www.aatuners.com
Tuition ~ Accompaniment ~ Weddings
http://www.pianotime1964.com
Member of The Guild of Master Craftsmen
-
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 183
- Joined: 06 Oct 2011, 14:30
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Withindale »
GillGill the Piano wrote:Bach wrote the 48 Preludes and Fugues to prove that ET worked, actually.
Are you 100% sure? I am looking forward to the day when I am proficient enough to play some of Bach's Preludes and Fugues and trying them in a Well Temperament. See Nigel Taylor's pages for an example of an alternative view: http://www.kirnberger.fsnet.co.uk/
Ian
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
If it's your bag to tinkle tunes in a temperament that sounds like a bag of old nails scratching in a tin bath that is your prerogative. Call me old fashioned......
We've got enough up here in Scotland with Our Dear Leader looking back to Bannockburn in 13jd.kb434 or so without looking at John Dowland's navel or something.
Any fool can make a piano-- it needs a tuner to put the music in it
www.lochnesspianos.co.uk
-
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 254
- Joined: 09 Dec 2011, 16:37
- sussexpianos
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 363
- Joined: 19 Aug 2006, 17:01
- Location: East Sussex
- Contact:
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by sussexpianos »
I have been tuning a piano for a lady teacher for 6 years. yesterday she canceled the appointment saying that she could not wait 4 weeks and that she had booked another tuner, and also to tell me that he was £10 cheaper. I said OK, but if it goes tits up, I will not be rescuing you! Why is it that some people ring up and want it that week! Besides, £50 for a tuning is my rate which is reasonable, £40 is too cheap and I cannot make a living on that! Some tuners near me charge £55-£75. One charged a local school £100!!Colin Nicholson wrote:Jonathan the 2nd wrote:I e mailed a local tuner for a historical tuning and he said he only did Equal Temperaments. .
...... what happened to the original piano tuner who did your Kirnberger temperament on 13th January?????? How many tuners do you have ??
Did you not ask YOUR previously booked tuner for this info? (I would have done)
Personally.... my favourite saying is that it takes time for a customer to trust a tuner, and even longer for the tuner to trust the customer.....
Stick to the one tuner - good policy.
Members of the PTA & I.M.I.T., MIA and Trading Standards Approved. C&G qualified and N&S Diploma. PTD(Precision Touch Design) Technician.
- Colin Nicholson
- Executive Poster
- Posts: 1704
- Joined: 04 Jul 2010, 19:15
- Location: Morpeth, Northumberland
- Contact:
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Colin Nicholson »
I noticed my piano went out of tune quite dramatically in 2 months - dropped roughly about 2 beats - did my head in!!!.... and its retuned now.
Sometimes I strike a deal with another tuning friend - luckily we still keep in touch, and went to college together. If a punter cant wait more than say a week, I'll tell them that I'll get back to them within a couple of hours, ring my friend - and the tuning can usually go ahead "between us" - I'll get about £10 for some commission; that way, they are more likely to ring you back & no custom lost. However, ringing a stranger tuner.... would need to know them & their work. Dont suppose you'll lose sleep over it !
Colin Nicholson Dip. Mus. CMIT CLCM PTLLS
Piano tuning & repairs. Full UK restoration service
http://www.aatuners.com
Tuition ~ Accompaniment ~ Weddings
http://www.pianotime1964.com
Member of The Guild of Master Craftsmen
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
I experimented with temperaments in the '60's. As tuners, we think and work vertically, that is, harmonically. We are concerned with the sound of several notes sounding together and arrange the harmonics in a certain way so that nothing is really offensive and let the funadamentals fall where they may. This is the nature and purpose of equal temrmnt but it means that melodic intonation is, in reality, the least of our concerns. As a violinist, melodic intonation is your principal concern. I noticed the profound effect unequal temperaments had on melodic intonation, the notes were much closer to where I wanted to hear them if I stuck to certain keys.
Although the 12th root of 2 was known to the ancIents for purposes other than music, it was not found necessary to music until composers wanted more freedom of modulation. A. J. Hipkins, a name familiar to tuners began instructing Broadwoods tuners in E. T. In the mid 1840's. Until then, meantone had been predominant as a compromise for the myriad of temperaments before that when musicians played mostly their own works and many tuned their own temperaments to fit before the necessity of the professional tuner. Even Bach used a temperament that, while it could be used in all keys, was far removed from equal temperament. Known as 'Well temperament' in English, there is much fascinating current information on the web. The way Bach wrote specifically to the nature of his temperament is a lifetimes study, particularly when we consider the two basic interpretations of the cryptic clues that he left and the cryptic nature of Bach himself. I am not surprised that even many early music people have but a flimsy grasp of temperaments.
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 4032
- Joined: 25 Oct 2003, 19:39
- Location: Thames Valley
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Gill the Piano »
So I was always taught, yes. And if Colin says so, it must be true...Withindale wrote:GillGill the Piano wrote:Bach wrote the 48 Preludes and Fugues to prove that ET worked, actually.
Are you 100% sure? I am looking forward to the day when I am proficient enough to play some of Bach's Preludes and Fugues and trying them in a Well Temperament. See Nigel Taylor's pages for an example of an alternative view: http://www.kirnberger.fsnet.co.uk/
Ian
-
- Regular Poster
- Posts: 71
- Joined: 22 Feb 2011, 19:55
- Location: Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Junior Piano Technician
-
- Persistent Poster
- Posts: 254
- Joined: 09 Dec 2011, 16:37
Re: local tuner for a historical tuning
Post by Jonathan the 2nd »
I shall see if the German for Equal Tempered is the same as Well Tempered. It`s not likely Bach would have missed the chance to write Equal if that`s what he meant. There was quite enough hassle about tuning going on at the time for him to have made the point much more clearly.
- Main Site Menu
-
Home
Piano Tuners
Piano Makers
Piano Teachers
Piano Accompanists
Piano Entertainers
Piano Shops
Piano Removals
French Polishers
Piano Rehearsal Rooms
Piano Hire
Pianos For Sale
Piano Parts
Piano History
Piano Forum
Piano Music
Piano Events
Advertise
Advanced Search Contact Site Admin
Help with a listing
Sitemap
Main Terms And Conditions
-
- Recent Listings