Support |
PH>Concerning pianos tuning, there is an interesting aspect which PH>is often overlooked: even the octaves on an expertly tuned piano PH>are "out of tune" with each other. This is because we tend to PH>hear very high pitches somewhat flatter than they "really" are, PH>and very low pitches somewhat sharper than the "really" are. To PH>compensate, the highest notes on a piano are tuned sharp and the PH>lowest notes are tuned flat. This is called "stretching". Actually, the reason pianos are "stretched" has nothing to do with the way we hear pitches, but the inherent out-of-tune-ness of a piano. If you were to analyse a piano sample via FFT, you would notice that the harmonics become progressively _sharper_. So, if you were to tune a piano to an equal temperment, chords with bass tones would sound very out of tune, even though the individual pitches would be spot-on. This is one of the reasons I don't like the sound of a piano in an ensemble context, it never sounds right. Coincidently, this is what Don Fagan was thinking of when he claimed that all digital pianos were out of tune, except for the Roland. He got reamed with letters to Keyboard magazine after he said that, because he didn't explain what he was talking about. My Roland XP-80 workstation offers three degrees of "stretcheyness", but I'm an organist at heart, so it doesn't matter to me. -- Eric Williamson - erwill@flink.com - erwill@hotmail.com - aka Suit & Tie Guy Join the "Suit & Tie List" - send mail to majordomo@marshall.ssi.net with the words "subscribe suit_and_tie_shows <your e-ddress>" in the body.