[CAUT] CAF

Susan Kline skline at peak.org
Thu Aug 20 09:59:41 MDT 2009


At 06:56 AM 8/20/2009, you wrote:
>Geesh, Fred. Should we not look directly into their faces lest their 
>countenance blind us?  Perhaps piano tuners should wear veils when 
>we go out in public.
>Jeff

I certainly will never rush forward in my infinite wisdom to tell a 
concert pianist how to play. Of course, not all pianists are created 
equal. The other day in a church I taught a pianist how to pedal a 
Brambach grand to avoid the THUMP when all the dampers in free fall 
hit the strings. I pointed out how extremely even the lift was, and 
how the pedal would work fine lifting the dampers only 1/4" off the 
strings, and how she should never just let go with the right foot.

At times pianists have been a wonderful source of information. I fix 
up the piano as best I know, doing what I can for the things which 
bother me, then a real pianist comes and plays and tells me what they 
feel and what bothers them. Not the same stuff .....
That "oh, dear" is similar to a few times when I had a revealing 
moment. I fixed up the piano (usually not a concert piano) thinking 
it was fine, and then played it for a few minutes and found out what 
I really should have been working on. We have this mental 
construction in our heads of what one might call "right piano, good 
piano, nice piano" but it doesn't always conform to reality at every point.

Has everyone else noticed how amazed and delighted pianists are when 
they complain about something and one actually improves it? This is 
because they've complained so often and had technicians not improve it.

Susan Kline

>----- Original Message -----
>From: <mailto:fssturm at unm.edu>Fred Sturm
>
>I suggest that no piano technician should presume to tell a pianist 
>what kind of technique to use. Nor should we have the attitude that 
>we know what pianos are capable of because of our own expertise. 
>Pianists come up with ways of approaching the keyboard through trial 
>and error and endless hours of refinement. If they have been able to 
>achieve the effect they want on one piano, they want to be able to 
>achieve at least a similar effect on another. Pianists (at the top 
>end of the profession) are constantly pushing the limits. It is our 
>job to try to accommodate their needs. At least that is my attitude. 
>Yours may differ.
>


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