[CAUT] Practicing on concert hall pianos piano

reggaepass at aol.com reggaepass at aol.com
Tue Feb 24 04:39:29 PST 2009


Hi Jim,

To clarify, all of our pianos have fallboard locks (of the "Hands Off " variety).  I had them modified so you need a key to unlock them, but not to lock them.  This way, I or faculty can unlock a performance piano for a student and they can lock it without them having a key.

Alan


-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Busby <jim_busby at byu.edu>
To: caut at ptg.org <caut at ptg.org>
Sent: Mon, 23 Feb 2009 5:09 pm
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Practicing on concert hall pianos piano




Thanks Alan. 

 

I suppose you’ve considered fallboard locks. That being said, I don’t recommend them because they end up losing the key or mechanism, bugging you to open them, crying about it, etc. I got tired of students “borrowing” a piano and took some keys out of the middle octave… Danged if they still didn’t try to use it.

 

Best,

Jim Busby

 


From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of reggaepass at aol.com
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2009 5:45 PM
To: caut at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Practicing on concert hall pianos piano


 

The heavy use throughout the day of our one and only recital hall precludes excessive use for concert preparation.  Our performance pianos are locked and, although I don't control the hall, I do control access to the pianos themselves (for the most part, that is).  While there is no policy per se, I don't grant access if I detect that it is for practice, as opposed to actual prepa
ration for a concert that is about to happen.   


 



That said, just today I found out that someone has been practicing in our recording studio (!!).  Now I have to plot how to bring an end to that...



 



Alan Eder



CalArts


-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Busby <jim_busby at byu.edu>
To: caut at ptg.org <caut at ptg.org>
Sent: Mon, 23 Feb 2009 4:01 pm
Subject: [CAUT] Practicing on concert hall pianos piano




All,



 



I know we have had this on the list before, but what policy do you have concerning students practicing on concert hall instruments? Here is ours;



 



- 0        Students are allowed only one rehearsal prior to their recital, and then only if time/schedule allows. 



-          Students cannot practice w/o their teacher being present.



 



Does this sound unreasonable? Does excessive practicing wear out the piano, or make it more difficult to keep in the best condition? Mind you, we have had up to 19 concerts in one week. What would you consider excessive, considering the rigorous concert schedule that the pianos must already endure?



 



Thank you!



 



Sincerely,



Jim Busby BYU



 



P.S. You can guess why I’m writing.  We’re being pressed to allow students to play more than our “policy” allows. Please do let me quote your short, to the point comments, a
s well as your policies to our piano faculty. You may quote me on the above.






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