Well, I'll probably be flamed, but I have had my personal piano in a Valotti for about a month and it doesn't do anything for me. I improvise a lot and write music (as best I can) and am changing keys all the time. I don't like the grossly fast beating keys one bit. I'm beginning to think the pure thirds are boring...I will try a Young next though... David I. -----Original Message----- From: Richard Brekne <Richard.Brekne@grieg.uib.no> To: pianotech@ptg.org <pianotech@ptg.org> Date: Tuesday, December 05, 2000 9:43 AM Subject: Re: Is this a physical impossibility? > > >Roger Jolly wrote: > >> >> No one has been banging down the door to have their piano tuned in HT. >> We are thinking of keeping a studio piano in the store tuned in a HT >> just for a curiousity, and to further judge reactions. >> Maybe I'm the only one who caught the dreaded HT flu virus. <G> >> Roger > >Me thinks not... I certainly have caught it.. but I am certain of one thing... >pianist dont really know what to do with this new "sound" toy. Left to themselves >many seem to dink around for a while, then just leave it. We have a few exceptions >here in Bergen.. but most of the other students and teachers are too busy to start >really checking out the possibilities.. or previous significance... so they need >somebody like me to try and whip up their enthusiasm. > >Like Ed Foote, and Bill Bremmer.... you simply got to put this on your agenda if >you want it to go anywhere for you. > >-- >Richard Brekne >RPT, N.P.T.F. >Bergen, Norway > > >
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