looking to replace my upright...

Piannaman@aol.com Piannaman@aol.com
Sun, 20 Jul 2003 19:08:08 EDT


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Stephen,

Make it a project.  Voice it, tune it, regulate it, and you may end up with 
something almost playable.  Granted, it will never be great, but you'll gain 
some experience and end up with something better than what you started with.

You're in the piano business.  How could you let your parents buy one of 
those??

Dave Stahl

In a message dated 7/20/03 1:14:31 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
stephenairy@fastmail.fm writes:


> Because that "grand" is a Young Chang PG-150.
> 
> ----- Original message -----
> From: "Farrell" <mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com>
> To: "Pianotech" <pianotech@ptg.org>
> Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2003 08:15:33 -0400
> Subject: Re: looking to replace my upright...
> 
> ".....living with my parents at this time and they don't have room for
> another grand."
> 
> So, there is a grand piano in your home? 
> 
> And does it have "a good responsive action, that allows for fairly fast
> playing, and good dynamic control, and a good, full, rich, brilliant
> tone, abundant in higher harmonics, all the way from A0 to C8, especially
> on FF passages, but not harsh"?
> 
> If so, why not play that piano - even if it is not a "9 foot piano", and
> "even if it was not a Steinway"?
> 



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