Defending one's tuning

J. Stanley Ryberg jstan40 at sbcglobal.net
Tue Jul 24 13:59:21 MDT 2007


Thanks, Diane, for this bit of information.  Though I'm no longer in the situation, for a number of years I played in a professional orchestra for a conductor who shall remain nameless (he's out there somewhere, in NYC, I think).  He was so very sensitive to trumpets, specifically, but brass, generally, that if we could be heard, we were too loud.  The principal trumpet player (a very close friend) was quite convinced that this conductor had hearing loss that was making him hypersensitive to particular frequencies (and associated partials) and that this caused the problems the trumpet section had for the duration of this festival.  It was also interesting to note that a guest conductor of at least equal ability as a conductor had no such issues with the same trumpet section!
   
  GREAT IDEA, PHIL  !

Strange as it may seem, a person with hearing loss sometimes cringes
 more 
from a bright sounding piano than a normal hearer does.

Frequently the person with hearing loss not only loses the ability to
 hear 
soft sounds, but also loses the ability to _tolerate loud sound_.
  Their 
total dynamic range becomes smaller.

Diane



Diane Hofstetter



Stan Ryberg 
Barrington IL 
jstan40 at sbcglobal.net
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