Wives tales ... violin tuning

Paul T Williams pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu
Tue Jul 1 15:39:42 MDT 2008


She says Dislexia (is that how you spell it?)  Anyway, spell check can 
help as I posted a couple weeks ago.  AE, you keep on keepin' on.


Best,

Paul




"Kerry" <kkean at neo.rr.com> 
Sent by: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org
07/01/2008 04:33 PM
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RE: Wives tales ... violin tuning






Alicia,
 
Please take this in the spirit in which it’s offered but your writing 
style bothers me. Text-messaging shortcuts make sense on a cell phone 
keypad, but are jarring (to me at least) in other contexts. You’ve made 
some interesting observations in your emails (and I understand that email 
is by nature informal) but in my opinion a careless writing style, poor 
spelling, etc., detract from what you’re saying. I’m not trying to tell 
you or anyone else what you can or can’t do, but I will say that I find 
myself giving more weight to the thoughts of those who take the time to 
express themselves clearly and without typos.
 
I don’t mean to pick on you and you’re certainly not alone in this 
(consider the poor example set recently at the highest levels of 
government). I just strongly feel that email is still writing, and sloppy 
writing leads to sloppy thinking. Yours just happened to be the straw that 
tipped me over. 
 
Just my two cents worth (deliberate sentence fragment ;-). I’m going 
upstairs to put on my flame-proof suit now.
 
 
Kerry Kean
Kent, Ohio
 

From: A E [mailto:eve_ane at hotmail.co.uk] 
Sent: Monday, June 30, 2008 9:04 AM
To: Pianotech List
Subject: RE: Wives tales ... violin tuning
 
I messed around with my friends before who are tied down in musical field, 
they randomly pressed keys on my piano and 9 out of10 i got it spot on... 
a few years ago i had a friend (may he rest in peace) who could tell  u 
exactly how sharp of flat the note was, and get it withing 1-2 cents....
there is such a thing i think.... it comes with experience, and knowing ur 
instrument... or in my case probably sheeer dumb luck...! 
U cant speak for everyone in this world Matt, u dont know what people can 
and can not do..
as for human perfection... well in that case, perfection is in the eyes of 
the beholder, and no one else matteres...
 
Alicia


Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 05:57:58 -0700
From: toddpianoworks at att.net
Subject: Re: Wives tales ... violin tuning
To: pianotech at ptg.org
There is no such thing as PERFECT pitch, only relative pitch.  It someone 
had perfect pitch, it would mean it would have to be perfect, and besides 
Jesus Christ, I have yet to see a human that was perfect.  If indeed this 
customer had perfect pitch, they could be able to tell you that the note 
was four cents flat.  But because she said the note sounded like a "d", it 
is relative.
 
Matthew

Richard Brekne <ricb at pianostemmer.no> wrote:
Yes... a good sense of relative pitch memory is an interesting thing 
indeed. Its just that it would be best for all concerned if it were kept 
better in perspective... i.e. words like Perfect and Absolute left out 
of it. Severely extreme cases of pitch sensitivity are more a handicap 
then an asset. Fortunately... there are very very few on this planet 
that actually suffer to that degree....and correspondingly few that 
could with any hint of justification fnyss at someone else for erring 
<> pitchwise.

Cheers
RicB


I had a customer a few days ago, whose piano I tuned 2 years ago. 
She played some notes and said how flat they were...the piano in
general sounded reasonable. I got started and the piano was indeed
about 4 cents flat and 7 in the treble. When done I asked her if
she had perfect pitch...wasn't sure. I played a D and she said that
sounded like a D...pretty cool...

David Ilvedson, RPT
Pacifica, CA 94044
 
 

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