Voicing of high bass on Steinway L

William Benjamin pianoboutique at comcast.net
Thu Mar 9 13:18:56 MST 2006


Dale,

 

Maybe it was a typo, but what is a bichords.   You have me stumped here.

 

William

 

 

 

 

PIANO BOUTIQUE

William Benjamin

Piano Tuner Extraordinaire

 <http://www.pianoboutique.biz> www.pianoboutique.biz

The tuner alone,

preserves the tone.

 

  _____  

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of Erwinspiano at aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, March 08, 2006 10:42 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: Voicing of high bass on Steinway L

 

  Hey John

   The upper bass register of the Steinway L was once scaled at 70% of its
breaking strength which IMO helped the power a tonal crossover at the break.
Don't know what the current scaling is except I don't care for the a strings
they use. The other problem IMO is that the tensions on notes 27-28-29 are
too low for a good transition.  Replacing them with 3 or 4 unisons of
bichords improves this tremendously. 

   Also If the bass strings have been replaced, most likely the string maker
did not duplicate this fairly high tension in notes 22 -26 & I find the
lower tensions in this area really make for a substandard sounding high
bass.  Arledge is doing in good job in the tension dept. & will accomadate
whatever you wish.

   Other makers may or may not do this upon you request. The L monochords
are also a horrible trashy sound as they are short & single wrapped and lack
fundamental.  A double wrapped string will open up the bottom end of the
piano considerably.  Talk about being stuck in the past, I mean mud. Oops .
JMO coming thru again.

  By the way what kind of hammers are we talking about.  This is loads to do
with it. 

  Dale

Hello,,

I know the Steinway L's high bass section is notorious for being  
problematic, but I am looking for advice from someone who has had  
success in getting an excellent transition from the B to the Bb -  
i.e. retaining the "buzz" from the C28 and B27 through to the Bb26  
and A25 while maintaining a decent tone and moderate attack.

I almost gave up hope of getting the sound, but just today I heard an  
old Steinway L that had the *exact* the tone I was looking for: the  
highest notes matched the low tenor extremely well, I was very  
surprised just how well. A full tone with some (good) buzz. I'm  
fairly certain they were original strings.

So, I'm assuming there must be someone out there who knows what I'm  
talking about and has some advice for voicing the hammer to get this  
tone (as best as is possible, at least). For those who are familiar  
with that not-so-pleasant sound that is so often in that Bb26 on L's  
and sometimes the A25, I figured they may know a general approach to  
relieving this sound.

Thanks!

- John

 

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