Hi Michael I'll reply to your email first. I knew where this piano came from. and it was selected. I agree with you with the condition of the regulation, and in the mad panic to get the show on the road there is never enough time to address all the problems. It was not mentioned that there was also a treble string that had been replaced somewhere and the sting spacing and coils were a disgrace to the technician responsible so that should have also been in the complaint. It would have been foolish to discuss the regulation problems etc to management as they had a show to deal with and the pianist was happy with the instrument. Why concern the musicians? Here in Brisbane, winter is traditionally the dry season, however we have cool mornings and warm days ( can wear short sleeves in the sun). This year we have gone from a long drought to now excessive rainfall. My description of the coolest night in Brisbane would be considered warm in Chicago. Humidity is high at the moment even though the temperature is cooler. We really only have dry and wet seasons, and at the moment the weather is confusing.. other than too wet. An example is my lawn. It stopped raining two days ago and the water is still 1 inch deep. On Wednesday, there was an air conditioning duct blowing coldish air on the piano. On Thursday night, the air was off. The result was that the piano was happy. Air on. tuning bad.. Air off.. Tuning good...enuff said Regards Brian _____ From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of ChicagoTuner at aol.com Sent: Sunday, 28 June 2009 12:26 PM To: pianotech at ptg.org Subject: Re: [pianotech] Simon and Garfunkel Piano The strange serial number sounds like a Concert Reserve number, meaning CB 81. I believe that removing the keyslip would have revealed a six digit number that you are used to. Also, on the keybed near the left-hand side. Steinways need to be regulated and voiced, just like any other concert instrument. This piano has probably seen a lot of use and not enough prep. The usual problem of no one wants to pick up the bill for it. Improper hammer alignment, in particular, could be the result of long hours on its side bouncing up and down on a truck or on a plane. And, if this is a recent episode, would someone explain to me how a piano is pulling sharp, during the winter, (in Australia) my experience is they fall flat in the drier air or, is it that humid near the ocean? I live near Lake Michigan and during the winter, the soundboards flatten out from the dryness, in spite of the presence of so much water. Michael Gutowski Chicago In a message dated 6/26/2009 9:56:08 P.M. Central Daylight Time, pianocare2 at bigpond.com writes: I tuned a late production New York model B (strange serial number, just the numbers 81) for Simon and Garfunkel last night (last of three concerts here in Sydney). All the usual problems re the break, but the regulation was nothing short of a total disgrace. There was nothing there in the way of hammer alignment or burning angle, and the hammers were way too soft to develop a tonal palate suitable for a performance instrument. Each day the tuning went sharp in the tenor. I haven't seen a late New York B before, but it left me underwhelmed. Ron O. Hi Ron I have thought about your comments over the last few days and although my first and gut instinct was to do nothing, I have now decided to change my mind. I consider your comments to be unprofessional, and it had nothing to do with the subject of key levelling. I don't believe that Chugg Productions or the American crew would be happy with your post. For the record, I tuned the piano for S&G for the Wednesday and Thursday concerts in Brisbane. The piano arrived on Wednesday from New Zealand, and it was not on pitch, nor was there any resemblance of it being in tune. I thought to myself that the cargo doors must have been left open on the B747. The piano was tuned Wednesday lunchtime. At 1900 I got back on the stage for the tuning. It was about 440.5 and again had no musicality in the tuning. I went through the tuning twice and I delayed the doors until 1945, in which 10 000 people were trying to get to their seat by 2000hrs. I was told by the American crew that the piano had to be perfect. And no excuses. I did the best I could considering the circumstances and the air conditioning duct blowing directly on the piano. On Thursday night the piano was 441hz. So perhaps the tuning instability was due to the travel and climate. I stayed for the show on Thursday, and although I did the best I could, I was not entirely happy with my tuning. However the client, that is the people who payed me were. The American crew were also happy, and I got a big thank you from the musical director. They had fun with "appearing on stage tonight.. Brian Wilson, Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel". At the end of the Brisbane show, the show was packed up and moved to Sydney via truck. Brisbane was having its coldest night of the year when the show finished, and I might consider that to be part of the tuning problems. I hope my tuning met with some approval with you, but I think you should be lucky you didn't hear the piano when it first arrived. Regards Brian _____ Make your summer sizzle with fast and easy <http://food.aol.com/grilling?ncid=emlcntusfood00000005> recipes for the grill. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.375 / Virus Database: 270.12.93/2204 - Release Date: 06/27/09 17:55:00 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://ptg.org/pipermail/pianotech.php/attachments/20090628/5428c76b/attachment-0001.htm>
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