[CAUT] Electronic Tuning Preferences

Porritt, David dporritt at mail.smu.edu
Mon Mar 17 08:22:46 MST 2008


Ed:

While your brain might be "visually dominant" that's not true of
everyone.  Research has suggested that people who are cross dominant
(like born to be left-handed but made to be right by parents) tend to be
aurally dominant.  I know I am.  Years ago I took up photography just to
try to make myself more visual.  It helped but didn't cure.  My
attention is more readily achieved by a sound than a visual.  In
addition, when I read I hear the words and they enter my brain as a
sound.  I have to have a pronunciation for each word (it can be an
incorrect pronunciation but I have to have one) before I can continue.  

Yeah, we're all wired differently.  Just ask my wife!  :-) 

dp

David M. Porritt, RPT
dporritt at smu.edu

-----Original Message-----
From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Ed
Sutton
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 8:48 AM
To: College and University Technicians
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Electronic Tuning Preferences

Someone on the Journal is.
My experience and opinions are similar to yours.
Physiologically, our brains are "visually dominant," i.e. visual
information 
overrides aural information, so I have the concern that
staring at a spinning display can make us less aurally sensitive, may
even 
prevent a beginner from learning exquisite aural discernment.
During his talk in Rochester, Askenfelt said "Sound is just a boring
fact. 
I'm only interested in what I can photograph or measure," and later, in 
response to a question "I don't know, that's something that only you
tuners 
can hear."
Could we also reach the day when tuners said "I don't know, that's
something 
only the old aural tuners used to hear. I've looked at every note on
your 
piano, and they all look perfect."
Besides, hearing is fun. I intend to hear as much as I can, as long as I

can.
Ed S.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: <rwest1 at unl.edu>
To: "College and University Technicians" <caut at ptg.org>
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2008 9:20 AM
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Electronic Tuning Preferences


>I wonder if anyone on the exam committee and the Journal is taking
notes 
>on this topic.  It will come up repeatedly because newbies will  always

>wonder about the very issues that have been raised in this  thread.  An

>article that outlines the aural/etd tuning controversy  would be a good
one 
>for the Journal and should be put Chapter Toolkit  so that chapters
have 
>ready access to information about some of the  issues.  It would be
good 
>for Associates to have in their exam prep  materials.
>
> Secondly several years ago I made the deliberate decision to be an
aural 
> tuner just so that I wouldn't lose the aural skill that I had  worked
so 
> hard to master.  For several years I went over to the "dark  side" and

> tuned almost exclusively with the ETD.  In one of those  epiphany
moments 
> that I described in my last post, I realized that  the quality of my 
> tuning wasn't up to my old aural standards.  It  wasn't a judgement 
> against the ETD; it was a realization I wasn't  paying attention to my

> work.  As I started to wean myself away from a  heavy reliance on the
ETD, 
> I realized that my aural skills had  atrophied.  So I decided that if
I 
> wanted to keep my aural skills at  the highest level, I would rely on
my 
> ears rather than my eyes.   Philosophically I decided that because
music 
> is primarily an aural  phenomenon, access to my brain should be via
the 
> ears when tuning.   My eyes are an equally valid way of accessing my
brain 
> for tuning  purposes, given the accuracy of ETD's, but music is not
seen, 
> but  heard.  Also maintaining a refined aural skill links me to all
those 
> folks who have tuned before me, and have explored all the various 
> intellectual facets that make tuning an interesting mental as well as 
> practical pursuit.
>
> So I wouldn't call myself a hybrid tuner any more.  I use an ETD for 
> setting my A and for pitch raises.  Otherwise I gladly open myself to
the 
> satisfaction that aural tuning gives me as well as all the quirks  and

> failures that exclusively aural tuning can engender.
>
> Richard West 




More information about the caut mailing list

This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC