[CAUT] Piano Mechanics class

Paul T Williams pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu
Tue Jan 12 07:03:57 MST 2010


MUS 361 Spring Semester 2010


Course Description

A 2-credit interactive workshop “poking around under the hood of a variety 
of pianos.”  This hands-on course is designed for pianists, piano 
teachers, and those who have a great interest in pianos.  This course will 
cover piano nomenclature, how pianos work, what to consider when buying a 
new or used piano, how to care for your piano, an in-depth look at the 
services that piano technicians provide and communicating with your piano 
technician.  Students are expected to come to class prepared to 
participate from the first class.

Purpose of the class

1.      To provide technical information about the piano to pianists so 
that the pianist will understand the possibilities and constraints of the 
instrument, how a properly maintained piano feels and sounds, what they 
want in a piano and how to ask for it, how to buy and care for a piano, 
and how to locate and assess the skills of a piano technician.
2.      Increase the comfort level and confidence that pianists have with 
their instruments.
3.      Enhance the communication between pianists and piano technicians.

Instructor

Paul T. Williams RPT  (Registered Piano Technician/Piano Technicians 
Guild-PTG)
Shop phone; 472-2568
E-mail;  pwilliams4 at unl.edu
Office hours; Room 5, by appointment

Class times
Tuesdays and Thursdays 12:30-1:20

Texts
The Piano Book: Buying and Owning a New or Used Piano
Larry Fine
Brookside Press  (provided by instructor)

Piano Tuning and Allied Arts
William Braid White, MusD
MT 165 W54 (Hagge Library, UNL)

Various Handouts

Hi Jeannie,  This above info is the general idea of the class.  I got 
quite a bit of information from Alan McCoy at WSU. My outline is very 
similar to his.  I think Richard West's class was also very similar.

Hope this helps.

Paul



From:
"Jeannie Grassi" <jcgrassi at earthlink.net>
To:
<caut at ptg.org>
Date:
01/11/2010 08:20 PM
Subject:
Re: [CAUT] Piano Mechanics class



Hi Paul,
This sounds great.  More people certainly does mean that your own 
attention is divided, so being organized is even that much more important.
 
Would you (or anyone else) be willing to share your basic outline or 
overview with the rest of us?  I can see where this would be helpful even 
with a private student, which I’m contemplating doing.
Thanks,
jeannie 
 
 
 

From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of Paul 
T Williams
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 11:21 AM
To: CAUTlist
Subject: [CAUT] Piano Mechanics class
 
Hi All, 

I'm wondering of your CAUTers that teach a basic piano mechanics class on 
how many students you usually have.  This year, I have 6 signed up.  The 
most I've ever had at once, and I'm wondering how to keep all 12 hands 
busy at the same time. 

I don't lecture in front of the classroom a lot, but rather, do a lot of 
hands-on teaching while explaining what I'm doing and then have them do 
it.  Two years ago, I had 4, which was sort of chaotic for me.  I really 
like 2 or 3, but 6!!?? The tuning basics was the hardest to monitor. 

I've developed a good plan of topics for them to learn and two "projects" 
they will be working on is a Yamaha U-1 for the first few weeks after 
teaching nomenclature, piano care, basic action functions and regulating 
on models. After the Yam, one of the grands from a practice room that's 
coming back with a new soundboard in a month or two. 

Since this class only meets for an hour twice a week, I won't be able to 
get really detailed on just one aspect of tuning, regulating, or 
repairs/rebuilding, but I want to touch on as much as I can. 

Am I making this too "cluttered"? I would like your input as to focusing 
on fewer topics, cover a spread of everything on the table, or something 
in between. 

Thanks! 

Paul 


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