Electric piano

Billbrpt@AOL.COM Billbrpt@AOL.COM
Fri, 5 Jan 2001 20:03:27 EST


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In a message dated 1/5/01 6:53:51 PM Central Standard Time, 
hgreeley@stanford.edu (Horace Greeley) writes:


> would one rather have such a lab?  Or, a 
> room full of 50's/60's vintage Wurlitzer and/or Kimball consoles to try to 
> keep in tune?  I am not sure which is more frustrating....except that, as 
> one very well known technician once said:  "Tuning a Kimball is like trying 
> to nail Jello to a wall" - so, one starts tuning, and, when the big hand 
> goes around once, one stops and moves on, without having to worry about 
> 

This is exactly what I mean, folks.  I'm sure there are abundant numbers of 
piano technicians out there who have not had the kind of lofty career 
described by this man who could figure out how to tune and maintain a group 
of Kimball 42" Consoles and have no trouble at all doing so.'

It takes only the most basic set of skills, common sense and common knowledge.

Bill Bremmer RPT
Madison, Wisconsin

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