[pianotech] Piano Tuning Competition

Paul T Williams pwilliams4 at unlnotes.unl.edu
Fri Oct 15 15:17:28 MDT 2010


Sounds like fun!  Never heard of such a thing though.  Are they all out of 
tune by the same amount.  Is this a regulated thing?  What if somebody 
gets an old clunker 100 cents flat??

Paul




From:
Wally Scherer <afinetune at yahoo.com>
To:
pianotech at ptg.org
Date:
10/15/2010 04:11 PM
Subject:
[pianotech] Piano Tuning Competition



"Bi-Annual Piano Tuning Competition

The XYZ Piano Company is pleased to announce its bi-annual piano 
competition.

All area piano technicians interested in having more customers are 
encouraged to enter the competition. Entry fee is $10.

Each piano technician will have the opportunity to tune two pianos which 
will be chosen at random by XYZ, one grand piano and one vertical piano. 
Technicians are limited to one and one half hours per piano. All tunings 
will be scheduled by the company and must follow the time limits strictly. 
Any method may be employed in the tuning procedure, as long as the 
A=440Hz. standard is adhered to. If the piano is tuned in less than the 
allotted time, the technician, at his discretion, may make any other 
adjustments to the piano he wishes, in accordance with accepted 
techniques, such as voicing or regulation. These details may have a 
bearing on the judges' decision.

The pianos will be judged for tuning by three judges, each of whom will 
have one hour to privately play and evaluate all the pianos that have been 
tuned for this event. The judges will score all the grand pianos on a 100 
point scale, then separately score all the vertical pianos on a 100 point 
scale. The three judges' scores will be averaged to give each piano a 
final score. The piano technician whose two pianos have the highest 
combined scores, will be declared the winner. In case of a tie, and random 
drawing will determine the winner. Judges are also encouraged to write any 
comments about the tunings in order to aid the technicians in the future. 
The identity of the judges will not be made known to the technicians prior 
to the judging.

The winning technician will be offered the job of being XYZ's official 
piano technician for the following two years. As such, he will tune and 
maintain the store pianos for an agreed upon fee, and will be referred any 
outside piano technical jobs that the store may receive.

Judges for the event are chosen from among the area's piano teachers or 
professional pianists. Each judge will be paid an agreed upon fee for his 
services."

Has anyone heard of anything like this actually happening? Could, or 
should it happen? Why, or why not?
-------------------------------------------------------------
A FINE TUNE - Piano Tuning & Repairs
Wallace T. Scherer, piano technician, music educator
Lake Worth, Florida  Telephone: 561-432-4121
Web page: http://aftune.angelfire.com
------------------------------------------------
FREE TICKETS: http://aftune.angelfire.com/freetics.html


 


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