[pianotech] The big discussion

David Love davidlovepianos at comcast.net
Thu Jan 27 18:45:55 MST 2011


OK.  I'm not sure what this is aimed at exactly.  I haven' t seen anything
at all referencing anyone's lack of heart, passion or commitment to their
work.  But I disagree with you.  Of course tools matter.  You do the best
work with the tools you are most comfortable with as long as they are
appropriate for the task at hand but some tools provide a distinct advantage
over others for certain procedures.  The very fact that I'm typing this onto
a machine in San Francisco and you are reading it on your machine in Los
Angeles moments later (along with everyone else all over the world) is a
pretty apt demonstration of that.  A musician who can compose and lay down
24 tracks of different instruments and voices all performed by him (or her)
owes a huge debt to his "tools" and tool makers.   A piano tuner who can
analyze the subtle variations in an imperfectly scaled musical instrument
and produce an optimum tuning curve, record it, reproduce it and refine it
if needed.  Our ability to design them and thereby improve the quality of
our lives is largely what defines us.  To reject them is to deny the very
essence of our existence!

 

Wow, that's heavy.  But I'd still love to buy you a beer in San Francisco
when you come.  Any more philosophy and we'll need a couple of six-packs.  

  

David Love

www.davidlovepianos.com

 

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of David Andersen
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 3:32 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] The big discussion

 

One thing I want to emphasize and repeat: at the end of the day, I need to
have fun and be challenged. The beauty of our craft is that there are so
many things to learn how to do, and so many ways to keep myself learning and
keep things fresh. I have a huge drive to get better at things I'm good at;
tuning, voicing, regulation, diagnostics, and rebuilding are deep oceans of
opportunity to get better, to achieve mastery. It's my belief that humans
function in a much healthier, more positive way if they are working toward
mastery of something---and then get there.

 

The word I've heard so many tuners use about their
tunings---acceptable----literally repels me. My tunings, my piano work, is
consistently excellent because that's the way I feel the best: to see
myself, and have others see me, as excellent. Excellence breeds peer and
self- respect, collegiality, and access to a better class of clients/pianos.
Acceptability breeds rationalization and excuses, and, at least for me,

a loss of self-regard.

 

Tools don't mean squat, ultimately, in terms of who does better work. My
wife the sculptor uses simple, inexpensive clay tools and bypasses the
newer, "better," more efficient implements. Take a look at her work, which
all originates in clay, then is transferred to other media:
www.tanyaragir.com                 

 

Do you think her decision to use tools that make her feel good, old tools,
"dinosaur" tools, subtracts from the quality of her work?

 

My favorite tuner in the world, Barbara Pease Renner, uses 3 or 4
temperament strips, the oldest, bulkiest Sanderson machine, and an impact
tuning hammer that weighs as much as a boat anchor. Her tunings are
magnificent, musical, soaring things of beauty. My tunings aren't as good as
hers, but they're pretty damn close. I use open strings, one felt mute, ears
only, and a nine-ounce hammer from Charlie Faulk. Radically different tools,
same result, in the same time frame. Do you actually think I give a sh**t
what she uses to get there?

Absolutely not. What I love, and respect, and honor, is inside Barbara; it
has nothing to do with tools.

 

The quality of my work comes from my heart, and gut, and gonads. I love the
attitude of the vast majority of people on this list, because we're most of
us making a huge effort to be excellent. Part of that is praising each
other, and seeing the incredible commonality among all the diversity---being
NICE to each other, as possibly cheesy at that sounds.

 

If your heart and passion is no longer in your work, it's time to move on.
If you choose not to move on, please don't complain to me about how boring
or repetitive or "no big deal" the work has become. Work without love and
fun involved becomes quickly toxic.

 

End of rant. Is the sun past the yardarm? May I have an adult beverage,
please?

 

>From freezing, gray, miserable southern California---  :--)

 

David Andersen

www.davidandersenpianos.com

 

 

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