I'm glad that you too find that you don't like things so much when you hear it back in the video! Yes it happens to me too. Thanks for a great video. I'd never thought of measuring unisons with thirds before.
Maggie, I love the videos. If you have not already have, could you please address the inevitable inharmononics of each string in the many uninisons of a general piano you would encounter out in the field as a practicing tuner? I am sure you know the many variables encountered in this in the field. Kevin McAlley. In the business since 1986. Thanks
I've thought about this a lot. It's a challenging subject. I talk about inharmonicity in intervals a little bit, but haven't really addressed it in unisons. I have a video on my old channel demonstrating how a bichord can have both strings "in tune" but sound terrible, then to get them to sound good, one must be tuned sharp and the other flat. Thanks for the suggestion. I'll play around with it after the holidays. 😊
Thank you for your videos Maggie, I really appreciate them, they teach me so much. That one was amazing as always. I noticed one thing. Sometimes I tune my piano and I think it's pretty good until I record something, then I'm like "wow, not as good as I thought" hahaha
YES! It's crazy. Sometimes I will get "stuck" tuning, so I'll video some intervals & listen on my phone. Often I'll hear what I'm missing. 🤣 So glad you like my vids! 😊 I want to share my fascination with aural tuning. 😉
I've been doing warts-and-all videos of complete tunings to encourage people and th-cam.com/video/6WEX5JC8Hac/w-d-xo.html is in encouragement for pianists to attend to slipped unisons themselves. However, on tonally deficient 19th century instruments were unisons as pure as we work them to be today th-cam.com/video/QF224PZBEvY/w-d-xo.html ?
I'm glad that you too find that you don't like things so much when you hear it back in the video! Yes it happens to me too. Thanks for a great video. I'd never thought of measuring unisons with thirds before.
Maggie, I love the videos. If you have not already have, could you please address the inevitable inharmononics of each string in the many uninisons of a general piano you would encounter out in the field as a practicing tuner? I am sure you know the many variables encountered in this in the field. Kevin McAlley. In the business since 1986. Thanks
I've thought about this a lot. It's a challenging subject. I talk about inharmonicity in intervals a little bit, but haven't really addressed it in unisons. I have a video on my old channel demonstrating how a bichord can have both strings "in tune" but sound terrible, then to get them to sound good, one must be tuned sharp and the other flat. Thanks for the suggestion. I'll play around with it after the holidays. 😊
Thank you for your videos Maggie, I really appreciate them, they teach me so much. That one was amazing as always. I noticed one thing. Sometimes I tune my piano and I think it's pretty good until I record something, then I'm like "wow, not as good as I thought" hahaha
YES! It's crazy. Sometimes I will get "stuck" tuning, so I'll video some intervals & listen on my phone. Often I'll hear what I'm missing. 🤣 So glad you like my vids! 😊 I want to share my fascination with aural tuning. 😉
I've been doing warts-and-all videos of complete tunings to encourage people and th-cam.com/video/6WEX5JC8Hac/w-d-xo.html is in encouragement for pianists to attend to slipped unisons themselves. However, on tonally deficient 19th century instruments were unisons as pure as we work them to be today th-cam.com/video/QF224PZBEvY/w-d-xo.html ?
Oh, I follow your M3 checks notice left and right are not good with center. Glad to know this technique to fine tune my piano. Thank you