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-
- Chapter 1-1
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
-
- MUSICAL KNOWLEDGE REQUIRED FOR PIANO TUNERS
-
- NOTE: The illustrations referred to in this book are not
- presented because they include graphics which cannot be
- shown on all computers. They are available directly from
- the author. However, they are not necessary to understand
- the text.
-
- ALSO: If you request the audio tapes that are offered, you
- will find that I occasionally refer to page numbers in the
- printed text. After reformatting the text from a commercial
- product to a disk presentation, these page numbers may not
- coincide. However, It will be no problem to find exactly
- where I want you to look.
-
- In order to properly tune a piano, I recommend you
- learn a "little" about music terminology, acoustics, how a
- string vibrates, how the musical scale is organized, a
- little about the mathematics of the musical scale, and the
- theory surrounding the art of tuning. Although I can teach
- you to tune a piano without requiring much knowledge in
- these areas, the more you know, the more confidence you will
- have. I believe the more you can learn about the complete
- subject of "TUNING", the better tuner you will become.
-
- This sounds like I am going to ask you to become a
- music major rather than a tuner. Nothing could be farther
- from the truth. You will find the musical knowledge re-
- quired to tune a piano can be learned in a very short time.
-
- A piano is tuned by listening for beats (explained
- later) and adjusting the tension of the strings to either
- eliminate or set the speed of these beats. A good ear is
- necessary, but a good musical ear is not.
-
-
- NOISE AND MUSIC
-
- Webster's dictionary defines noise as "something that
- lacks agreeable musical quality or is noticeably
- unpleasant." A musical tone is defined as a "sound of defi-
- nite pitch and vibration."
-
- When a piano string is struck, a musical tone is heard,
- and when you hear the sound of a jack-hammer, you are hear-
- ing noise. You probably have learned elsewhere that in
- order for a sound to exist, it must be heard. If a sound
- vibrates at a certain rate and causes your ear to vibrate at
- the same rate, you are hearing a musical sound. Conversely,
- if a sound vibrates in an unorganized fashion causing your
- ear to vibrate the same way, you are hearing noise.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-2
-
- THE VIBRATING PIANO STRING
-
- If you secure a length of piano wire on both ends and
- pluck it with your fingernail, you will hear a musical
- sound. The sound (pitch) you hear is determined by 1) the
- thickness of the wire; 2) the length of the wire; 3) the
- tension put on the wire; and 4) how stiff the wire is. It
- is not necessary to try this experiment at this point - just
- remember the characteristics of a vibrating string.
-
- NOTE: If you are not familiar with basic musical notation,
- please refer to appendix D.
-
- When a string is struck, it vibrates in many different ways.
- First, and foremost, the sound you hear will be the FUNDA-
- MENTAL. Secondly, the string produces a series of PARTIALS
- by dividing itself into halves, thirds, quarters etc. This
- phenomenon occurs simultaneously (see illustration 1-1).
-
- | When you enroll as a student and receive |
- | your pack of illustrations, attach them |
- | in the empty spaces throughout this book.|
- -
-
- / \
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- \ /
- illustration 1-1
-
- (The above illustration simply shows you how a string vi-
- brates and produces partials when it is struck in different
- places along its length).
-
- The first eight PARTIALS produced by striking an indi-
- vidual string are shown in illus. 1-2 built on the fundamen-
- tal note C-28 (explained later).
-
- / \
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- \ /
- illustration 1-2
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- Chapter 1-3
-
- The partials shown above (over the FUNDAMENTAL C-28) are C-
- 40, G-47, C-52, E-56, G-59, A# (or Bb - explained later) and
- C-64. A little later, after I have explained these numbers
- attached to the notes (pitches), I will ask you to play them
- on the piano.
-
-
- PRODUCING BEATS
-
- If one piano wire is adjusted to sound exactly the same
- as another wire, they are "in tune" with each other. On the
- other hand, If one wire is just a little "flat" or "sharp"
- to the other, they will produce a softer tone when sounded
- together and you will hear a VIBRATION. This VIBRATION will
- either be fast or slow, depending on how far sharp or flat
- one wire is to the other.
-
- For example, if one wire is tuned to sound at 440
- C.P.S. (cycles or beats per second) and the other wire is
- tuned to sound at 441 C.P.S. you will hear ONE beat per
- second. You will hear this because the faster vibrating
- string will overtake the slower vibrating string ONCE per
- second. Every time you hear the sound getting louder and
- then softer, you are hearing ONE beat (cycle). Therefore
- one string (or partial) vibrating at a specific C.P.S. will
- cause you to hear beats if it is sounded with another string
- vibrating an a different C.P.S.
-
- Please don't give up yet. This subject will be pre-
- sented in more detail later on. I am just filling your head
- with facts that will magically make sense as you progress.
- I promise!
-
-
- THE PIANO KEYBOARD
-
- Now, I am going to introduce you to your piano in a way
- you may not have experienced before.
-
- FIRST: Sit down in front of the piano - say "HI! I
- am going to tickle your ivories and make you
- feel and sound great".
-
- If you are sitting in front of a full size
- piano, you will be looking at 88 individual
- keys. The key at the far left of the key-
- board will be a white key and it will be
- given the name of A-1. The key at the far
- right of the keyboard is also a white key and
- will be given the name of C-88.
-
- SECOND: Observe that there are 52 white keys, and 36
- black keys (which we will call SHARPS). If
- you do not know the names of all the keys you
- will now learn them very easily.
-
- I will take you up the keyboard as you are SITTING IN
- FRONT OF THE PIANO.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-4
-
- The keys (for identification) are numbered from left to
- right 1 thru 88.
-
- LEARN this sequence: A-B-C-D-E-F-G-A. This is the way
- the scale progresses from A-1 up to C-88 ON THE WHITE KEYS.
-
- TRY IT. Start on A-1 and play every white key all the
- way up to the top. You just played 52 keys, NOT 88. The
- other 36 keys are the black ones.
-
- As you progress up the keyboard on the white keys, and
- come to a black key between two white keys, give it the name
- of the key you just left and add the name SHARP. In other
- words, the first black key you come to will be called A-
- sharp (written usually as A#). The second black key you
- come to will be called C#. The third black key will be
- called D#.
-
- SO NOW, you have the ability to name all the keys from
- A-1 to C88.
-
- I'm sure you are familiar with the word "FLAT" as
- pertains to musical sound. When most people hear this term,
- I imagine they think of a tone (note or pitch) that sounds a
- little "off". This is correct, but another way tuners and
- musicians use the term FLAT is to identify musical pitches.
-
- If you start at the top of the piano on pitch C-88 and
- come DOWN, you will find that the black keys are in exactly
- the same place. Brilliant? I thought you would think so.
-
- As you come down the keyboard the first black key you
- come to is just BELOW B-87. Since it is BELOW the note we
- are going to call it B-flat (normally written Bb).
-
- Simply put, when you are going UP the keyboard, the
- black key takes the name of the white key BELOW it and adds
- the term SHARP (or #). When your are coming DOWN the key-
- board the black key takes the name of the white key ABOVE it
- and adds the term FLAT or (b).
-
- At this point, make sure you understand that C# is the
- same as Db; D# is the same as Eb; etc...
-
- One other point to make - Please note that between the
- notes E and F; and B and C, there are no black keys. This
- merely means that E# can also be called F and B# can be
- called C. Also Fb is the same as E, and Cb is the same as B.
- Please do not let this confuse you. Just accept it for
- now .
-
- IMPORTANT: Tuners, for the most part, call all black keys
- SHARPS. Musicians use both SHARP AND FLAT. For the pur-
- poses of this course we will use the term SHARP exclusively
- in the printed text and illustrations. I just wanted you to
- understand why you may hear C# called Db - A# being called
- Bb etc...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-5
-
- On the audio tapes you will hear me occasionally refer to
- both Sharps and Flats. This is so you will be able to
- better understand the terms and feel comfortable with either
- one.
-
- Take a break - have a cup or glass of your favorite
- beverage, think about it until just before you get a head-
- ache and then proceed reading. Believe me, it WILL eventual-
- ly make sense.
-
- Earlier, when you learned the sequence of notes as you
- go up and down the keyboard, you saw that the notes start
- repeating after 12 have been hit. Start on A-1 the first
- note on the left side of the keyboard and go up note by note
- and the 13th note you hit will be A-13.
-
- REMEMBER THIS: The distance between one note and
- another one with the same letter name (higher or lower) is
- called and OCTAVE.
-
- Now, start with A-1 and go up counting the A's and
- determine that there are 7 more - plus 3 more notes. This
- tells you that the complete piano scale contains 7 OCTAVES
- plus three notes.
-
- When you start at the bottom of the piano and ascend by
- playing each note (white and black) one after the other, you
- will be going up the keyboard CHROMATICALLY. Practice going
- up and down the keyboard in this manner and saying aloud the
- notes as you play them.
-
- / \
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- / \
-
- Illus. 1-3 Chromatic scale
- (from C-40 up to C-52)
-
- INTERVALS
-
- An INTERVAL is a unit of harmony, resulting from sound-
- ing two tones (notes) simultaneously. For our purposes we
- will think of an interval as the DISTANCE between two notes
- measured by their differences in pitch. If the two notes
- are played one after the other, it is referred to as a
- MELODIC interval. If they are played together, it is re-
- ferred to as a HARMONIC interval.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-6
-
- The distance from any note to the next note, higher (to
- the right) OR lower (to the left) is defined as a HALF-TONE
- or HALF-STEP. This is the SMALLEST interval. Recall now
- that the LETTER NAMES of the notes are A-B-C-D-E-F-G-...
- Now if you want to find out the GENERAL name of any inter-
- val, you simply start counting on the first note of the
- interval and continue up or down to the second note of the
- interval.
-
- EXAMPLES: If the first note of the interval is C-28
- (the 28th note from the bottom of the piano) and the second
- note of the interval is D-30, you would count 1-2. The
- interval would be called a SECOND; C-28 up to E-32 is a
- THIRD; C-28 up to F-33 is a FOURTH and so on until you
- reach the 8th which is called the OCTAVE (C-28 to C-40).
-
- / \
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-
-
-
-
- / \
-
- Illus. 1-4 (Various intervals within the octave)
-
-
- Since sharps (#) and flats (b) take their LETTER NAMES
- from the adjacent white keys, they are not considered when
- you are determining the size of an interval. A to C is a
- THIRD and A to C# is also a third.
-
- This brings us to another term called the UNISON. Look
- at the strings on the piano and you will find that when you
- strike them by pressing the keys, the higher notes will have
- three strings per note. The notes to the immediate of these
- will have two strings per note and the bottom 10 or so will
- have only one string per note. When the strings struck by
- one hammer are tuned to each other the are said to be in
- UNISON. This is also referred to as the interval of a
- perfect PRIME.
-
- We must now learn to identify the intervals by counting
- HALF-STEPS. A half step is the distance from on note up or
- down to an adjacent note (black or white). The chart below
- will show you how to construct the intervals. You then need
- to be able to start on any note and play any interval neces-
- sary.
-
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-
-
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-
- Chapter 1-7
-
- FROM TO HALF-STEPS INTERVAL NAME
- _____________________________________________________
- C-28 E-32 4 MAJOR THIRD
-
- C-28 D#-31 3 minor third
-
- C-28 F-33 5 PERFECT FOURTH
-
- C-28 G-35 7 PERFECT FIFTH
-
- C-28 A-37 9 MAJOR SIXTH
-
- C-28 G#-36 8 minor sixth
-
- C-28 C-40 12 PERFECT OCTAVE
-
- _____________________________________________________
-
- Some new terms were introduced in the chart - MAJOR,
- minor and PERFECT. As you have probably have figured out by
- now, if C-E is a third and C-D# (Eb) is also a third, we
- need some way to label the difference since they will not
- sound the same when played together. So, a third will be
- MAJOR if there are 4 half steps between the two notes and it
- will be minor if there are only 3 half-steps.
-
- Practice identifying intervals starting on various
- notes until you are able to start on ANY note and play the
- intervals of the MAJOR & minor thirds and sixths and the
- Perfect fourths and fifths.
-
- You will use these intervals over and over while learn-
- ing to tune and in every tuning you perform in the future.
- The importance of learning the keyboard cannot be over-
- emphasized. You certainly do not have to know how to play a
- piano to tune it and an auto mechanic does not have to know
- how to drive, but you wouldn't take your car to a mechanic
- if he/she didn't know a spark plug from a carburetor.
-
-
- A "LITTLE" MATH
-
- There are numerous books you can find that will delve
- deeply into the mathematics or mechanics of the musical
- scale. My purpose in this book is to present just enough
- (hopefully) but not too much of the technical aspect of
- tuning. Once you grasp the information herein you may find
- your appetite has been whetted sufficiently and you can
- expand your knowledge. As in all professions, there is
- always more to learn.
-
- The rest of this chapter is fairly technical, but no
- course on tuning would be complete without at least includ-
- ing this information.
-
- I recommend you at least read the rest of the chapter
- because there are many non-technical bits of information you
- should know. Don't worry that you will not be able to tune
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-8
-
- without knowing everything I will present. I tuned pianos
- professionally for a few years without knowing MOST of the
- information on the next few pages. If you are really seri-
- ous about entering this profession, you will refer to and
- learn the theory of tuning eventually.
-
- So, speed read the following info and proceed to chap-
- ter two. If you understand it all - great, if not - don't
- worry.
-
-
- EQUAL TEMPERAMENT
-
- As you sit in front of your piano and play the notes up
- and down, it is apparent that they all sound at a different
- pitch or frequency. You learned that a string, when struck,
- vibrates at a certain rate causing your ear to vibrate at
- the same rate. Since there are 88 different pitches on most
- pianos, there has to be a way to space these pitches one to
- another so that the piano will be in tune.
-
- For instance, we know that within any octave there are
- 13 separate sounds. These sounds must be arranged so there
- is exactly the same distance between each note as we go up
- or down. There are 13 separate sounds, but only 12 half-
- steps.
-
- In order to obtain the frequency of a tone one half-
- step higher than another and have 12 equal half-steps from
- the lower note of an octave to the upper note it is neces-
- sary to multiply the frequency of the tone by the 12th root
- of the octave ratio, which is 1:2. The 12th root of 2 is
- 1.0594631 for those of you who understand this terminology.
-
- More simply, the note A-49 vibrates at 440 cycles per
- second (C.P.S.). If you multiply 440 by 1.0594631 you will
- get 466.163764 which is the number of C.P.S. of A#-50. If
- you multiply 466.163764 by the 12th root of 2, you will get
- the frequency of B-51. You could do this from the bottom of
- the piano all the way to the top and you would go from A-1
- with a frequency of 27.5 to C-88 with a frequency of
- 4186.009. OR you could just refer to appendix B from the
- table of contents (main menu) and find that I have provided
- this information for you.
-
- When 12 successive half-steps (comprising one octave)
- are EQUALIZED by the method explained above, the result is
- called and EQUAL TEMPERED octave.
-
- A smaller unit of measurement was introduced by A.J.
- Ellis called the CENT. Ellis divided the equal tempered
- octave into 1200 units called "CENTS" with each half-step
- being exactly 100 cents distance from the next, regardless
- what octave you are in. The cent is too short a distance to
- be heard by the ear, but a trained ear will hear a distance
- of 2 cents and the average person can hear a distance of 3-4
- cents.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-9
-
- Now that we know how the EQUAL TEMPERED octave was
- created, it is a simple matter to "equally temper the entire
- keyboard."
-
- For Example, the lowest note on the piano is A-1 which
- beats at 27.5 C.P.S. To obtain the beats of A-13 an octave
- higher) we multiply 27.5 by two and get 55.00 C.P.S. We
- then could multiply 55.00 by two and get the C.P.S. of A-25
- (110.00). If we proceed by multiplying each frequency by
- successive of 2 we will reach A-85 at a frequency of 3520.
- Again, please refer to Appendix B for clarification.
-
- At the beginning of this section, I told you that a
- tuner tunes a piano by listening for beats. You are surely
- wondering how you are supposed to hear 440 or whatever
- cycles per second. YOU DON'T HAVE TO. Since it is impossi-
- ble to hear those frequencies, we will use a system of
- tuning based on COINCIDENT partials. Don't let this new term
- frustrate you. You will understand soon enough.
-
- Recall that we learned when a string vibrates it pro-
- duces a series of PARTIALS. When two strings are sounded
- together forming an INTERVAL, you will find (explained
- later) that there is a common partial sounding at close to
- the same frequency. So instead of comparing the extremely
- high frequencies of the FUNDAMENTALS, we will be comparing
- the closely related frequencies of the coincident PARTIALS.
-
-
- SERIES OF PARTIALS
-
- In order to follow the discussion of partials, it will
- help to have the chart on pitch frequencies (Appendix B) in
- front of you Just return to the Table of Contents and
- highlight the topic "Theoretical Fundamental Pitches of All
- Notes. Press ENTER, and when Appendix appears, turn on you
- printer and press P. It is only two pages long. Chart (1)
- gives you the cycles per second that every note on the piano
- sounds when struck. Chart (2) starts on C-28 (the 3rd C
- from the bottom of the piano). Locate C-28 on the piano.
- Beneath The word NOTE on Chart 2, the notes from C-28 up to
- C-40 are listed and the first column to the right will give
- you the C.P.S. of these pitches.
-
- When you play C-28 on the piano the FUNDAMENTAL will be
- sounding at 130.81 C.P.S. Since the string produces PAR-
- TIALS, I will give you the first eight partials that will be
- produced. Remember, the FUNDAMENTAL is actually the FIRST
- partial.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- Chapter 1-10
-
- PARTIAL NOTE C.P.S. INTERVAL
-
- 1st C-28 130.81 FUNDAMENTAL
- 2nd C-40 261.63 OCTAVE up from C-28
- 3rd G-47 392.44 FIFTH up from C-40
- 4th C-52 523.25 FOURTH up from G-47
- 5th E-56 654.07 MAJOR third up from C-52
- 6th G-59 784.88 minor third up from E-56
- 7th A#-62 915.69 minor third up from G-59
- 8th C-64 1046.50 ONE OCTAVE up from C-52 and
- TWO OCTAVES up from C-28
-
- Now, start on C-28 and while holding the RIGHT pedal on
- the piano down, play the partials one after the other from
- C-28 up to C-64. As you play each note try to learn the
- intervals listed above. Listen to the sounds of the inter-
- vals.
-
- Since our goal is to tune the piano by listening for
- beats or vibrations as one note is sounded against another,
- I will now show you how we get these beats down from the
- hundreds of cycles per second to the range in which we can
- distinguish them.
-
- For this exercise, we are going to assume that the note
- C-28 is perfectly in tune. How to do this will be explained
- later, but for now we already have it in tune. We are going
- to tune E-32 to C-28 so we will have two notes on the piano
- in tune.
-
- Look at chart TWO in Appendix B which lists the fre-
- quencies of the first eight partials of each note in the
- temperament octave. By the way, the TEMPERAMENT octave is
- the octave we will use later when we begin tuning the piano.
-
- Locate C-28 under the column labeled NOTE. Follow this
- to the right until you come to the 5th partial. The 5th
- partial of C-28 produces 654.07 C.P.S. NOW, E-32 in the
- same column. Follow this to the right until you come to the
- 4th partial. You will find the 4th partial of E-32 produces
- 659.26 C.P.S. We subtract 654.07 from 659.26 and find that
- when C-28 and E-32 are tuned we will hear approximately 5
- C.P.S. You will be able to hear 5 C.P.S. easily once your
- ear is trained (later). For now just try to follow the
- mathematics all well as you can. It will gradually (believe
- it or not) become easy.
-
- The simple fact is, that when we sound any note with
- another, somewhere in the series of partials of each note we
- can find a partial of one series that beats very close to
- the other. Above, we found that the 5th partial of C-28
- beats very close to the 4th partial of E-32. Therefore, we
- can conclude that the RATIO of C-28 to E-32 (which is the
- interval of a MAJOR third) is 5:4.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Chapter 1-11
-
- I will now give you the ratios of the intervals we will
- be using later so you will be able to find the COINCIDENT
- PARTIALS by using the chart. If you didn't have the chart,
- you could find the C.P.S. of any partial by finding the
- multiple of the fundamental. For example, if you wanted to
- know what the C.P.S. of the sixth partial of C-28 is, you
- merely multiply the fundamental (130.81) by six. You will
- find it to be 784.86, which you can find under the column
- labeled 6th in the chart. The cycles have been rounded off
- to two decimal places. You can find the C.P.S. of any
- partial of any fundamental by the same method. Simple -
- Right?
-
- RATIOS
-
- INTERVAL RATIO
-
- Unison 1:1
- Octave 2:1
- Perfect Fifth 3:2
- Perfect Fourth 4:3
- MAJOR Third 5:4
- minor third 6:5
- MAJOR Sixth 5:3
- minor sixth 8:5
-
- REMEMBER to multiply the lower note in the interval by
- the larger number in the ratio and the upper note by the
- smaller.
-
- ONE MORE EXAMPLE and then you must spend some time
- working on this procedure until you feel comfortable with
- it.
-
- We just tuned E-32 to C-28. Now we will tune G#-36 to
- E-32. We will then have three notes in tune - C-28, E-32
- and G#-36.
-
- First, determine that the interval from E-32 up to G#-
- 36 is a MAJOR third. Then find the ratio of a MAJOR third
- from the above chart. Since the ratio is 5:4 we know that
- the 5th partial of E-32 will sound very close to the 4th
- partial of G#-36.
-
- Locate the C.P.S. of the two notes. E-32 beats at
- 164.81 C.P.S. and G#-36 beats at 207.65. Multiply 164.81 by
- 5 to obtain the C.P.S. of the 5th partial and get 824.05.
- Then multiply 207.65 by 4 and get 830.56. Subtract and come
- up with approximately 6.5 (6 1/2) C.P.S. So we would then
- tune G#-36 to E-32 until we hear 6.5 C.P.S.
-
- You could also just have looked up the notes on the
- chart and saved the hassle of multiplying.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
- Chapter 1-12
-
- IN THIS CHAPTER YOU LEARNED:
-
- 1. The difference between noise and musical sound
- 2. How a piano wire vibrates
- 3. What partials are and how they are used in tuning
- 4. Identification of keys on the piano keyboard
- 5. What intervals are and how to identify/construct them
- 6. What "equal temperament" means
- 7. What coincident partials are
- 8. The ratios of intervals and how they are applied
-
- Press P to print out this chapter or ESC for the menu
-
-