Music Trade Review

Issue: 1951 Vol. 110 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
PRACTICAL PIANO TUNING
By ALEXANDER HART
Formerly with Steinway & Sons Tuning Department, Instructor
Piano Tuning, Teachers College, Columbia University, N. Y.
Registered Member of the
National Association of Piano Tuners
CHAPTER 35-Piano Tuning in Review
Tuning Instruction
Now for a bit of tuning instruction.
Are you practicing up on your
octaves and unisons? Don't neglect this
procedure. Being careful with tempera-
ments is fair enough, but remember, the
entire make-up of tuning is chromatic,
that is, the half-tones with octaves per-
fect clear unisons make a fine sounding
job.
good lesson to be learned (and
only through experience) is to
A
know what specific tool to carry in the
tool kit and how it can serve for more
than one purpose.
One such tool is a long-nosed pliers
for pushing the flange pin back in place
without spoiling the bushing cloth.
It is not an uncommon occurrence to
find that flange pins have worked their
LOMC N O S E ?Ll££ POO. PUSHING FL.AN3E PIN*
WITHOUT DAMAGE TO
way out and often interfering with the
movement of another whippen flange.
As an example, when a pin moves from
one abstract or extension to another, th?
key balance and repetition is also dis-
turbed. These pliers come in handy to
catch each side of the pin, and push it
back where it should be.
Many sticking keys can be traced
around the flange area. There are ex-
treme cases when flanges have been
tampered with, that is, not intentionally,
but by using a screwdriver instead of
the pliers described. When this happens
there is no alternative but to rebush or
replace. It's far better to insert a new
one.
Unglued Jacks
The problem of jacks coming un-
glued can be easily solved by using the
long-nosed pliers. First of all, you can
hold the jack flange steady, and be able
to seat it in the groove, without the
likelihood of jumping out of place
when your back is turned.
If you observe the cut, it will be seen
how, by its extreme length, it is possible
to pass the pl'crs through the whippen
wire and bridle wire without difficulty.
This alone is a time saver, and makes
the work easier.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, NOVEMBER, 1951
IN PL AC C
On the other hand, setting a fine bear-
ing without being particular with uni-
sons and octaves, can spoil the fruitful
work preceeding the extra care already
expended but don't count with the final
test.
You will find especially those who do
not know how to modulate usually test
the tuning by octaves, otherwise being
careful to set a good temperament as
well as the other intervals nicely bal-
anced goes a long way for clean cut
work.
When we think of fine piano tuning,
that is, harmonizing the strings, we must
include tonality, in other words kev-
stone or tonic, i.e., choosing any tone
to write music.
All other tones from C # to D, with-
in the octaves D:£t and the rest. They
"can all serve as a tonic for either a
major or a minor scale, and its own
set of tonal relationships, and its own
group of chords.
ACQUAINT YOUR PERSONNEL
with
ZEISS PRECISION TUNING
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Composers have twenty-four tonal
levels—twenty-four keys, twelve major
and twelve minor.
When we speak of tonality or the key
of the piece, then we describe its spe-
cific tonal level tonic around which
tonal structure is built. As an example,
take B—as a tone we have five sharps,
and half step to the right C with no
sharps, tonal levels. Rather intricate for
amateur listeners, yet the tuner's work
is to build a musical scale for the com-
poser so that changes of key called
modulation can hold and increase his
interest in his musical compositions.
Tonality is a powerful asset in the
art of tuning pianos. When fine tuning
measures up in sets of tonal relation-
ships, that each and every key can be a
starting point, and also serve as an axis
that all keys—chords and thus inver-
sions blend without offending the ear
in the slightest degree, one can call him-
self skilled in the art of pianoforte
tuning.
Aeolian Co. Announces Record
Library in Fifth Ave. Salon
On Monday, November 5th, the Aeol-
ian Co., 536 Fifth Ave., New York, used
liberal newspaper space advertising the
grand opening of Aeolian's new record
library, on Wednesday, November 7th.
The new record library is on the main
floor of the new Aeolian Building at
the above address, designed by Richard
Bellamy. Several soundproof listening
booths have been installed.
At the opening, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m..
on November 7th, Morton Gould was
present and autographed four of his
records "Moonglow" and "Deep Pur-
ple", and "Charleston" and "Diane"
which were given away free to those
who attended the opening.
PLAYERS REBUILT
• Airmotors
• Pneumatics
• Bellows
• Rebuilt
Wri+e: TOLBERT F. CHEEK
1 i Beauport Ave., Gloucester, Mass.
25
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
I OBITUARIES |
PHILIP GORDON
Philip Gordon, Business Manager of
the "Music Trades", New York, and a
former concert pianist, passed away
suddenly on Tuesday, October 23rd, at
his home, in his 58th year.
Mr. Gordon had been associated with
the "Music Trades" since 1933. Pre-
vious to that he had been an exhibiting
artist for the Aeolian Company and the
American Piano Corp. He also had ap-
peared with Caruso and accompanied
Mischa Elman and studied under Rafael
Joseffy and Ernst Von Dohnany.
He is survived by a widow, Virginia
Benton Gordon, and a nephew, Edmund
Gordon.
Funeral services were held on Thurs-
day, October 25th, at the Riverside
Chapel in New York and were attended
by many friends as well as a large
number of members of the piano indus-
try in the New York metropolitan area.
A. V. MINIFEE
A. V. (Jock) Minifee, Pontiac, Mich.,
passed away recently from a heart at-
tack at the age of 77 years.
He was born in Alma, Ontario and
was trained as a piano tuner by the
Bell Piano Co. at Guelph, Ontario. He
ESTABLISHED 1885
INCORPORATED IS03
HENRY WICKHAM.
Ftunder
FRANCIS J. RYBAK
Francis J. Rybak, head of Francis J.
Rybak & Co., Yonkers, N. Y., well-
known organ technician, passed away
in his fifty-second year on October 30th.
He is survived by his widow, Norma,
a son Frank, his parents and two sisters
and a brother.
He was former president of the Bronx
Kiwanis Club, a Mason and belonged
to Pilot Project, a welfare group in
the Bronx where on White Plains Road
his organ plant was located.
Services including religious and Ma-
sonic services were held at his home, 78
Seminary Ave., Wednesday evening,
October 31st. Interment was in Mount
Hope Cemetery.
CELEBRATED WICKHAM P L A T E S .
Now Available . . .
TheTunerAlone^
Preserves^
The To
FLY BRAND TUNING PINS
• The celebrated Fly Brand Tuning Pins, known
for their exceptional tonal qualities, are again
available.
• The quality is the same today as it was over 50
years ago.
• Fly Brand Pins are made of specially drawn wire,
absolutely uniform in every detail.
WE INVITE YOUR INQUIRIES:
Sole Agents in U.S.A. and Canada
AMERICAN PIANO SUPPLY CO.
Division of Hammacher, Schlemmer 8C Co.
6 WEST 20 STREET
Since 1848
JOIN
THE .
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
o f
PIANO TUNERS
THERE IS N O T H I N G FINER
i
went to Pontiac in 1906. He was a
charter member of the Piano Tuners
Guild, organized about 1910, and later
became a member of the National Asso-
ciation of Piano Tuners and was the
first president of the Detroit division.
He became national president of the
N.A.P.T. in 1931.
He was the first to promote regional
convention meetings among tuners
which were then held in Indianapolis,
Grand
Rapids, Toledo, Toronto,
Rochester and Washington. Since 1941,
he has been a member of the American
Society of Piano Technicians and has
been active in the support of this or-
ganization. He was also a founder of
the Pontiac Music Guild and helped or-
ganize chapters in other cities through-
out the state.
He is survived by his widow and
three daughters, three sisters and a
brother, as well as five grand-children.
Funeral services were held at the
Huntoon Funeral Home and interment
at the Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.
NEW YORK 3, N. Y.
Organized To Maintain The Highest Tech-
nical And Professional Standards In The
Practice Of Piano Service.
Originators of a Nation-Wide System of
Qualified Piano Service Identified by a
Membership Certificate of "REGISTERED
TUNER and REBUILDER of Pianos." This
certificate is issued each year for the pro-
tection of the Tuner and his C'ientele.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
PIANO TUNERS
MEMBERSHIP OFFICE:
957 EAST 78th ST., CLEVELAND 3, OHIO
TUNERS' JOURNAL OFFICE:
430 OGLETHORPE ST., N.W., WASH. 11, D.C.
READ THE TUNERS' JOURNAL
26
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, NOVEMBER, 1951

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