Yes that is my general question, but here is more about my case..
I have an English Eavestaff upright piano which gets out of tune in about 6 months. I play around 1 to 2 hours per day on average. Eavestaff (Chippendale, if you know what I mean..)
If you really know what I mean, how good is the piano otherwise??? I kind of bought it, because I loved the tone plus it takes more finger force to press the keys, which is good, as this develops your fingers and you get a great pleasure and ease when playing other pianos..
Another question:
When a tuner comes to your home to tune your piano, what a good professional tuner should consider. I know some tuners not only tune but do something to the softness of the hammers and they might even change the touch,.. how to say... well the amount of force needed to suppress the key.. Is this true and is this good stuff to expose your piano to???
What should one consider in such issues???
2007-08-19
03:04:45
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8 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Classical