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  2. Piano tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_tuning

    Frequent and hard playing can also cause a piano to go out of tune. [2] For these reasons, many piano manufacturers recommend that new pianos be tuned four times during the first year and twice a year thereafter. [3] An out-of-tune piano can often be identified by the characteristic "honky tonk" or beating sound it produces. This fluctuation in ...

  3. Piano maintenance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_maintenance

    The longer a piano remains out of tune, the more time and effort it will take for a technician to restore it to proper pitch. When a piano is only slightly out of tune, it loses the glowing tonal quality characteristic of a freshly tuned piano , especially because each note in the middle and upper range is sounded by more than one string, and ...

  4. Musical tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_tuning

    The pitches of open strings on a violin. Play ⓘ. In music, the term open string refers to the fundamental note of the unstopped, full string.. The strings of a guitar are normally tuned to fourths (excepting the G and B strings in standard tuning, which are tuned to a third), as are the strings of the bass guitar and double bass.

  5. Harmonic series (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonic_series_(music)

    The Western chromatic scale has been modified into twelve equal semitones, which is slightly out of tune with many of the harmonics, especially the 7th, 11th, and 13th harmonics. In the late 1930s, composer Paul Hindemith ranked musical intervals according to their relative dissonance based on these and similar harmonic relationships.

  6. Pythagorean tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagorean_tuning

    The so-called "Pythagorean tuning" was used by musicians up to the beginning of the 16th century. "The Pythagorean system would appear to be ideal because of the purity of the fifths, but some consider other intervals, particularly the major third, to be so badly out of tune that major chords [may be considered] a dissonance." [2]

  7. Inharmonicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inharmonicity

    Piano tuning is a compromise—both in terms of choosing a temperament to minimize out-of-tuneness in the intervals and chords that will be played, and in terms of dealing with inharmonicity. For more information, see Piano acoustics and Piano tuning .

  8. Elton John reveals why he was sobbing at the piano in moving ...

    www.aol.com/news/elton-john-reveals-why-sobbing...

    In one striking moment, John can be seen sobbing at the piano as Carlile gives him a hug. “This [has] never happened to me in my whole career,” he confesses, wiping his tears away.

  9. Stretched tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretched_tuning

    Stretched tuning is a detail of musical tuning, applied to wire-stringed musical instruments, older, non-digital electric pianos (such as the Fender Rhodes piano and Wurlitzer electric piano), and some sample-based synthesizers based on these instruments, to accommodate the natural inharmonicity of their vibrating elements.