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Originally Posted by Gadzar
BDB, I've heard your file.

The piano sounds good. I can not distinguish a temperament by listening to a unique isolated piece without comparing it to another temperament. But I've found no disonances in the harmonies, I guess this means ET.

I am with Kamin, I don't know what he exaclty means by "tight" but I didn't like the sound of some unisons.

For the stretch I believe the bass matches perfectly the tenor and treble.


tight : close , not enough air, or light, or whatever very immaterial concept you can come with (while I am sure there is a acoustical explanation which is pretty simple, probably ...)

2 parts in tone : strenght/timing of the stabilisation,(called "attack") and spread of the partial halo.

We tune from those both directions, listening with ears and fingers, checking for the energy spread and its use, and checking as well for the coupling of partials.

With only those 2 concepts you can tune a whole range of unisons.

One of the nicest thing that add energy is the "charging" of upper part of the system : tuning pin and the little wire segment under it. (patented concept !) done with the test blow at the speed of light, it manage to put the system in the best position for an open tone.



Last edited by Kamin; 01/29/10 11:42 AM.

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Originally Posted by Gadzar
Bill,

Now that it is detuned, I mean tuned in ET, I wonder if I can tune it in reverse well and make some tests.

And after showing the reverse well, retune it in EBVT III and record again the same 3 pieces, getting a way to compare the results. But, as I am a bad player, I'm afraid that would be not worth.



Yes, Rafael, do it! Transpose each of the values for the EBVT III up one half step, example, C= the value for C#, C#=D, D=D#, etc. and use the Verituner or whichever ETD.

Ask people to guess which is reverse well and which is ET. I bet that more than half of the guesses will be wrong. It will show that the really bad sound is actually ET and that even a backwards version of a WT actually sounds better than ET does.


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Originally Posted by Bill Bremmer RPT
Ask people to guess which is reverse well and which is ET. I bet that more than half of the guesses will be wrong. It will show that the really bad sound is actually ET and that even a backwards version of a WT actually sounds better than ET does.

You should do this, Mr. Bremmer, rather than asking someone else to do it, particularly someone without your experience.


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The trouble with anyone doing this is the temperaments could be sabotoaged to make one sound better than the other.

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Yes, and very few people would know the difference. Temperaments are not the first thing people listen to. After all, most instruments use different temperaments when they are played normally. Stringed instruments use different temperaments from wind instruments, and neither of them are the same as pianos.


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Wouldn't it be interesting if people preferred a well temperament transposed up a semitone, or better yet 6 semitones, (I choose not to use the made-up term for this) to a traditional well temperament?

But this is gong down a path other than the subject of this Topic. A new Topic would be appropriate.


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Originally Posted by BDB
Yes, and very few people would know the difference. Temperaments are not the first thing people listen to. After all, most instruments use different temperaments when they are played normally. Stringed instruments use different temperaments from wind instruments, and neither of them are the same as pianos.


Very astute BDB. I was hoping for this to come out here.

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Originally Posted by UnrightTooner
Wouldn't it be interesting if people preferred a well temperament transposed up a semitone, or better yet 6 semitones, (I choose not to use the made-up term for this) to a traditional well temperament?

But this is gong down a path other than the subject of this Topic. A new Topic would be appropriate.


Now this would surprise a lot of members here, and this is the type of thing that should be attempted...
New topic Jeff??

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Not me. I am not all that interested. But I do wonder sometimes how the Bb trumpet, as the lead voice in North American music education, might effect what people expect to hear. The Bb chord (in the power range) is in just intonation while the C chord has a major third that is 2 cents wider than ET.


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Well, here it is: Reverse Well Temperament.

This is the Anton Bemetzrieder Reverse Well Temperament of 1808.

It is a strong colored Well Temperament identical to the Vallotti-Young transposed down one semitone.

In this Reverse Well temperament six fifths are pure and the other six fifths are equally tempered, twice as tempered than in Equal Temperament.

The aural procedure to tune this temperament is to tune pure all fifths between white keys and to tune tempered all fifths that involve one or more black keys.

Pure fifths = C-G, D-A, E-B, F-C, G-D, A-E
Tempered fifths = C#-G#, D#-A#, F#-C#, G#-D#, A#-F, B-F#

When testing this temperament it may be possible to find that a theoretical pure fifth is in fact a little tempered to the wide side. Also a theoretical tempered fifth may sound almost pure. Why? Because iH of the strings tends to bring wider than theoretical intervals. Though Major thirds in this temperament behave as theoretically expected. That is M3 of the simpler keys sound harsh and M3s of the remote keys sound more harmonious.

In the video I made a mistake when saying that thirds sound horrible. What I mean is that some of them sound horrible. Some of them in fact sound better than in ET.

The color of the Keys is also inverted. Simpler keys sound busy and remote keys sound harmonious. So in this temperament pieces in the remote keys will sound better than in ET but music written in the simpler keys will sound harsh. So what says UnrightTooner of people liking more Reverse Well would be no surprise. It will depend on how strong is the coloration of the keys. And what keys are most used by this person.

Reverse Well


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Gadzar:

What exactly did Anton Bemetzrieder call his temperament?



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Originally Posted by BDB
[quote=Bill Bremmer RPT]

You should do this, Mr. Bremmer, rather than asking someone else to do it, particularly someone without your experience.


Well, he already did it and did a fine job! I only wish some music had been played (although the You Tube video stalled before the end, so I don't know what may have been there). I have heard many pianos which have sounded more or less like this although most are not so precisely done. This had the pure 4ths and 5ths perfectly pure and the tempered 4ths & 5ths all tempered twice as much as in ET and all the same. Since reverse well is virtually never deliberately done, they are usually not quite as regularly structured.

That is why I recommended tuning the EBVT III electronically but transposing all the values up 1/2 step (down 1/2 step would work too). The EBVT III is an irregular Victorian style WT. "Irregular" only means that the tempering of the 4ths and 5ths varies from one to another. A reverse EBVT III but without the carefully constructed octaves would be a better representation of what I usually come across. Even that would be more precisely constructed than the usual results of erroneous tempering found by 4ths & 5ths tuners for whom the piano did not "tell" the tuner when the tempering was correct (on topic).


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Originally Posted by UnrightTooner
Gadzar:

What exactly did Anton Bemetzrieder call his temperament?



There is a long section on this in Owen Jorgensen's book, Tuning. He Bemetzreider did not have a name for what he did, only several attempts at what by his description of what he was trying to accomplish would be called ET today. He also berated the methods of other tuners of his time saying that they were too wrapped up in theory and did not follow what was obvious to a musically trained ear.


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He beilieved he was tuning Equal Temperament.

It is known as a Pytagorean Temperament used as a substitute from Equal Temperament.

Pytagorean because he tunes pure fifths. Substitute from Equal Temperament because he tempers 6 fifths at 1/6 of a comma aiming to make it "disappear".

He was aware that in just intonation there is a difference betwen flats and sharps i.e. Eb and D#. He called this a "differential coma".

In his own words:

"the differential comas disappear under the hammer of the tuner, and both chromatic and diatonic half tones become equal, the one loosing what the other gaines".

He wrote:

"Tune the fifths for the flats and sharps not quite so full as your ear can bear them, you will make differential comas disappear, without any further tempering. C and F flats will coincide with B and E, and B and E sharps will coincide with F and C".

He used an F fork to start with.

If you do the mathematics of these tuning instructions you'll come to the Vallotti-Young Well Temperament, transposed one half tone down.


Last edited by Gadzar; 01/29/10 04:29 PM.
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Originally Posted by Silverwood Pianos

The trouble with anyone doing this is the temperaments could be sabotoaged to make one sound better than the other.


If you already took Gadzar's rendering of ET as acceptable, there would be no reason to sabotage it. Just put the two recordings, one ET, one reverse well side by side in random order and ask people to identify which is which.

Nobody is trying to fool anybody. I already know the entire world has been fooled already.


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Here is Bach's Prelude N° 1, in C Major, from the Well Tempered Clavier, with the piano still tuned in Reverse Well.

The prelude loses all its musical meaning. The harmonies create tension where they must release it and visceversa.

Prelude N°1 in C Major. Bach. Reverse Well.


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Hi Rafael, Bill, and all...

As a novice wanna-be tuner/tech, I have been following this thread with great interest.

Ultimately, is it the musicality of the instrument's tuning as a whole the concern, or exactly which temperament is pressing against the bridge?

Here is a recording of my attempt at trying to acheive an equal temperament. My main checks are m3, M3, M6, M10ths, 17ths. I tune the fourths slightly wider than the fifths are narrow (too old school?). As I do the checks up the scale it is clear that some of the intervals 6ths/10ths/17ths do not increase equally. Does this uncategorically mean it is not equal, or can this be expected due to the scale of the piano, inharmonicity, etc?

I suspect it is not even close to being equal, even though playing in the key of C Major is equally as musical as playing in any other key. What should I be listening for with this? True, some minor/major keys ring more than others, etc. Yes, consistency is key, I know...it is a work in progress. wink

[color:#3366FF]Bach's Prelude in C Major BWV 846[/color]

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Originally Posted by Inlanding
Ultimately, is it the musicality of the instrument's tuning as a whole the concern, or exactly which temperament is pressing against the bridge?


Musicality of course! But it is attained through temperament.

Nice tuning. Good unisons. What kind of piano are you playing? How did you do the recording?

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Here is: Behind the Waterfall & Desert Rain Medley. By David Lanz. Played in Reverse Well Temperament.

As it is written in the key of A flat Major, it may sound better in Reverse Well than in Equal Temperament. I personally believe that it lacks character, it is too mellow, too much harmonious.

Behind the Waterfall & Desert Rain. David Lanz. Reverse Well Temperament.





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Originally Posted by Gadzar
Here is Bach's Prelude N° 1, in C Major, from the Well Tempered Clavier, with the piano still tuned in Reverse Well.

The prelude loses all its musical meaning. The harmonies create tension where they must release it and visceversa.

Prelude N°1 in C Major. Bach. Reverse Well.



Beautiful example, Rafael! That is approximately the way most people are used to hearing it. The harmony is so confused, you really don't know why you're modulating, you just are and for most people, that is all ET means to them. This was ET to Bemetzrieder, why not to everybody else for the entire 20th Century?


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