Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy Generator Update cookies preferences

Hadley Wood London England

Hadley Wood

Browse Locations England » London » Hadley Wood


Featured Listings

  • Cunningham Piano

    20 Moorfield Drive
    Baildon
    Shipley, West Yorkshire BD17 6LQ
    England

    Cunningham Piano always has a varied selection of

  • Handel Pianos Ltd

    Verve House
    Sunningdale
    Ascot, Berkshire SL5 0DJ
    England

    Handel Pianos is a family run business and our

  • Benny Crawford & Son Ltd

    Donaghadee, County Down BT21 0NL
    Northern Ireland

    We have a high quality range of New andAs-New

  • The Full Octave

    152 Market Street
    Dalton-in-Furness, Cumbria LA15 8RQ
    England

  • Chas Foulds & Son (Derby) Ltd

    40 Irongate
    Derby, Derbyshire DE1 3GA
    England

    Charles Foulds opened the first Foulds shop in

Featured Classifieds

No featured classifieds

Blog Categories

Recent Blog Posts

No new blog posts

Recent Classifieds

No featured classifieds

New Events




Did You Know Piano Facts



Tuning Temperaments

How many piano tuning temperaments are there? There are countless variations, but most fall within three major categories;

1. Meantone, which generally concentrated the dissonance into a few unusable intervals (often called "wolf" intervals), so that the others could be Just. These are often called "restrictive" tunings, since there are certain intervals that are not usable. Good intervals are really good, bad ones are really bad. The Meantone era was approx. 1400-1700

2. Well-Temperament, which gives more consonance to the most often used keys, and more dissonance to the lesser used ones. Though not equal, these tunings are "non-restrictive" because all intervals can be used. The intervals range from Just to barely acceptable. Well-temperament refers to a genre, not a specific tuning. The Well-Tempered era is approx. 1700-1880.

3. Equal Temperament, which spreads the dissonance equally among all intervals. There is no difference in consonance or dissonance between any keys, thus, there are no good ones or bad ones. Equal temperament represents a complete average. Dates of its acceptance are debated, but there is ample evidence that it was widely available by 1900 and is the predominate tuning on keyboards, today. r.