Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy Generator Update cookies preferences

Old Malden London England

Old Malden

Browse Locations England » London » Old Malden


Featured Listings

  • GSG Pianos

    Grove House
    Wade House Road. Shelf
    Halifax, West Yorkshire HX3 7PF
    England

    GSG Pianos is one of the North of England’s

  • Fleets Piano Workshop

    1a Vale Road
    Crosby, Merseyside
    England

    Beautiful Pianos for Beautiful Music At the Piano

  • Renaissance Music Piano Centre

    81 Myddleton Rd
    London
    Bounds Green, London N22 8NE
    England

    Piano specialists offering new, used and

  • A&C Hamilton Musical Instruments

    946-950 Blackpool Rd
    Lea
    Preston, Lancashire PR2 1XN
    England

    A&C Hamilton Musical Instruments is Located in

  • Brittens Music Tunbridge Wells

    Russell House
    Grove Hill Road
    Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent TN1 1RZ
    England

    Covering Kent, Sussex and Surrey from stores 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

Temperament

Temperament is both the process and result of making slight changes to the pitches of a pure musical scale, so that the octave may be conveniently divided into a usable number of notes and intervals. In the history of Western music's 12-note octave tradition, there have been several, fundamentally different forms of temperament applied to the developing keyboard. Music suffers when performed in a tuning that is different than that which the composer used in its creation.

Well Temperament Keyboards

Well Temperament Keyboards may be tuned so that all keys are musically usable, but contain varying degrees of the "wolf". This is the tuning used in this recording. Between the Early Baroque and Romantic eras, the popular tuning was something between Meantone and Equal Temperament. This era was a brief, transitional stage in temperament history, but considering the music composed during this period, its importance cannot be overlooked. This style of tuning is called "Well Temperament" following the use of the term by J.S. Bach. The term refers to a genre, rather than a specific temperament, as there were many Well Temperaments in use between 1700 and 1825.