Howdy
Was listening to a youtube clip last night and realized that they were at 442.
You can hear it.
When we work in Europe the piano's are 442 so we tune to that.
It makes for more tension on the stringed instruments.
Its good, brighter.
Sometimes if its accordion, we let the accordion be at 442 and we don't tune up.
It depends on the effect we want.
Give it a thought if your curious.
Feels a bit more taught, sounds a bit brighter.
You may like it.
Discuss ?
AW
Comments
I find for me that on exposed unisons the vibrato from the disimilar tunings idea a bit much. Unless playing with an accordion . Other than that it doesnt make much diff to my guitar at least not to my ears. I don't jam much at the moment but my experience in jam sessions is quite a number of guitars are out 15 cents or more
2 hz difference 440 is about 8 cents. Audible for a trained ear.
I'm not about "jams".
4's a crowd . IMO
When you tune to 442 most players can at the least feel the difference.
I can hear the difference.
YMMV
In vocal ensemble pitch reference is somewhat flexible but even a few cents doesn't get the magic happening. Has to be perfect. Which in guitar can never be because, as we all know, its a temper tuned instrument.
Four guitars is two too many IMO.
Another more reasoned objection is that guitar and violin tops are "tuned", that is, made to vibrate/resonate best to certain pitches or frequencies. When you tune sharp by say a half-step, you are creating perhaps a less-than-ideal set-up for your instrument to sound, no?
Anyhow, I feel the pitch creep thing is just causing trouble where there wasn't any. Maybe somebody could make a piano capo?
That's an old invention. Irving Berlin used to have one back in the 1940's.
http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_605967
http://www.jazzpartout.com
As there is a downward angle after the bridge some of that force is directed down and most is still in line.
When I switched my Dunn to the Newtone Django strings the neck went crazy on me compound bend.... had to completely slack strings offrest for an hour or so and restring with the argies. Fortunately no harm done it all came back to its usual self.
I had an interesting experience last weekend, when i jammed with Jean-Claude Laudat and some other very good accordeon players. Their bass (electric) player asked me to tune my guitar to the same pitch as his bass. And this was 436 Hertz! I could see this on his tuner. He explained it in french to me, so unfortunately I didn't understand all of it. What I could figure out was that they always tune the guitars and bases at 436 Hertz when accompagning an accordion, because it "sounds better together". My wife recorded the session and it sounded very good, indeed.
Can anyone explain the technical background of this to me?
thanks