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Post by Jablea on Mar 18, 2015 0:17:28 GMT -5
Hey I'm super late, but I wanted to thank you for gathering this research. :D I'll be looking at the very extensive comment section over the next few days. Better late than..... lol. Vivlite is still really interested in it too so on the next slow period I'm hoping we'll remember to bring it up again. After all it is related to Adam's voice.
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Holst
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Post by Holst on Mar 18, 2015 5:39:52 GMT -5
As a violin player this might explain why for years I struggled to get the tuning "right". Then again, maybe I was just fine IKR??? Isn't it remarkable, the possibilities??? I'm not sure how "scientific" the experiment in this video is. I came out half-and-half. The music snippets are not only played with a different "A" setting, but are also played in different keys. Many musicians (composers in particular) feel that certain music sounds different in different keys. I had a violin student who wanted to jump on this bandwagon and tune his violin differently. Well, that's fine if you never play with anyone else, which he always did.
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Holst
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Post by Holst on Mar 18, 2015 5:46:12 GMT -5
Hey I'm super late, but I wanted to thank you for gathering this research. :D I'll be looking at the very extensive comment section over the next few days. Yes, thanks for this. As a musician, I'm aware of this already. One of the challenges of playing string instruments (violin family) with a piano is because of the piano's tempered tuning. If I tune my strings to the keys of a piano, it will not be perfectly in tune. Luckily, most experienced string players just naturally adapt to playing in tune with other instruments, as long as the piano isn't too mistuned. It's something we can do as we have no keys or frets.
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