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Comment by bluGill

4 hours ago

If you play piano you should find a tuner who does something better than equal temperament. When you accept that changing keys will change the tone of the song you can get a lot better music. You don't need to go to just temperament (and since you still need octave stretch it wouldn't be ideal anyway - though if you can live with playing music in exactly one key it is nice).

I tuned my piano to EBVTIII and I like it. (well I tuned 3 notes and then got my son interested and he tuned the rest). It isn't as hard to tune a piano as professionals make it out. However it takes me about 5x as long so if you can find a good tuner I'd call it worth it.

Do you get wolf tones?

  • not with EBVTIII. Some temperaments would, but Bach showed it was possible to do without. (Bach did not use equal temperament)

    • JS Bach did not use a piano either.

      Because so much of music was written around the organ (e.g. vocal music sung in tune with a church organ) tuning was what it was.

      The well tempered clavier is exceptional because it is an exception to the vast majority of JS Bach’s work.

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