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 The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606
2000 Post Club Member
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OP
2000 Post Club Member
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606 |
I've recently enjoyed reading a kind of piano tuning autobiography by Terence Lowe. It's not an autobiography of his full life, but more connected with his career as a piano technician, during which he worked as an employee with all the big piano retailers in London, and regularly tuned for many many prominent musicians from all genres of music. He paints a very vivid picture of a Britain that has gone, both piano-wise and job-wise. Leaving school in the mid 1960s, he started with a piano repair workshop (of which there are precious few in the UK now, and probably none taking on trainees). His career followed the declining arc of piano production, repair and retailing in the UK, and the variations in his fortunes make interesting reading. I don't have any connection with the author, and am just mentioning this out of interest. The MAdness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 517
500 Post Club Member
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500 Post Club Member
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 517 |
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606
2000 Post Club Member
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OP
2000 Post Club Member
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606 |
It's an interesting read. It doesn't go into extensive technical detail about piano technical matters, as it's aimed at a general readership. But it gives a clear picture of what the UK and the piano trade was like from the mid 1960s, and how it changed. Also 'personal glimpses' of many musicians. It's heartening to see how normal and civil most of them were to the author. The world is very different now from when the writer started his piano career, having left high school shortly before his 15th birthday.
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: May 2012
Posts: 217
Full Member
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Full Member
Joined: May 2012
Posts: 217 |
Thanks David; I've just ordered my copy after reading a couple of pages on the "See Inside" feature on Amazon. Looking forward to reading it when I get some spare time, which will probably be about Christmas...! 
Started work at the Blüthner piano re-building workshop in Perivale, UK, in 1989. Self employed since 2000. Learning something new about pianos every day... http://www.hamiltonpianos.com/
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: Feb 2017
Posts: 3,710
3000 Post Club Member
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3000 Post Club Member
Joined: Feb 2017
Posts: 3,710 |
My summer reading binge has gone by with "Kochland" by Christopher Leonard, but this one sounds like an interesting read. I'll have to pick it up.
Pwg
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 2,583
2000 Post Club Member
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2000 Post Club Member
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 2,583 |
Curious if there is a shift in the UK from piano to some other instrument? Here it may be happening too as I hear more bone on hollow log with story telling.
RPT PTG Member
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: May 2007
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2000 Post Club Member
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OP
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The last piano factory in Britain closed in October 2009. That was the Kemble factory, owned for years before by Yamaha.
Now there is only some small-scale artisan piano making, but no piano factory, in the UK.
A century before, there were around a hundred piano factories of various sizes in and around London. Terence Lowe started his career in 1965 as a boy of 15, when there were still several piano factories, and many piano restoration workshops and piano retailers. Notably, one older journeyman in his first job kept telling him to get out of piano work, it would never pay! In a sense, the experience of piano manufacturing mirrors the manufacturing industries in general in Britain in the 20th and 21st centuries. Cheap labour costs have seen manufacturing moving away from the developed, to the developing world.
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: Jul 2019
Posts: 21
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Full Member
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Thank you David for the hint !
Ulrich Guillerm Piano technician France Ti Piano
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: Sep 2018
Posts: 181
Full Member
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Full Member
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Posts: 181 |
Thanks for posting about the book David. I tried the sample on my kindle and it is good. So I've ordered it. Nick
Nick, ageing piano technician
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606
2000 Post Club Member
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OP
2000 Post Club Member
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606 |
Hope you enjoy it Nick. It gives an interesting picture of the period.
Ulrich, I see you too have a Fujan lever. They are becoming ubiquitous! (and you use a Papps wedge, as I do, too)
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: Jul 2019
Posts: 21
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Full Member
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Ulrich, I see you too have a Fujan lever. They are becoming ubiquitous! (and you use a Papps wedge, as I do, too)
 (Papps' wedges are very fast to use, and mind-saver on birdcage pianos)
Ulrich Guillerm Piano technician France Ti Piano
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 Re: The Madness: Memoir of a Piano Tuner
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606
2000 Post Club Member
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OP
2000 Post Club Member
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,606 |
[/quote]  (Papps' wedges are very fast to use, and mind-saver on birdcage pianos) [/quote] Vraiment! There are so many birdcage pianos still around, in my part of the world (West of Scotland). I almost always refuse to attempt to tune Spring & Loop action birdcage pianos nowadays. They are so old and there is so little cast iron in them, that even if the tuning pins feel tight, the whole piano is inherently unstable. By the time you do two octaves, the middle has gone well out again. They seem to have been an English "thing", around the 1880s. Some 1880s pianos are still wonderful, but not Spring & Loop action Birdcage pianos! Birdcage pianos
Last edited by David Boyce; 09/10/19 04:03 AM.
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