Posted: 12 Jun 2015 3:43 am
The link to Larry Bell's compromise tuning is inoperative; I'm guessing it's close to 6-comma meantone (ET is 12-comma).
Being a piano tuner, I'm accustomed to ET, a necessary thing for fixed0pitch polyphonic instruments.
(I like to exploit the beating in playing guitars).
Violin, voice, and trombone can adjust to the musical context; the soloist does the compromising.
With pedal steel, the fudge factor (location of the comma)is useful in tuning thirds; Lane has a useful approach.
With meantone, if you're on the fret line you have a better chance of being in tune;
with JI, you can't afford flat; with ET, you're at the limit of sharp.
Here's a link to meantone tuning, with a chart b0b uses.
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopi ... one+tuning
Mr. Emmons was no genius when it came to tuning; he's a practical man, and discovered that in tuning a triad, play it and tune thr third until it just eisappears.
Being a piano tuner, I'm accustomed to ET, a necessary thing for fixed0pitch polyphonic instruments.
(I like to exploit the beating in playing guitars).
Violin, voice, and trombone can adjust to the musical context; the soloist does the compromising.
With pedal steel, the fudge factor (location of the comma)is useful in tuning thirds; Lane has a useful approach.
With meantone, if you're on the fret line you have a better chance of being in tune;
with JI, you can't afford flat; with ET, you're at the limit of sharp.
Here's a link to meantone tuning, with a chart b0b uses.
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopi ... one+tuning
Mr. Emmons was no genius when it came to tuning; he's a practical man, and discovered that in tuning a triad, play it and tune thr third until it just eisappears.