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Celebrating People, Places & the Good Life in SW Washington State
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Out of Harmony? When Getting Your Piano Tuned is Much More Than it Seems

“I prefer my piano to people. It’s totally reliable and it’s alive. I can hear what it’s saying.” ~ Tori Amos

Is there a piece of furniture that is more alive or elicits more memories than the family piano? This week we had the piano tuned. It was in surprisingly good tune in spite of 14 years since the last tuning and its home under a large, single-paned window. (Not good, I learned.) But it did suffer from “lost motion” and a few stuck keys.

Les Fitzpatrick gives our piano a tune-up

Listening to your piano being tuned can bring back all kinds of memories. This is the piano that joined the family in 1950 and helped me learn how to play music. This is the piano that attracted the neighborhood kids as my mother patiently played the Davy Crockett theme song over and over and over again while we all sang “Davy, Davy Crockett, king of the wild frontier” at the top of our adolescent lungs. It has survived moves from house to house, state (Iowa) to state (Washington). It can go years without being played and not complain when its function has been reduced to holding houseplants.

Maintaining your piano in our community is more than just having the piano tuned. We are fortunate to have the only program of its kind in the world – the School of Piano Technology for the Blind. Founded by Emil Fries in 1949, the school attracts students from around the globe. All are blind or visually impaired.

Emil Fries was also blind. He studied at the Washington State School for the Blind in Vancouver, worked his way through the University of Washington by tuning pianos ($4 per piano) and returned to Vancouver to teach at the state school for 18 years before founding the independent piano technician program. Since 1949, the school has graduated more than 200 students.

For two years, the students (8 at a time) learn the intricacies of working with thousands of moving piano parts. They develop an “ear” for the pianos, learning how to tune and repair them. They also learn customer service skills and create business plans for their future careers. While the national unemployment rate is 60-70% in the blind community, they are bucking that horribly high rate by making plans for financial independence.

About half of the school’s budget comes from tuning, repairing and selling pianos. (Click here to see available pianos.) Staff members like Les Fitzpatrick, who tuned our piano, make about 1,000 service calls per year.

So you can make a difference while getting your piano tuned! Or you can donate your piano. Whether you own a piano or not, you can sit back, enjoy some wine and listen to a great pianist at the school’s fundraiser Jazz, Pizazz and Vino at Bethany Vineyards on Sunday, June 27 with Tom Grant on piano and Nancy Curtin on vocals.

Jazz, Tom Grant, Bethany’s gorgeous setting and a great cause — what more could you want on a summer Sunday in Southwest Washington?

And, by the way, get that piano tuned!

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4 comments

1 Gary { 05.06.10 at 2:49 pm }

Wow! Beautiful writing. I can just feel the need to hear the notes again. On an newly tuned piano, of course.

2 Katlin Smith { 05.06.10 at 3:02 pm }

YOU are the best! I’ll play the piano anytime for you!

3 Sue Anderson { 05.24.10 at 9:34 am }

I do miss having a piano. I haven’t played in years and only played for my own enjoyment. Thanks for rekindling good memories, Katlin!

4 Katlin Smith { 05.24.10 at 9:52 am }

Now that the piano is tuned, come on over and play anytime, Sue! We’ll hand over the house if you want to practice with privacy OR you can give a concert!

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