source file: mills3.txt Date: Mon, 20 Oct 1997 20:40:38 +0200 Subject: Dinarra From: Eduardo Sabat D I N A R R A (read Deenarha) At 06:56 AM 17/10/97 -0300, you wrote: > TUNING Digest 1209 > >Topic No. 2 > >Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 16:09:58 -0400 >From: "Paul H. Erlich" >To: "'tuning@eartha.mills.edu'" >Subject: RE: how about 22et vs 19et ? >Message-ID: > >Neil Haverstick did a nice job talking about 19et. That's partially >because the existing musical terminology makes sense in 19et. Which .......................... Dear Paul Erlich : I think you have used guitars fretted in different tunings, and I see you have a great experience. For twenty years I worked very hard with my Dinarra (read Deenarha). That's a fretted 53 -1/9 skhisma-guitar. Ten acoustic and two electric ones have been made until now. I have not use any other micro-guitar. I am surprised because it seems that all around the world both Didier Ashour and myself are the only persons in the list that promote the 53 guitar. I don't know if the Didier's instrument is fretted or slide. Siemen Terpstra (Holand) (he is not yet in the list) has reported to me his 53 slide guitar. Some days ago, somebody in the list said that in the 31 guitar the spaces between the frets in the zone near the bridge were very closed but in practice it functions. And I say, in the Dinarra the frets are much closed and functions well. A nephew of mine Johannes Stenger (15) study Dinarra from 11 and plays both Jazz and European Classics very well. He has a gift. And I ask : What are the reasons why 53 is not used as it should ? I understand that 53 is the best theoretical proposition for 3 and 5 (90 per cent of the possibilities, just for 5/3-6/5 and tempered 1/9 ninth of a Skhisma (about 0.2 cent) for 10/9-9/5 and 5/4-8/5). For the other harmonics the tempering is not bigger than half a comma. The sound of the acoustic Dinarra is very warm and much better than the sound of the original guitar. Eduardo -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Eduardo Sabat-Garibaldi e-mail : esabat@adinet.com.uy Home: Simon Bolivar 1260 Office FAX-Phone : 598 2 900353 11300 Montevideo Home Phone : 598 2 780952 Uruguay