source file: m1372.txt Date: Wed, 01 Apr 1998 16:45:00 -0500 (EST) Subject: RE: TUNING digest 1371 From: "Collins, Gordon" Bill Alves wrote: >Handel's 16-key organ was the exception, not the rule, and the vast >majority of meantone keyboards had 12 keys. Thus musicians had to decide >whether to tune a given tritone to an augmented fourth or diminished fifth, >and so they might encounter music where they had to play a Db when they had >tuned an C#. Thus enharmonics, while theoretically distinct, had to be >treated as the same for practical purposes on most keyboards. Of course, the musicians did not think about tritones at all when tuning. What they had to decide was whether the key in question would sound a C# or a Db. If they had tuned it to C# and needed a Db, well, then it was time to retune. No one wrote a C# and Db in the same piece (except for that unique John Bull fantasia discussed earlier), and collections of pieces were arranged by key precisely to facilitate their performance on the usual keyboard. Those who got tired of retuning for the more common alternatives of D#/Eb and G#/Ab obtained an instrument with a 14-note keyboard, which was fairly common. Handel just went farther than most - his organ was not an exception _in principle_. Gordon Collins gordon_collins@jhuapl.edu