ABOUT
Hastings Piano Services offers a wide range and the highest quality piano services in Winnipeg, Manitoba and surrounding areas. Owner Perry Hastings is a widely recognized and highly regarded piano tuner, piano technician and piano rebuilder with over 30 years of experience. Perry provides
a wide range of piano servicing needs, including piano tuning, piano action regulation, voicing, concert preparation, on-site piano repairs, partial or complete piano rebuilding and refinishing. Perry has worked with world-renowned performing artists, orchestras, recording studios, institutions, and the most reputable dealers and showrooms of pianos in Winnipeg.

What Is Piano Tuning?
A standard piano has 88 keys, but did you know that it actually takes over 200 strings to produce those 88 pitches? That's because some keys have two or three strings, which must be kept in perfect unison. When tuning a piano, the technician uses a tuning hammer to adjust the tension of individual strings. The tuner uses a given frequency, usually A440, to start tuning the note A. Then, when A is established, the tuner has a vast amount of choices of how to tune the rest of the piano in relation to that A. When the tuning is complete, each note will have in-tune unisons, and the musical pitch of each note will be relative to the pitches of the other notes in a prescribed manner such as Equal Temperamant. At this point, the piano will sound "in tune."
What Is Pitch Raising?
A piano technician can also perform a "pitch raise." This is an important technique that is used when a piano is very flat. Strings tend to settle back to where they were after its last tuning. To compensate for the flattening of the pitches after tuning an out-of-tune piano, each note is brought up above the standard pitch quickly. Then the strings will stretch out and flatten a little, closer to the desired pitch. Then the piano is tuned again; this time each note will be at the standard pitch.
How Frequently Should I Have My Piano Tuned?
That depends...
â—¾If there have been extreme changes in weather conditions, especially humidity, the piano will go out of tune faster. In this case, your piano may need to be tuned every three to six months, regardless of how often it was played.
â—¾The more frequently the piano is used, the more often it will need tuning. If you play a lot and want it in tip-top shape all the time, you should get it tuned every three months.
â—¾If you use your piano rarely, and it is in a climate-controlled room that doesn't fluctuate much in temperature and humidity, then it may stay in tune for nine months or more. In that case, you may need a yearly tuning.
â—¾If the piano strings are new, or the piano has been moved recently, it will probably go out of tune because of the piano settling in.
If you're still not sure how often your piano should be tuned,
give me, Perry Hastings, a call or e‑mail me and I will be happy to help you figure it out.