If you've just moved a piano — across the country or across the room — there's a good chance it now needs tuning. Here's why, and when to book it.
People assume the bumps of a move are what knock a piano out of tune, and jostling plays a part. But the bigger factor is the change in environment. Your new room almost certainly has a different temperature and humidity than the old one, and as the piano's soundboard adjusts to its new home, its pitch shifts with it. Even a careful move into a very different room will unsettle a tuning.
Resist the urge to book the tuning for the same day the piano arrives. Give it a couple of weeks — ideally two to four — to acclimatize to the temperature and humidity of its new space. Tune it too soon and it'll keep drifting as it settles, undoing your fresh tuning. Let it stabilize, and the tuning holds.
Once it's had a couple of weeks in place, get in touch. If the piano also sat untuned for a long time before the move, that first appointment may be a pitch raise followed by a fine tuning. Either way, we'll assess it on arrival and tell you exactly what it needs.
Booking takes two minutes. Call, email, or send us a note and we'll find a time that works.