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Piano care

What Is A440? Concert Pitch, Explained

When a tuner says they'll bring your piano to "A440," it sounds technical — but the idea behind it is simple, and it's the reason your piano can play in tune with anything else in the room.

A shared reference point

A440 means the A above middle C vibrates 440 times a second. It's the internationally agreed reference pitch that orchestras, instrument makers and tuners around the world build from. Tune one note to a known standard, and every other note on the piano is set in proper relationship to it. Without a shared reference, two perfectly "in tune" pianos could still sound wrong played together.

Why it matters in your home

If your piano only ever plays solo, a slightly low pitch might pass unnoticed. But the moment it joins a violin, a flute, a singer, or a backing track, pitch matters enormously — an instrument tuned below A440 will clash with everything around it. For students especially, practising on a piano at true concert pitch trains the ear correctly from day one.

What pulls a piano away from A440

The same forces behind any tuning: seasonal humidity swings, the constant tension of the strings, time between services, and moves. A piano left long enough will gradually settle below pitch, which is when a pitch raise is needed to bring it back up before a fine tuning can hold.

The short version

A440 is the tuning fork the whole musical world shares. Keeping your piano there means it sounds right on its own and plays nicely with everyone else.

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