Tuning Your Instrument to a Standard Scale
By Bobby Neal Winters
It’s all about fitting in.
I’m still working on learning how to make flutes. I’ve made some Native American style flutes. Several now. Note the word “style” there between “American” and “flute.” Whenever I make one, it has to be there because I don’t share the heritage of any of the indigenous peoples of this continent. I am just copying them.
I don’t mind having to throw the word “style” in because it’s a small price to get along.
My ultimate plan is to make recorders, and I’ve made progress, but I chose to work on Native American style flutes first because you don’t have to tune them to a formal scale. It is a choice. Some people don’t tune them to the major scale that is used in the music tradition of the West, but some of them do.
Those who do choose to tune to fit in with the music of the West then have an opportunity to make music with anyone else who has. As I understand it, and it’s far from certain that I do, if you aren’t tuned to the same scale and try to play together, then it sounds like...well...crap.
I am pretty sure that if I am wrong in this assertion that I will be corrected and corrected swiftly.
So by choosing to give up the freedom of not being tuned to the standard scale, you can gain the freedom of being able to play with anyone else who is tuned to the standard scale. You gain access to the music that is written for that standard scale. And any music that you might create in your instrument can then be played by others long, long after you are dead.
By making changes to fit a larger system much can be gained.
That last sentence is hard for me to write.
I personally like “unique” individuals, people who do not necessarily color within the lines. People others might call odd. (The more self-aware of my friends might pause after having read that sentence and wonder, was he talking about me? You, no, never.) I find that I can learn a lot from these people.
You can learn a lot, but not always in a good way.
Forgive me if I’ve told you this story before, but I think it's germain. In the academic year 1988-1989, my wife, my eldest daughter, and I lived in Austin, Texas where my thesis advisor was taking a year of sabbatical. We lived in the northern part of the city, and I took the bus down to the campus everyday.
Austin being a liberal city and in a warm part of the world, drew its share of the homeless. Riding the bus only cost a quarter and it was warm on the bus, so quite a few of the homeless availed themselves of this form of transportation so they could be warm.
There were quite a few of these folks, but I remember one because he was as articulate as any of my professors were at the time. He would find someone to talk with and share his life’s philosophy. The uniting theme of his lectures was that he’d always done things his own way.
I would imagine he’s dead now and that he has been for quite a while. I’ve got to wonder if he’s been buried or has a marker on his grave. If so, a fitting epitaph: “I did it my way.”
Indeed, he did it his way, but he had to get on a bus to stay warm, and the bus was a product of the system.
I do believe in bending a bit to help the odd, the outsiders, but there has to be some bending back. It can't all be just one way.
God has painted a picture of Himself in each of our faces. Each of us is a precious individual.
But we are not meant to be alone.
We can make our own beautiful music, but unless we tune ourselves to fit in, we will never be able to join it to the music of others. Our songs will die with us.
And that would be a pity.
Bobby Winters, a native of Harden City, Oklahoma, blogs at redneckmath.blogspot.com and okieinexile.blogspot.com. He invites you to “like” the National Association of Lawn Mowers on Facebook. Search for him by name on YouTube.