You know, people talk about Key color all of the time..
"so and so brought out the such and such charachter of this and that key..
As a technician, I and probably everyone else knows that in order for a piano to sound good in all keys, there needs to be an equal interval between all 12 S.T. of the scale. On, top of that, due to the amount of inharmonicity inherent in the scale design of particular pianos, the stretch may need to be much more or less.
So assuming a piano is well tuned, all I can surmise is that our sensing of tone color is simply that, a reaction to the key beginning on a relative frequency, and having nothing to do with any actual change in the character of the intervals..
Would anyone argue with that??
Then, the next question would be.. how can we explain how we can sense this relative interval as having a certain charachter when that starting note commonly has about a 10 cent varience. (percentace of a semitone, that is)
Let me give you an example, since the advent of "intelligent tuning machines" the exactness of each pitch on the piano is even less consistent between pianos. The reason for this, is that aural tuners will tune a piano to a certaion note )A440 for instance) so A 440 will be roughly exact. A tuning machine, will listen to the piano, then create a tuning in equal temperment that averages out the inharmonicity without preference for the purity of any particular tone. I can always tell when a tuning machine has been used, because A440 is about 10 cents too high. (not that they are bad tunings,)
But I'm not here to talk about tunings, what I want to know is this. If a tuning is in equal temperment, then key color must just be our reaction to a tonal center around a certain frequency, right,
and...since that specific frequency can have so much varience, as I have shown, how can we be sure that we are not just trying to hear things that are not there? I mean, it makes you sound really smart if you can talk about key color, but is there really anything to it?
Granted, with historical tunings, there was very surely key color because the tunings were in biased temperements, could our perception of key color be a carry-over from those past days?
iF someone has anything comments on key color, please let me know, especially if it is concrete, This post was based on no research, just observation, and I would like to have a more concrete answer than I don't know when a tuning customer asks...
thanks so much