About me...

As is the case with many piano technicians, I found my way to this profession by an indirect path. As a
teenager living in Peoria, Illinois, I discovered a fascination with our family's piano. Having had a history of
disassembling things that should probably be left alone, I delved into the piano's innards, but fortunately
stopped short of the point of no return. I expressed an interest in studying piano technology to my parents,
but understandably concerned that I might bypass a college education, they discouraged the idea.

So, I set about to pursue a degree while flirting with various academic interests. Most notably, as a result of an
interest inventory exam provided by a local college, I was steered toward a career in speech pathology. I
studied speech pathology and audiology at the University of Northern Iowa for two years. I found the study
compelling though not altogether well suited to my personality. I was someone who needed processes that
require a hands on approach and produce tangible solutions. The work of a speech pathologist is often
painstaking and elusive as I discovered first hand while assisting in a therapy group for clients with severe
brain damage. I left the major feeling tremendous respect for the diligence and patience required of those in
that profession. Without any certain direction in my life, I quit college.

After a two year hiatus where I worked for a newspaper supervising delivery by nearly 100 adolescent
newspaper carriers, I felt a need to complete my degree. I then made a completely arbitrary decision. I
opened the college catalog to the index of majors, closed my eyes and pointed. Oddly enough, this approach
yielded a much more fortuitous result than the sophisticated tests provided by the college counselor's office.
My new major, geography, provided me with a mental framework that has actually served me well as a piano
technician.

Geography, essentially, is the study of spatial relationships. It examines how any one thing in the universe
relates to any other thing according to their relative locations. I particularly excelled at cartography which
graphically represents these relationships with maps and charts. This led to a career where I worked as a
photogrammetric technician making topographic maps from aerial photography. But within months of
completing my degree and while working for a mapping firm in North Adams, MA, the piano came back into
my life with a great crescendo. I had bought a small grand piano that needed rebuilding and, of course, I just
had to take it apart. I removed the strings and the plate and disassembled the action. This time I had gone too
far and was in way over my head. I couldn't leave this unfinished so I made a momentous decision. I quit my
job and moved to Charlotte, NC to study piano tuning and repair at a small college. The aspect of tuning,
particularly, came easily to me. You see, tuning is all about the spatial relationships of sound. Piano tuning is
basically a representation of how different frequencies relate to one another for a given piano. I am still
making maps only now with my ears.

I became an associate member of the Piano Technicians Guild and started attending every conference and
seminar on piano technology that I could. At PTG conferences, highly experienced and respected technicians
teach classes on all aspects of our work, from basic tuning to sound board design, to business practices. For
most of my years as a piano technician, these seminars have had a central part in my development. After two
years in Charlotte, I moved to greater Portland in May of 1987 to start my business. Within another two years,
I successfully completed the PTG exams to qualify as a REGISTERED PIANO TECHNICIAN.

Five years later, I had the good fortune to be invited to work part time for R.J. Regier of Freeport. Rod builds
fortepianos and harpsichords that closely emulate important historic keyboard instruments. For me, as a
technician of modern pianos, it allowed me an opportunity to explore the evolution of this amazing
instrument and to develop a deeper understanding whence the piano we now play came. For more than three
years, one day per week, I assisted Rod whom I've come to respect as one of the finest craftsmen that I have
ever met. The skills that I learned in Rod's shop continue to positively impact the work that I do for my
customers today.

Now, in my 35th year of working for musicians of greater Portland, my enthusiasm for this work remains high.
But while the piano continues to fascinate me, I realize that the real value of my work lies in the greater
enjoyment that I can bring to my customers who play this wonderful instrument.