- I really don’t want to keep the place heated up to 70°($$$$), so…yeah: flat… until I manage to get the room heated up from 63° to 70°.
- Relative tuning of the instrument is also goofed up until I manage to heat up the larger parts of the instrument, so that the air column inside the larger part is also warmer. One of the symptoms is that tubas - that normally don’t suffer from the “flat third partial syndrome“ - feature a flat third partial, until the big parts of the instrument are warm.
It’s hard enough to get motivated to sit down and practice at night - when I’m tired from working (or get home from actually playing a gig somewhere), but then I have to deal with these “cold“ obstacles.
Does anyone else have trouble with playing in cold rooms - due to trying to save some utility bills money? I wonder if I should pick up some sort of quiet radiant heater, and just plug it in and turn it on close to where I’m going to practice - perhaps ten minutes ahead of time, and with the instrument(s) nearby, as well.