It sounds like an instrument. It plays notes. It's a violin. Go look at violin solos.
Do you mean movie? The Red Violin fits your description. It is a very good movie and I highly recomend it. (however it is not a g movie)
No Eli Whitney did not invent the violin, but Eli Whitney did make his own violin when he was 12 years old.
Together
Violin, viola, cello.
It sounds like an instrument. It plays notes. It's a violin. Go look at violin solos.
Do you mean movie? The Red Violin fits your description. It is a very good movie and I highly recomend it. (however it is not a g movie)
No Eli Whitney did not invent the violin, but Eli Whitney did make his own violin when he was 12 years old.
Together
because, that was the name of the product. (movie,book,etc) if the main subtitle was "the red violin" the author will base it on that name so the violin has to be red. The answer to this question will ruin the surprise ending of the movie - which is that the maker of the violin in the movie used his dead wife's blood to varnish the instrument, and in doing so the violin took on her life force. Which is complete rubbish since dried blood turns dark brown when dried.
The violin is used to make music to people's ear's.
The violin doesn't, the violinist makes the music.
It depends on your electric violin. A hollow-body violin with an acoustic pickup (basically, a traditional violin with a microphone built into it) will make sound just like a standard acoustic violin. A solid-body electric violin will make sound without an amp...but unless you're the violin player, you won't hear it.
The wood used to make the front of a violin is well seasoned maple.
Tim Fain.
Violin, viola, cello.
Sarah nemtanu