answersLogoWhite

0

Violin

The violin is the smallest member of the strings family. It is the most commonly played string instrument and features largely in orchestras. This category contains questions about the violin.

1,195 Questions

What is the name of the Atreyu song with the violin in it?

"Bleeding is a Luxury" has a nice violin part that starts at 2:21. I feel that there is another yet my amazing atreyu senses are failing me at the moment.

Is hot weather for violin bad?

No, cold weather is bad. It can change the pitch of the strings.

Who is Rebecca Ramsey?

That would be Gordan Ramsey's wife.

There's a violinist and composer by that name as well.

Otto schmidt violin maker in 1937?

I have a 1/2 size violin with a label that says "Otto Schmidt - 1937 Copy of a Stradivarius". It has a nice tone for a small violin, but the label does not say where the instrument was made.

---------

Violin making firm in NJ in the early 1900's.

Can the sound of the violin altered in any way to produce different effects?

The sound of any instrument can be modified in many ways to produce different sounds. The violin is no exception.

Traditional violin playing consists of bowing the strings (arco) and stopping the strings with fingertips to select pitch. The manner of handling the bow itself has changed for the common stroke over the centuries, resulting in a change of the tone and volume-shape of the violin sound, appropriate to changing styles since the Renaissance era. However, the manner of bowing is not a simple back-and-forth smooth operation: many different techniques already cause the violin to emit very different sounds from bouncing the bow on the string to tremolo, where the violinist moves the bow back and forth very quickly, creating a kind of shimmer in the sound.

Back in the Baroque and early Classical era, it wasn't uncommon to have the violinist use the wooden part of the bow on the string to get a pinging effect, and this has survived until the present time. Two most notable uses of the bow in this fashion (called col legno and col legno battuto) are Rossini's overture to Il Signor Bruschino and the graveyard segment of the last movement of Berlioz' Symphonie Fantastique. (Most modern violinists, having paid a great deal of money for their bows, will use a wooden dowel, instead!)

Departing from the bow, the violin has always had the ability to be plucked (pizzicato), strummed like a ukulele, etc.

Another technique is harmonics, where the violinist presses very lightly against the string in certain locations, then bows, producing a particularly different tone. This is because their finger is on a 'node', and by stopping the string's motion in that point but letting the rest of the string vibrate on either side of their finger, they are making the string vibrate in subdivisions. For instance, placing the finger lightly at the same point that they would use for the musical forth above the open string's sound, they cut the string into four parts, and the pitch of the note is two octaves above the open string. Placing the finger where the musical fifth sounds normally will cut the string in thirds, producing a note an octave and a fifth above the open string's pitch: these are called harmonics and sound almost like a bird singing or like whistling.

Also in the Classical technique, the use of a mute will change the sound of the Violin. The word mute comes from the Italian muta, changed, and the mute for the violin is a weighted addition to the bridge. The bridge carries the sound of the string to the top plate of the violin, where it causes the body and air-cavity of the instrument to produce the normal sound. By adding the weight to the bridge, the tone of the instrument is changed. The sound is generally quieter than without the mute (causing most people to think that "mute" means "to silence or make quite".)

In modern use of the violin, many avenues for sound-change are available: since the instrument can be easily electronicified by microphone or conductive pickup, the entire battery of electronic sound-amplification and sound-modification available to electric guitar players or synthesists are available to the violinist. Some makers produce entirely-electric violins, which, like solid body electric guitars, produce no sound without added amplification. Additionally, it is possible for a violin's sound to be fed to a synthesizer, modified and played back in real-time with the violin's own sound.

Who modified the violin?

THE PEOPLE WHO MADE VIOLINS WHERE the Italian people. Long ago there ware like three people that made violins in Italy I forgot their names but their violins where the oldest and the best kind in the world. Today these Italian violins cost like :

fifteen thousand million or billion dollars.

those violins are very special as you can see.

:)

Did heifetz record shostakovich's violin concerto?

No. Sadly. Might have been very interesting.

What is a time signature in a violin?

4|4 is the time signature in a violin

by the way im anne patrice martinez

What is the difference between a fiddle and a violin?

When a violin is used for playing country-style or folk music people just nickname it as a "fiddle".

<><><>

A fiddle is sometimes tuned differently than a violin. The instrument itself is pretty much the same though.

More expert opinions

The shape of the bridge is sometimes flatter to allow for easier triple stops, and fiddle players are more likely use steel strings than violinists.

That said, many good fiddlers use high-end synthetic strings and have bridge set-ups that are the same as the classical players use.

See the Related link for a Youtube video that has a good discussion of the difference between a violin and a fiddle, and includes a variety of styles of fiddling.

<><><>

The difference between a fiddle and a violin is nothing! People just nickname a violin a "fiddle" when the violin is used for country or folk music.

<><><>

Violins are used in classical music, fiddles are used in country music, etc. Sometimes they are exactly the same instrument, there is just a different playing style.

<><><>

A fiddle is sometimes tuned differently than a violin. The instrument itself is often the same though.

Violin virtuoso Perlman?

Is that a question about Itzhak Perlman? Just google his name and you'll get more than you'll ever want to know. He has been one of the leading classical violinists for several decades. He also conducts.

What do you call someone who plays the violin in beatles?

A session musician; although the Beatles occasionally tried playing violins - who could resist trying out session musicians instruments - none of their efforts made it onto records.

What is the purpose of the bow on a violin?

It vibrates the string by pulling it across the string. The hair on the bow has rosin applied to it making it sticky.

What is the swirly thing on a violin called?

If you mean on the body of the violin, you may be referring to what are commonly called the "f holes," because of their f-like shape. If you're talking about the thing at the end of the neck, that's the headstock.

What make is Andre rieu's violin?

He has several. but the one he is always talking about is a stradivarius.

Where can I get free sheet music for violin for 'Embers' by Just Jack?

omg me too! im dying to find it! :( sorry i can't help .

I've searched for this too. But I simply tried to play it on the piano, and it worked. First it's an A for, yeah well, a long time. Then a G and then B and then A and then A.

So,

A [x8] G [x8] B [x8] A [x6] G [x2] And then play from the beginning, i hope it helped :)

Who invented the first violin?

from how i feel and what i know Andrea amati was the first to invent the violin..!

Where might one find listings of violins for sale in the United States?

One find a listings of violins for sale in the United States on the Craigslist website. One might also find a listings of violins for sale in the US on websites like Kijiji, eBay, Amazon and many more.

How is sound produced from a violin?

Sound is produced by drawing a bow across one or more strings (which may be stopped by the fingers of the other hand to produce a full range of pitches), by plucking the strings (with either hand), or by a variety of other techniques.

Where is the violin made?

It isn't made in a particular place it's made in many different places around the world Indiana Europe and Asia MANY MANY MANY different places.

What is do you know how to play the violin in Italian?

"Do you know how to play the violin?" in Italian would be:

Non si sa come suonare il violino?

What is a bass violin?

A bass violin is another name for the double bass - the largest stringed instrument of the violin family.

What was Nathan Milstein's preferred violin?

Stradivari. He played a 1716 Strad his entire adult life.