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Know
More About Violin
The violin is a stringed instrument that you play by
pulling a bow across the strings. It belongs to the stringed
instrument family that contains the same instruments as the viola,
cello and the double bass. The violin is the smallest instrument
in this group and the one with the highest sounding pitch. This
musical instrument is essential when performing chamber music, but
it provides for exceptional solo performances as well.
Description of a violin
A violin is a hollow wooden box with rounded ends and a narrow
center. The front and the back of the instrument are slightly
convex and connected to each other by the sides, also called ribs.
There are four sets of strings on a violin that extend from a
string holder at the bottom of the body, over a raised bridge to
the end of the narrow neck, which is called the fingerboard. On
the fingerboard, the four strings are inserted into a pegbox and
are held there with pegs. The pegs are twisted in order to tune
the violin, in much the same way as you tune a guitar, in order to
raise or lower the pitch of each string. The bow is a long arched
strip of wood with horsehair strings stretched along its length.
When the bow is drawn across the strings on the body of the violin
it produces a sound.
The body of the violin is a resonator, which means that it
amplifies the vibration produced by drawing the bow across the
strings. There is a block of wood inside the body of the violin,
called a sound post and this device helps to coordinate the
vibrations of the front and back panels. There are two F-shaped
holes in the table near the bridge that lets the panels vibrate
freely.
Playing the violin
When a musician plays the violin, he/she must hold the neck of the
instrument with the thumb and forefinger of the left hand. The
left shoulder supports the violin and keeps it in the correct
position of having the chin rest on a support located beside the
stringholder. He/She grasps the bow with the right hand and draws
it across the strings near the bridge. The left hand fingers press
or pluck the strings against the wood in different ways to produce
different c sounds or chords. This pressure shortens the string
and raises or lowers the pitch.
History of the Violin
The modern violin was developed in Italy in the sixteenth century
using the techniques used in a variety of other stringed
instruments, but mainly the viol. The viol had more strings than
we see on the violin and the body was not convex, but was flat.
The most famous violin in the world is the Stradivarius, named
after its maker, Antonio Stradivari from the Italian town of
Cremona. Although there have been a few minor changes in the
overall design of the violin, the designs of the Italian masters,
the design has basically remain the same.
About the author:
James Hunt has spent 15 years as a professional writer and
researcher covering stories that cover a whole spectrum of
interest. Read more at www.best-in-violins.info
Written by: James Hunt
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