Obiaks Blog

History Of The Violin

Violin
The violin is a bowed string instrument with four strings tuned in perfect fifths. It is the smallest and highest-pitched member of violin family. A violin is sometimes informally called a fiddle, a term originated from instrument’s use in folk music, but sometimes used regardless of the music played on it.
The person who plays the violin is called a violinist, and a person who makes or repairs them is called a luthier.
Violin strings
Strings were the first made of sheep gut, stretched, dried and twisted. Modern strings may be gut, solid steel, stranded steel and various other synthetic materials. Strings have a limited lifetime apart from obvious things such as the winding of string coming undone from wear; a player will generally change a string when it no longer plays true or when it loses the desired tone.
Violin Sheet Music
Violin sheet music is a hand-written or printed form of musical notation, like its analogs books or pamphlets. The medium of sheet music is paper earlier was parchment. The term sheet is intended to differentiate music on paper from a recording, broadcast or live performance and usually refers to the print publication of commercial music alongside the release of the film.
Sheet music can be used as a record of, a guide to, or a means to perform, a piece of music. It can be studied to create a performance and to elucidate aspects of the music that may not be obvious from mere listening.
Violin Cases
Musafia Violin cases are high quality cases made for the violin. The cases are manufactured from a high standard multi laminate wood shell and screw-attached Cordura cover with an exterior pocket. They also make viola cases and double cases, which are cases that carry two violins or violas. These cases have excellent craftsmanship, and are considered the best cases in the world.
Electric Violin
An electric violin is a violin equipped with electronic output of its sound. It can refer to standard violin fitted with an electric pickup or to an instrument made to be electrify with built in pickups. Electric violin signals usually pass through electronic processing, in the same way as an electric guitar, to achieve a desired sound. This could include delay, reverb, chorus, distortion, or other effects.
Violin Stores
Visit eWoss for a large collection of Violin Stores resources. Find Violin Stores and much more. Make eWoss your preferred search engine.
Violin Lessons
Violin Primer Book by Jim Tolles shows the beginner all the techniques necessary to get started on the violin. Includes many illustrations showing how to hold the bow and violin, and many exercises to develop good bowing technique and learning how to play in tune. The easy to follow step by step instruction makes this the perfect book for school orchestra programs or group instruction.
Free violin sheet music
If you are looking for violin sheet music to expand your repertoire without breaking your budget, you have several legal options.
The first thing you ought to know about sheet music is that most arrangements are protected by copyright. Yes, most music known by the catch-all term classical was written before 1923 and now is public domain in the United States. That means the music is owned by no one, and can be freely copied and performed without having to pay royalities to the composer or his estate.
But even though musical compositions might be public domain, many arrangements of those works were published in 1923 or later and are protected by copyright. That means you cannot legally post or download them online without permission of the copyright owner.
Here the lists for free violin sheet music:
Werner Icking Music Archive, public domain works in .pdf (not easy to search, but if you've got some time to browse, there's a lot of stuff there).
FreeScores.com, a sheet music directory of public domain works, searchable by instrument.
If you're looking for software to convert midi music to digital sheet music, try the free 30 day trial from MidiNotate at Make Your Own Sheet Music.