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Encyclopedia > Baroque violin

A baroque violin is, in common usage, any violin whose neck, fingerboard, bridge, and tailpiece are of the type used during the baroque period. Such an instrument may be an original built during the baroque and never changed to modern form; or a modern replica built as a baroque violin; or an older instrument which has been converted (or re-converted) to baroque form. The violin is a bowed string instrument with four strings tuned in perfect fifths. ... Adoration, by Peter Paul Rubens. ...

Baroque mounted Jakobus Stainer violin from 1658
Baroque mounted Jakobus Stainer violin from 1658

Following period practices, most baroque violinists use gut strings. This lends a certain purity and even at times earthiness to the sound. Baroque violinists commonly play their instruments without a chin rest or shoulder rest, as they had not yet been invented in the baroque period. The relaxed and natural baroque violin posture is quite different as compared with the more poised modern violin position. The baroque violin is usually positioned more in front of the player than the modern violin, with the strings often running perpendicular to the player's collarbone. This causes the player's bow arm to be positioned differently as well, facilitating articulations which would be difficult and less natural in a modern violin posture. Some players do not touch their chin to the instrument at all. However, when used, the player's chin is usually placed on the treble side of the tailpiece. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...


Other typical differences from the modern violin include: a smaller bass bar, a differently shaped bridge which is thinner at the base and thicker at the top, a shorter fingerboard, a fuller neck, and the absence of fine tuners. The biggest difference between the modern and baroque violins is the bow, however. The modern violin bow curves downward in the middle while the baroque bow will look straight or bent outwards under tension. The baroque bow is thinner near the tip which comes to an exaggerated point. The common myth that the baroque bow had a huge exaggerated arch shape so as to play all four strings at once remains unsubstantiated. [1] Although the convex bows found in paintings may appear to be for the purpose of playing all four strings at once, the testing of period and replica convex bows quickly shows that this is an impossibility. In a string instrument, the bass bar is a brace running from the foot of the neck to a position under the bridge, which bears much of the tension of the strings. ...


There is some debate on subjects such as the possibilities of lower string tension, low string angle over the bridge, and shorter string lengths on the baroque violin.


Baroque violins have surged in popularity since the 1980s as part of the growing interest in authentic performance. Their renewed use reflects an attempt to rediscover the original style of violin playing in the baroque period. As is always the case with period instruments, merely having authentic equipment does not necessarily guarantee an authentic sound. Typically, period instrument players receive extensive university training in the style and often use original treatises as a resource. The authentic performance movement is an effort on the part of musicians and scholars to perform works of classical music in ways similar to how they were performed when they were originally written. ...


Performers

Fabio Biondi is an Italian violinist and conductor. ... Lucy van Dael born in 1946 is a Dutch baroque violinist and member of the faculty of the Amsterdam Conservatory. ... Enrico Gatti is an Italian classical violinist. ... Reinhard Goebel (born 1952) is a German conductor and violinist devoted to early music. ... (Graf) Gottfried von der Goltz (born 1 June 1964 in Würzburg, Germany) is a German-Norwegian violinist and conductor, specialising in the baroque repertoire. ... John Holloway - a British baroque violinist, currently based in Dresden, Germany. ... Sigiswald Kuijken (born February 16, 1944) is a Belgian violinist, violist, and conductor who works primarily with Pre-Nineteenth Century Music. ... Jeanne Lamon is a Canadian violinist and the music director of the Baroque orchestra Tafelmusik. ... Andrew Manze (born 14th January 1965, Beckenham) is known as one of the foremost baroque violinists of the present generation. ... Rachel Podger is an English violinist specialising in the performance of baroque music. ... Simon Andrew Thomas Standage (born 8th November 1941 in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire) is an English violinist and conductor best known for playing and conducting music of the baroque and classical eras on original instruments. ... Elizabeth Wallfisch (born January 28, 1952) is an Australian Baroque violinist. ...

References

  • "On Bach and the curved bow" by James Pritchett, Princeton, December 6, 1994 - January 21, 1995, retrieved September 8, 2006

  Results from FactBites:
 
Baroque violin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (147 words)
A Baroque violin is, in common usage, any violin whose neck, fingerboard, bridge, and tailpiece are of the type used during the baroque period.
Such an instrument may be an original built during the baroque and never changed to modern form; or a modern replica built as a baroque violin; or an older instrument which has been converted (or re-converted) to baroque form.
Baroque violins have surged in popularity since the 1980s as part of the growing interest in authentic performance.
Violin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5594 words)
When determining the violin size appropriate for a child, a general rule is to have the child hold the instrument against the neck, and reach out past the end of the scroll.
Violins are tuned by turning the pegs in the pegbox under the scroll, or by turning the fine tuner screws at the tailpiece.
A violin is usually played using a bow consisting of a stick with a ribbon of horsehair strung between the tip and frog (or nut, or heel) at opposite ends.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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