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  2. History of the violin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_violin

    The history of the electric violin spans the entire 20th century. The success of electrical amplification, recording and playback devices brought an end to the use of the Stroh violin in broadcast and recording. Acoustic-electric violins have a hollow body with soundholes, and may be played with or without amplification.

  3. Marc Laberte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Laberte

    Marc Laberte was born into a family of violin makers. His great grandfather set up a workshop in Mirecourt around 1780. On 21 May 1904, he married Marie Adeline Josephine Thérèse Drouin, but she died on 15 December 1909.

  4. Violin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Violin

    Heads of three violin bows: (upper) transitional (F. Tourte), swan-bill head of a long 18th-century model, pike-head of a 17th-century model. 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. A typical violin bow may be 75 cm (30 in ...

  5. Amati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amati

    Often considered the most eminent violin maker of the family, [3] [4] he improved the model adopted by the rest of the Amatis and produced instruments capable of yielding greater power of tone. [5] His pattern was unusually small, but he also made a wider model now known as the "Grand Amati", which have become his most sought-after violins.

  6. Antonio Stradivari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Stradivari

    The violin collector Count Ignazio Alessandro Cozio di Salabue, Vuillaume, and later Tarisio Auctions have all contributed to this frenzy that would extend well into the 21st century. Also, most of the other major Cremonese luthiers died soon after Stradivari, putting an end to the golden period of Cremona's violin making, which lasted more ...

  7. Violin family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Violin_family

    A violin is a "little viola", a violone is a "big viola" or a bass violin, and a violoncello (often abbreviated cello) is a "small violone" (or literally, a "small big viola"). (The violone is not part of the modern violin family; its place is taken by the modern double bass, an instrument with a mix of violin and viol characteristics.)

  8. List of classical violinists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_classical_violinists

    The Violin: A Social History of the World's Most Versatile Instrument by Schoenbaum, David (2012). New York, New York : W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393084405; The Violin and I, by Kato Havas (1968/1975), Bosworth & Co. Ltd. Violin Playing-As I Teach it, by Leopold Auer (1921/1960), Gerarld Duckworth & Co Ltd.

  9. Ernst Heinrich Roth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernst_Heinrich_Roth

    An E. H. Roth violin, Guarneri copy, Markneukirchen 1930 It was a policy of the Roth workshop in the days of Ernst Heinrich I to manufacture different grades of instruments for different budgets. For this reason, but also due to the size of the workshop's production and the many decades of its operation, the quality of Roth violins varies ...