The electric amplification that we see in
the case of electric violins is accomplished by means of a violin
pickup, which is a transducer
with the ability to capture the mechanical and sonorous vibrations from the
violin and convert it into electrical signals that may be used for either
amplification for enhanced musical performance or recorded for a later stage.
The commonly used varieties of violin pickup include magnetic pickups and piezo
pickups. Though the electric violin was
introduced in the market as early as the 1920’s it is only of late that they
have picked up a huge audience and clientele among distinguished violinists,
especially from the jazz and blues genre.
In modern symphony orchestra, double bass,
or string bass remains to be the largest bowstring instrument with the deepest
pitch, ranging from the strings E1, A2, G2 and D2. Double
bass string, forms a standard and
important member of the orchestra and finds favour in various music genres like
jazz, blues grass, country folk, folk rock and even rock and roll. Being a
string instrument, like the violin and cello, a bassist uses either a bow or
his fingers to pluck the double bass strings, which are generally made from
metallic materials and have replaced the original gut strings.
In the family of bowed string instruments,
the viola
string happens to be the middle
child, between the violin and its deeper pitched sibling, the cello. Though the
viola string, in its construction, closely parallels the violin, it differs
from it in size, and the method of playing which includes different fingerings
as compared to the violin.
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