coalport: You could well be right.
But let’s do an experiment. Forget all the hundreds of years of knowledge that was been formed about the correct way to play a violin. (Let alone just hold it.) Somebody hands you a violin, not tuned as that information is also not standardized, and bow and says: “Figure out some way to make music with this thing.” (Let’s also pretend you don’t start hitting the violin with the bow like a drum with only four untuned notes.)
What do you do first. Tune the strings? Should I tune the strings low to high or high to low, or something else? Well after a couple of weeks, if not months, you might settle on some type of tuning. You will make several false starts and have to start from over.
Now you need to work out a fingering method. Maybe you shouldn’t use the pinky as it’s so weak. Do you use a bow, strike the string, pluck the strings? Hit the back of the violin with your fist? What about tremolo? Finger sliding? Wrist motion? Slide fingers sideways bending the string? Maybe we should add frets.
Sounds like the violin becomes much more difficult to play if not impossible to learn at all This all reminds me of trying to learn to play the theremin. . We haven’t had hundreds of years to figure out a system for this extremely hard to play instrument. Maybe a system can’t be worked out. But maybe the theremin has just not become widely appreciated and understood enough to develop a system. Maybe there are just too many things that are not “standard” about the theremin.
Violins come in standard sizes. So do piano keys. If I want to score some music the range of most instruments is absolutely known.
Theremins, the instrument, we have no standards. No standard distance between notes. (Linearity.) No particular number of octaves. (Range.) No standard voicing.
No standard way of playing it. No standard way of teaching it.
I agree with you about the novelty of the theremin. I believe if it weren’t for it’s novelty we wouldn’t accept all the un-standard characteristics about them. Just as we wouldn’t
run down the street and buy a 4/9 violin or a 9 string guitar without frets.
Just a thought
But let’s do an experiment. Forget all the hundreds of years of knowledge that was been formed about the correct way to play a violin. (Let alone just hold it.) Somebody hands you a violin, not tuned as that information is also not standardized, and bow and says: “Figure out some way to make music with this thing.” (Let’s also pretend you don’t start hitting the violin with the bow like a drum with only four untuned notes.)
What do you do first. Tune the strings? Should I tune the strings low to high or high to low, or something else? Well after a couple of weeks, if not months, you might settle on some type of tuning. You will make several false starts and have to start from over.
Now you need to work out a fingering method. Maybe you shouldn’t use the pinky as it’s so weak. Do you use a bow, strike the string, pluck the strings? Hit the back of the violin with your fist? What about tremolo? Finger sliding? Wrist motion? Slide fingers sideways bending the string? Maybe we should add frets.
Sounds like the violin becomes much more difficult to play if not impossible to learn at all This all reminds me of trying to learn to play the theremin. . We haven’t had hundreds of years to figure out a system for this extremely hard to play instrument. Maybe a system can’t be worked out. But maybe the theremin has just not become widely appreciated and understood enough to develop a system. Maybe there are just too many things that are not “standard” about the theremin.
Violins come in standard sizes. So do piano keys. If I want to score some music the range of most instruments is absolutely known.
Theremins, the instrument, we have no standards. No standard distance between notes. (Linearity.) No particular number of octaves. (Range.) No standard voicing.
No standard way of playing it. No standard way of teaching it.
I agree with you about the novelty of the theremin. I believe if it weren’t for it’s novelty we wouldn’t accept all the un-standard characteristics about them. Just as we wouldn’t
run down the street and buy a 4/9 violin or a 9 string guitar without frets.
Just a thought