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i've just been using rosin, is there a special gel i can buy for my violin bow strings, or what do the professionals use?

2007-10-16 23:11:13 · 4 answers · asked by elizabet 3 in Arts & Humanities Performing Arts

4 answers

Professionals use rosin - probably high quality rosin. With a very high quality, expensive bow. There's practically nothing else you're supposed to put on your bow hair (that's the correct term). You're supposed to make the violin sing with your playing techniques. A good bow together with a good violin will give a better sound naturally, but the largest part of making a violin sing is through the skills of the performer. For example, if you're horrid at playing and use a thousand-dollar bow + million dollar violin, it's not going to make much difference because the problem lies with you, not the bow or the instrument.

2007-10-17 01:45:50 · answer #1 · answered by ? 6 · 1 0

The type of the string and the quality of the instrument greatly affects the sound quality of the strings.

The only think you can use for your bow hairs is rosin. Professionals use high quality rosin (that can run you $20+). Anything else will probably mess them up.

If you have a larger instrument, the sound would "sing" more because the sound would be able to travel and vibrate through your instrument.

I recently had a change in strings, and it greatly improved the sound from my instrument. I had some pretty crappy strings that were icky, sounded squeaky, and produced little sound. I bought a new set of Helicore strings (for viola) and the tone was a lot more clear, and the sound was amazing.

So...
1. Only rosin can go on your bows. High quality rosin will help.
2. Make sure your strings are decent. Check with your teacher to see if they need some changing.
3. You can't do anything about the quality or size of the instrument, I'm sure, so you're going to have to deal with that.
4. Practice! Like the first answerer said, skills and technique greatly help the sound you get. Make sure your bowing techniques are good. Don't bow like you're afraid. Use full bows on longer notes and play the proper bowing.

2007-10-18 20:08:06 · answer #2 · answered by ¥ 5 · 1 0

Just use Rosin, but you could try making sure that your violin isn't covered with old rosin under the strings, and isn't full od dust and fluff. I had mine set up and cleaned, and it improved the tone no end. Also, what strings do you use.? You could try a different brand. I use Tomastik Dominant, cos I play in a barn dance band and need amplification. Hope this helps.

2007-10-17 04:05:30 · answer #3 · answered by SKCave 7 · 1 0

it relatively is hair, no longer string. Bows might desire to be rehaired each and every so many times, yet while in basic terms some hairs destroy, do no longer project approximately it. A rehair job in many situations expenses approximately $30-60 observing the be attentive to-how of the guy who does it and the going fee on your section. a expert who performs numerous hours an afternoon will might desire to get a bow rehaired each and every 2-3 months, a student who in basic terms takes the violin out for the time of orchestra class can bypass 2-3 years. it relatively is in basic terms greater fee-effective to purchase a sparkling bow in case you have an extremely much less costly, junky bow to initiate with.

2016-10-12 22:30:28 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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