Violins made by the Stradivari
family in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries are worth millions of US
dollars. Why are they so special?
In this week's 6 Minute English,
Alice and Neil talk about quality of sound and some of the language used to
describe it.
Alice asks Neil which language the word timbre comes from. Is it:
a) Russian
b) Italian
c) French
Listen out for the answer at the end of the programme.
Listen
Neil:
Hi Alice .
Neil:
A multi-million dollar violin? So, that’s a musical instrument which costs several
million US dollars? Who’s got that kind of money to spend on an instrument?
Neil:
OK.
The same musical scale played on two different violins
Neil:
Well, my perfect musical ears are telling me the second violin was the multi-million
dollar one.
Neil:
Oh yes. Of course!
a) Russian
b) Italian
c) French
Neil:
Hmm. Definitely not Russian. I would be tempted to say French but most musical
expressions come from Italian. So I’m going to say Italian.
Neil:
I like that very mellow sound – a sound that that is sweet and rich.
Professor
Tasmin Little:
There are two most famous and great makers. Stradivari
is the most famous, but also there is Guarneri del Gesu who is also very
favoured by top soloists, perhaps the instruments are more mellow in sound. But
certainly, there is nothing to beat a Stradivarius, because they are just
really the top of the range instruments. And I'm very, very fortunate to have
this instrument on loan from the Royal Academy of Music.
Neil:
And she’s very fortunate – very lucky to have one on loan. That means she’s
borrowing the violin to play at concerts.
Neil:
And what is it about violins made by the Stradivari family in 17th and 18thcenturies
that makes them so special?
Neil:
Reverberates – it echoes back at you. A really rich, deep sound. How did violin
makers like the Stradivari family give violins that special sound quality?
Professor
Tasmin Little:
That’s the billion dollar question, isn't it – it's
one that has foxed people for centuries.
People have come up with all sorts of explanations.
There are a few, such as: at the point when Stradivarius was choosing his wood,
there had been a particularly cold spell of temperature and the trees had grown
very slowly and, therefore, with more density.
Apparently he used to go into forests and tap on the
trees and listen to how reverberant they were and, according to the results, he
would chop them down or not.
Neil:
Professor Tasmin Little says that’s one possibility why the violins are so special.
Neil:
Well I said Italian, but judging by the way you’ve been pronouncing that word,
I think I’m probably wrong!
Neil:
They are:
multi-million
– several million
timbre
– quality of the sound
mellow –
rich and sweet
top of the
range - best
reverberates
– echoes back
the
billion dollar question - the question everyone wants to know
the answer to
Neil:
And don’t forget to find us on Facebook and Twitter.
Neil:
Bye.
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