violin

violin
/vuy'euh lin"/, n.
1. the treble instrument of the family of modern bowed instruments, held nearly horizontal by the player's arm with the lower part supported against the collarbone or shoulder.
2. a violinist or part for a violin.
[1570-80; < It violino, equiv. to viol(a) (see VIOLA1) + -ino dim. suffix]

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The violin is the highest-pitched member of a family of instruments that includes the viola, cello, and double bass. It has a fretless fingerboard, four strings, and a distinctively shaped wooden body whose "waist" permits freedom of bowing. The violin is held on the shoulder and bowed with the right hand. It has a wide range of more than four octaves. It evolved in Italy in the 16th century from the medieval fiddle and other instruments. Its average proportions were settled by the 17th century, but innovations in the 18th–19th centuries increased its tonal power. With its brilliance, agility, and singing tone, the violin has been immensely important in Western art music, and it has the largest and most distinguished repertoire of any stringed instrument. From the mid-17th century it has been the foundation of the symphony orchestra, which today usually includes 20–26 violins, and it is also widely used in chamber music and as a solo instrument. It is played as a folk instrument in many countries, folk violins being often called fiddles.

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 bowed, stringed musical instrument (stringed instrument) that evolved during the Renaissance from earlier bowed instruments: the medieval fiddle; its 16th-century Italian offshoot, the lira da braccio; and the rebec. The violin is probably the best known and most widely distributed musical instrument in the world.

      Like its predecessors but unlike its cousin the viol, the violin has a fretless fingerboard. Its strings are hitched to tuning pegs and to a tailpiece passing over a bridge held in place by the pressure of the strings. The bridge transmits the strings' vibrations to the violin belly, or soundboard, which is made of pine and amplifies the sound. Inside the instrument, beneath the treble foot of the bridge and wedged between the violin belly and back, which is made of maple, is the sound post, a thin stick of pine that transmits the string vibrations to the instrument's back, contributing to the characteristic violin tone. The belly is supported from beneath by the bass bar, a narrow wood bar running lengthwise and tapering into the belly. It also contributes to the resonance of the instrument. The sidewalls, or ribs, are constructed of pine-lined maple.

 The violin was early recognized for its singing tone, especially in Italy, its birthplace, where the earliest makers—Gasparo da Salò, Andrea Amati, and Giovanni Paolo Maggini—had settled its average proportions before the end of the 16th century. During its history the violin has been subject to modifications that have progressively adapted it to its evolving musical functions. In general, the earlier violins are more deeply arched in the belly and back; the more modern, following the innovations of Antonio Stradivari (Stradivari, Antonio), are shallower, yielding a more virile tone. In the 19th century, with the advent of large auditoriums and the violin virtuoso, the violin underwent its last changes in design. The bridge was heightened, the sound post and bass bar were thickened, and the body became flatter. The neck was angled back, giving greater pressure of the strings on the bridge. The result was a stronger, more brilliant tone in place of the delicate, intimate tone of the violin of the 18th century.

      The earliest violins were used for popular and dance music. During the 17th century it replaced the viol as the primary stringed instrument in chamber music. The Italian composer Claudio Monteverdi (Monteverdi, Claudio) included violins in the orchestra of his opera Orfeo (first performed in 1607). In France the king's orchestra, les 24 violons du roi, was organized in 1626. Arcangelo Corelli (Corelli, Arcangelo), a virtuoso violinist, was among the earliest composers to contribute to the new music for the violin, as did Antonio Vivaldi (Vivaldi, Antonio), J.S. Bach (Bach, Johann Sebastian), and the violinist Giuseppe Tartini (Tartini, Giuseppe). Most major composers from the 18th century on wrote solo music for the violin, among them Mozart (Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus), Beethoven (Beethoven, Ludwig van), Robert Schumann (Schumann, Robert), Johannes Brahms (Brahms, Johannes), Edvard Grieg (Grieg, Edvard), Paul Hindemith (Hindemith, Paul), Arnold Schoenberg (Schoenberg, Arnold), and Alban Berg (Berg, Alban). Such virtuosos as Francesco Geminiani (Geminiani, Francesco), Niccolò Paganini (Paganini, Niccolò), Joseph Joachim (Joachim, Joseph), Fritz Kreisler (Kreisler, Fritz), David Oistrakh (Oistrakh, David), Yehudi Menuhin (Menuhin, Yehudi, Lord Menuhin of Stoke d'Abernon), and Isaac Stern (Stern, Isaac) stimulated the composition of fine violin music. The violin was assimilated into the art music of the Middle East and South India and, as the fiddle, is played in the folk music of many countries. The tenor violin, known from the 16th century through the 18th century, was midway in size between the viola and cello. It was tuned F–c–g–d′. “Tenor violin” also occasionally referred to the viola.

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Universalium. 2010.

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