VIOLIN FAMILY


The 'Violin family' of instruments was developed in Italy in the 17th Century. The modern violin family consists of the violin, viola and cello, along with the double bass. While the violin, viola and cello are true members of the ancestral violin family, the double bass's origins are disputed. It is sometimes taken to be part of the viol family, due to its sloping shoulders, its tuning, and its sometimes flat back. Others say that these features are arbitrary, and point to the internal construction of the double bass, which is proportionately identical to the violin's, as a more weighty piece of evidence than the external features.
Instrument names in the ancestral violin family are all derived from the root ''viola'', which may have come from the Medieval Latin word ''vitula'' (meaning "stringed instrument). A ''violin'' is a "little viola", a ''violone'' is a "big viola" or a "bass viola", and a ''violoncello'' (often abbreviated ''cello'') is a "small violone" (or, literally, a "small big viola"). (The ''violone'' is not part of the modern violin family; its place is taken by the modern double bass.)
The instruments of the ancestral violin family may be descended in part from the lira da braccio.


Contents
Characteristics
Uses
References
See also

Characteristics


The playing ranges of the instruments in the modern violin family overlap each other, but the tone quality and physical size of each distinguishes them from one another. Both the violin and the viola are played under the jaw, the viola being the larger of the two instruments, with a playing range reaching a perfect fifth below the violin's. The cello is played sitting down with the instrument between the knees, and its playing range reaches an octave below the viola's. (The double bass is played standing or sitting on a stool, with a range that typically reaches a minor sixth, an octave, or a ninth below the cello's).
All string instruments share similar form, parts, construction, and function, and the violas bear a particularly close resemblance to the violin family. However, instruments in the ancestral violin family are set apart by similarities in shape, in tuning practice, and in history. They have four strings each, are tuned in fifths (the bass is tuned in fourths), are not fretted, and have four rounded bouts.
Violin, viola, and cello bow frogs (top to bottom)

French (top) and German (bottom) double bass bows

Uses


The members of the ancestral violin family are the most used bowed string instruments in the world today. Although all share a place in classical music, they are also used (less often) in jazz, electronic music, rock, and other types of popular music, where they are often amplified, or simply created to be used as electric instruments. The violin is also used extensively in fiddle music, country music,and folk music. (The double bass plays an indispensable part in both classical and jazz music forms).
One of the most popular and standardized groupings in classical chamber music, the string quartet, is composed entirely of instruments from the ancestral violin family. This similarity in the manner of sound production allows string quartets to blend their tone colour and timbre more easily than less homogeneous groups. This is particularly notable in comparison to the standard wind quintet, which, although composed entirely of wind instruments, comprises four fundamentally different ways of producing musical pitch.

References




The NPR Classical Music Companion, , Miles, Hoffman, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1997, ISBN 0-395-70742-0

The Complete Luthier's Library. A Useful International Critical Bibliography for the Maker and the Connoisseur of Stringed and Plucked Instruments, , , , Florenus Company, 1990, ISBN 88-85250-01-7

Online Etymology Dictionary

See also



Violin octet, an experiment in part to create an even more homogeneous blend of instruments related to the violin.

String instrument

String orchestra

List of string instruments

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