Guitar playerd with violins?

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Shawn0278

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Any of you guitar players ever want to play the violin? Fender makes a cool one and I'd like to learn how but it seems a little hard, is there such thing as a fretted violin? that would make it real easy to adjust from guitar to violin.
thanks
 
I remember some dude in the 80's played heavy metal violin with some whacked violin that had frets. I'm sure it was a custom job, though.
 
Shawn0278 said:
Any of you guitar players ever want to play the violin? Fender makes a cool one and I'd like to learn how but it seems a little hard, is there such thing as a fretted violin? that would make it real easy to adjust from guitar to violin.
thanks

Playing Violin is a bitch. I used to play, havent picked one up in years. You can spend as much time learing to bow properly as most people spend learning to play gtr.
 
Violin sucks. I used to play but it bored me so I quit. Picked up guitar a few years later and haven't turned back.
 
The violin does NOT suck!!!! It is an incredible instument that takes years to learn...

And plus, ask a violin player about easy and hard, they would just call you lazy, I know I dated one!

I'm not saying you should learn or not, but don't trash a beautiful instument. Plus "it's just a mandolin attached to your chin" (ha ha)

Later,
Musik
 
No, it most certainly doesnt suck. Its a great instrument. Just not something someone can just pick up on a whim.
 
JR#97: I remember some dude in the 80's played heavy metal violin with some whacked violin that had frets. I'm sure it was a custom job, though.

Mark Wood: "Voodoo Violence" is the dude and album in question.
 
One of the tools they sometimes use when teaching the violin is to tie catgut 'frets' around the fingerboard. Once the student gets used to where everything is, they are then removed.

Love the violin - David LaFlamme - It's a Beautiful Day - Oh Yeah!

foo
 
there's some old country guy who plays a double neck guitar. the bottom is a basic freted six string, but the bottom is a solid steel fretboard without frets on it. He uses a double neck so he can play chords on the other neck and solos on the fettless neck.
I'm not sure what his name is i'll look for it. A friend of mine riped the frets off of his guitar and used some jaco brand epoxy to fill in where the frets were. It was far from perfect but it got the effect he was looking for.
 
Guitar Played With Violin

I played that way for a while after I saw Page play guitar with a bow. The violin body banged against my Tele's body and left some nasty scratchs so I gave it up.
 
I picked up the violin last year! :D
I'm a guitar player but wanted to experiment with the violin, so, I bought one.

It isn't too difficult. After a week, (playing about 8 hours a day) I started to get sounds that weren't too horrible, and believe me, the sounds you're going to get are going to be horrible at first.

I guess they key is to be able to deal with repetitive exercises. With the guitar, I just played the scales over and over again, non-stop, for hours at a time. If there was a chord I couldn't hold right, I'd keep my hand in that position till it went numb (usually about an hour or two). When I was learning drums, I built my leg muscle for the bass drum by tapping my foot non-stop (again, hours at a time while watching TV or something). So, with the violin, I just I kept going back and forth with the bow or playing the scales (that I managed to figure out).

I quit though because I was afraid that if I ended up teaching myself incorrectly, it would be hard to turn back. In the end though, I did manage to learn some songs by ear.
LowRider, Angel in The Center Fold.... stupid songs (well, LowRider is actually cool ;)).

So, it's not hard to start playing some songs pretty quickly if you have guitar experience. Not having frets isn't so bad, after all, if you can play guitar with your eyes closed, it's kind of the same thing. The tricky thing is that fact that it's so small! You don't have move your fingers nearly as much as you would think you would. In fact, there's almost no gap between your fingers (and I have small hands) when you lay them out on the 'fret board' (I forget what it's called).

Another reason why I quit was the fact that there aren't as many resourced for violin as there are for guitar. For example, I never found any forums, and forums are great when you want to ask something. :)

One thing though, I doubt you’ll be able to master it if you’re also trying to master guitar, which is another reason why I let it go. You might end up spreading yourself too thin. Still, it wouldn’t be bad to learn a little bit and be able to play some jigs. ;)
 
Although I played guitar as primary weapon of choice, I play also keyboard, basses, and yes... violin. Not quite like Mae, nor Bonn... just enough for my need. My top of skill would be "Dust in the wind". You can tell my level then...
;)
 
You can find some nice hard rock violin sound samples at: www.hagen.nu .

It's an electric violin built by T-bear in Sweden. Effects used are overdrive, wah-wah, phaser and more.

Hans
 
The great guitarist Allan Holdsworth has played violin, but very rarely. There's a nice solo on the tune "Upon Tomorrow" from the Tempest album.

Other terrific violinists who have played electric violin in something of a rock context include Don "Sugarcane" Harris with Frank Zappa, Jean-Luc Ponty (with Zappa, The Mahavishnu Orchestra [edition #2] and his own bands), and Jerry Goodman (with The Flock and The Mahavishnu Orchestra [the original edition]).
 
I know this is old, but I can answer this one!

Hey people. I know this is years stale but I was doing a search and this came up. I wanted to tell you guys the reality: I'm a heavy metal violinist and we're slowly coming on strong.

No threats guys, so chill the conservative critique. We've been around and now that we're coming a bit out of the woodwork, we're here to stay.

Mark Wood is an aquaintance and distant friend of mine-the guy lives about four states away and travels most of the time-and he *is* the world's first metal violin.

All his violins are custom jobs, but they're *his* invented customs. He's got a company that makes the most wicked axes you've ever seen, baring the one-of-a-kind artwork ones.

Check 'em out: www.woodviolins.com

Antonio Ponterelli is another one; dude's about 16 now and he's already doing gigs with Emmy types, seriously. www.antonioponterelli.com I think is the link.

Sure we play what guitars do, but our axes can sing its own tune. Infinate sustain with tone, pitch and volume control over the whole time, and all the tricks that a bow can throw. Mix a little Beethovan, Iggy Pop, Charlie Daniels, ancient Celtic and Cradle of Filth and you've got a little idea of what we can, and usually, do.

Music is Art Eternal....
-Othergear
 
I was really hoping this would be about playing the guitar with a violin (I watched Spinal Tap today).
 
Adam P said:
I was really hoping this would be about playing the guitar with a violin (I watched Spinal Tap today).

now yoyu come to mention it, isn't there a 'guitar played with violin' solo in "breaking like the wind"? (or is it in "smell my glove"?)
 
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