Comments

From Yixi Zhang
Posted from 24.68.243.153 on May 12, 2007 at 8:54 PM (GMT)
Congratulations, Karen! The love affair just begins to unfold itself:) What's his name?

I think we’ll always go through stages that we hate the sound of our violin or viola and think that we’ve outgrown it. The notion of outgrow is not always clear though. The day before yesterday I had a rehearsal with the accompanist, who is really well-known in Canada (frequently on national radio and TV). Before and after the rehearsal, I felt strongly that my $1,500 strad copy wasn’t good enough. I expressed this to my teacher casually afterwards. She wisely offered me to try her violin, which always sounds very smooth and sweet when she plays. I also tried her bow on her violin, well, I didn’t like it any better than mine. So I asked her to play my violin, first with my bow and then with hers. Yes, you might have guessed, I didn’t know my violin sounded beautiful!

What I’ve learned from this is that, since it is very subject when it comes to choose a violin, the subjectivity should be affected by my shaky state of mind and technical immaturity. If I start to hate the sound of my violin again, I will have my teacher or a much better violinist to play it before spending more money on another one.

From Tommy Atkinson
Posted from 24.127.67.199 on May 13, 2007 at 1:03 AM (GMT)
ooh, good choice on the doetsch! i had a doetsche violin that lasted me all the way into my college years until i got an upgrade after a bunch of technique work in college. i thought the doetsch was a really nice instrument that played much easier and better than instruments much more expensive than it. i'm sure you'll love it!
From Clare Chu
Posted from 128.107.248.220 on May 13, 2007 at 6:07 AM (GMT)
Congratulations Karen. I'm glad you got the one you really liked. Even though it might have been more than the Eastman, you don't have any regrets. Violins are so personal. I know what Yixi is talking about. Sometimes you have a love/hate relationship with them. I hope that violas are always good to their owners, smooth, sweet and mellow like chocolate.
From Karin Lin
Posted from 71.139.177.20 on May 13, 2007 at 7:10 AM (GMT)
Congratulations, Karen! Enjoy!
From al ku
Posted from 24.188.124.233 on May 13, 2007 at 1:19 PM (GMT)
karen, i am very happy for you that, at last, at least for the foreseeable future, your heart and ears have found a home.
From Anne Horvath
Posted from 71.12.182.211 on May 13, 2007 at 2:34 PM (GMT)
Congratulations on your Bouncing Baby Viola! Have fun with it!
From Karen Allendoerfer
Posted from 18.4.1.76 on May 14, 2007 at 2:03 PM (GMT)
Anne, that's funny you should call it a baby, because I've been thinking of it the following way: when my daughter was my son's current age, we had another baby. Now that he is that age, I got a viola.
From Karen Allendoerfer
Posted from 18.4.1.76 on May 14, 2007 at 2:46 PM (GMT)
Yixi, I think I know what you mean about "outgrowing" being subjective, but my viola sounds so much better than my violin, even with the same player (me) playing the same piece on the same day on the two different instruments. I'm interpreting that as my really having outgrown that violin. Or maybe it's the viola personality. Either way, I'm planning on upgrading my violin next.
From Bernardo B
Posted from 168.168.67.112 on May 14, 2007 at 5:34 PM (GMT)
Congrats, Karen. You should post pictures of the new viola so we can admire it!