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Full Steam Ahead

Krista Moyer

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Published: November 16, 2015 at 5:06 PM [UTC]

In my last entry I whined about frustration related to my bad habits. It should be well established by now that my deepest, darkest string playing hours are the precursor to a breakthrough; yet it surprises me every time. I am happy to report that things are moving forward again. One day I simply woke up and could do the thing that I couldn’t do. What a maddening cycle!

The viola hunt has come to an end. Not wanting to spend much on a side-interest, and having limited options in a 14” viola, made the search pretty easy. As much as I hated the concept of a full size violin strung as a viola, that is ultimately what I ended up with. I tried a decent number of 14” violas, and had nearly settled on a pretty nice Tertis model. However, my local shop sourced a regraduated Jurgen Klier violin from Weavers that had been set up as a viola and I changed my mind.

I’m not entirely certain whether my selection was based on being a violinist at heart, or if it really does sound better. My experience with the true 14” violas I tried was that they all had a somewhat nasal quality. It was as if they were just violins with a cold. The Klier had a clearer sound (pardon the pun). I had a number of people (most of them violists) play my selections, and most of them agreed that the restrung violin sounded the best; but not necessarily as good as a larger viola. Certainly if this was going to be my primary instrument, I would have continued the search for a true viola in a more expensive price range that would suit; but for a string fling, this one works nicely.

As a side note, purchasing the compromise violin/viola solved the ugly 14” viola case problem. There’s plenty of selection in full-sized violin cases. One can always find a silver lining.

I've turned my focus to new repertoire and signing up for camps. I'm signed up for a chamber music camp in March, and my teacher has suggested a fiddle camp for this summer. I don't know anything about fiddle, but it should be fun, right?


From Tom Holzman
Posted on November 16, 2015 at 9:06 PM
Good to hear things are picking up for you. I think you will have some fun with the viola. Do not look at it as a side interest, but, rather, as an extra arrow in your quiver that allows you to do more chamber music. That's my experience with it.
From Smith Nathan
Posted on November 17, 2015 at 1:30 AM
Good to hear!
From Krista Moyer
Posted on November 17, 2015 at 3:08 PM
Thanks, Tom. I'm having a great deal of fun with the viola, even if I have frequent "violin moments" with it. It certainly makes it easier to help my boys with their lessons.

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