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A $30,000 Violin Like No Other 

MyLuthier - Fine Instruments
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While violin-making has undergone many technical innovations over the last few hundred years, a violin’s appearance and functionality has remained largely unchanged. This is not surprising as the world of western classical music can be described as conservative and we still look up to the old masters as the pinnacle of craftsmanship and sound.
A violin, in the simplest terms, can be described as a wooden box with strings. A very beautiful, refined and deceptively complex box; but still a box nonetheless. Luthiers work at sub-millimeter level precision, and there are hundreds of variables that affect an instrument’s sound, playability and response. This is why when a player wants to adjust their precious instrument, they need to take it to a skilled luthier, even for the simplest modifications. This can be a problem if you are not happy with you violin, but are far away from the nearest respectable violin-maker.
Customisation therefore, hasn’t been a word associated with traditional violins, and players have been strongly encouraged not to alter their instruments themselves for hundreds of years - and for very good reasons.
This is where this Ultralight model violin by Curtin Studios comes in. With a solid worldwide reputation, no living maker has been innovating as much as US based Joseph Curtin.
An ultralight weighs less than a traditional instrument for the same reason a Formula 1 car weighs less than your car: performance. Low-density woods and state-of-the-art acoustical design give the Ultralight a malleable voice of operatic intensity. Play one and you will be heard.
Ultra-low maintenance: The Ultralight is built to resist the kind of damage that is almost inevitable with traditional instruments. The bridge will not warp, nor will the strings dig into their grooves. The fingerboard has an abrasion resistant surface that can be removed and replaced in case of eventual wear. The chinrest assembly does away with the metal clamps that so often damage the top and ribs. Strategically placed veneers prevent the soundpost and bridge from digging into (and eventually cracking) the top. A host of less obvious innovations ensure long-term structural and tonal stability.
It was also designed to give players control over some important aspects of setup and playability: the string-heights above the fingerboard can be changed by inserting a key into the base of the neck. The centering of the fingerboard beneath the strings can also be altered equally. These and other innovations ensure that your Ultralight is kept in optimal adjustment, even when located a continent away from the nearest violin shop.
Need to blend in? Different size micro-mutes allow you to incrementally mellow the timbre to best fit a particular ensemble, or a particular piece of music, or to simply avoid tiring your ear during long hours of practice.
In conclusion, this violin embodies the intersection of tradition and innovation. It takes the timeless elegance and functionality of the classical violin and enhances it with modern technology and design, effectively combining the best of both worlds.

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13 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 28   
@MyLuthierUK
@MyLuthierUK Год назад
Check it out at www.myluthier.co/product/ultralight-violin-by-curtin-studios-2023!
@unusualstrings1669
@unusualstrings1669 Год назад
It's so great to see u guys make a wonderful ultralight light intro. After one years experience with ultralight, I realized that maybe the Formula 1 is not just means the less weight of Mr. Curtin's work. Cos some makers also could made a very light violin and also some old violin's weight less than 410g. Some of those light violin sounds not good enough(less plate thickness). But the ultralight is not just have a thick plate. So my opinion is you can drive the ultralight like a Formula 1 car, the driveability is design for any professional player.
@ShahFareed-y3k
@ShahFareed-y3k 3 месяца назад
Innovative certainly and the 1st of its kind I have come across. The Ultralight has a beautiful inviting sound throughout.My violin's E string height is a shade below 3mm, probably in part due to weather- l prefer 3.5mm. In Lahore so far, I haven't found a reliable luthier to make the requisite adjustments- Ultralight could be the answer. In your opinion, how does its sound compare with traditional violins in the same price range? Can you try different chinrests?
@nelsongrimaldi3926
@nelsongrimaldi3926 10 месяцев назад
Beautiful, heavenly
@MyLuthierUK
@MyLuthierUK 10 месяцев назад
It really is!
@fareedshah4417
@fareedshah4417 9 месяцев назад
The Bach was really nice
@jonhh6918
@jonhh6918 Год назад
When 30k seems like a bargain but you don’t have it 😢 😮
@jonviol
@jonviol 11 месяцев назад
Well, for what its worth , this fiddle is not worth $30K unless you get taken in by Curtin's well practised speel . The asking price has no truth in how well it plays for you . There are fiddles getting sold in auctions for peanuts which with skill and care play as good as the best . Trouble is 'good' is just a valued judgment, an opinion.
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 11 месяцев назад
Isn't that bridge designed really weird? Or am I looking at it incorrectly? The sides are open and the holes are bigger? I don't know.
@uliwidmaier5192
@uliwidmaier5192 8 месяцев назад
New design. Simplified, lighter, more stable, less subject to warping, better at transmitting vibrations.
@karenlozada6006
@karenlozada6006 Год назад
What's the deal with the bridge?
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 11 месяцев назад
​@@jonathanparle8429Yes. Wouldn't adjusting the string height make it harder to finger the notes, as in sore fingers?
@uliwidmaier5192
@uliwidmaier5192 8 месяцев назад
@@patriciajrs46 you can adjust it higher AND lower.
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 8 месяцев назад
@@uliwidmaier5192 Oh. Okay. Thank you.
@jonviol
@jonviol 11 месяцев назад
Lets be honest here ,like many fiddle makers world wide , anything to attract attention and get a sale is worth a try Curtin is up to this . His best traditional instruments are perfectly good enough to be played in concert halls and recording studios yet so are most of all the others getting knocked out weekly. Makers and dealers have a growing unsold stock as stupid prices for new violins are trying to mirror established auction prices and milk the already empty bank accounts of jobbing musicians. Try selling or part exchanging this violin next year for a real Italian Job. You'll faint at the 90% hit . And that's reality . There are dozens of 19thC European 'trade ' violins which sell for pennies ,which carefully chosen then expertly rebuilt with the aid various accoustic aids , play equal to if not better than the supposed 'best'. Why spend £30K ?
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 11 месяцев назад
Probably a good question.
@sorinal1234
@sorinal1234 10 месяцев назад
Could not possibly agree more. As far as tone is concerned, nothing to write home here. Actually, less than that.....
@uliwidmaier5192
@uliwidmaier5192 8 месяцев назад
Lots of inaccuracies here. $30K is cheap for a top-flight instrument. Anything Italian and old, even from third-tier makers, will cost in the six figures. I sold mine a few years ago, from a decent 18th-century Florentine maker, for a ridiculously high sum. With that money, I bought a custom-made violin and viola, as well as several modern bows, all of them both superior and much less expensive than equipment dating to the 1800s and older. You complain that "Makers and dealers have a growing unsold stock as stupid prices for new violins are trying to mirror established auction prices and milk the already empty bank accounts of jobbing musicians." Of course they do. "Established auction prices" are a key part of defining market value. And your idea that one can buy a 19th-century violin for "pennies" and refurbish it to sound as good as the best violins is utterly ridiculous (unless you mean purchasing a top-flight instrument from someone who doesn't know what it is, which is a different case, very rare, and possibly deceptive).
@jonviol
@jonviol 8 месяцев назад
Interesting comment ,and like much of which goes on in the violin business an improper view of value . I have played may high value fiddles which I would not want to own let alon eplay or pay crazy prices for. I have also bought dozens of 'trade violins, usually with gorgeous TripleAAA maple and perfect grain tops which have little commercial value yet are potentially great violins . Often Mirecourt Dresdon or Paris built to a superficial high standard and quite heavy . I take the things apart and carefully retune the tops and backs using scratch and tap techniques to even out the often appalling balance and response . I then fit a new bass bar ,usually 20mm shorter than before and slightly wider and tap check that even up with the tops. Takes a full day usually then reglue the plates back . New fingerboard, pegs ,decent strings and fittings and for less than £1500 all in I have a violin which (usually ) plays so well it sells instantly . One which I did before Covid sold to a player who owns a Stradivari violin ( and a good one at that in looks and tone) to use in rehearsals and long flight concerts . You cannot tell the difference ! I have played Strad Guarneri Storioni Bergonzi Guadagnini and so and so on, they all have faults and differing character and none are any better than each other or than my rebuilds.
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 8 месяцев назад
@@jonviol Wow! Some people might think I shouldn't be impressed, but I am. Good job.
@elianejoly5352
@elianejoly5352 Год назад
Thanks ! Bellissima 🎻👏👩‍🦰
@JOHNL-z1h
@JOHNL-z1h 4 месяца назад
Gorgeous bass, but ruined treble with pitch-noise.
@sorinal1234
@sorinal1234 10 месяцев назад
The tone is indifferent, besides being monochromatic. The "innovations" are superfluous nonsense and ALL of them have been tried already in some form or another. Just another gimmick looking for somebody with more money than sense.
@fragslap5229
@fragslap5229 9 месяцев назад
Yeah, and you'll probably be seeing them coming from China and selling on ebay for three HUBDRED dollars -- AND they'll probably sound almost the SAME.
@uliwidmaier5192
@uliwidmaier5192 8 месяцев назад
Profoundly untrue. A Chinese violin costing under $1,000 will invariably sound very bad. I've never heard one that is even halfway usable.
@fragslap5229
@fragslap5229 Год назад
LOL! Yeah, like the AVERAGE professional violinist has 30 grand to spend on an instrument.
@uliwidmaier5192
@uliwidmaier5192 8 месяцев назад
Well, it's the tool of your trade. Let's say you're a salesperson who has to drive a lot. You need a decent car, which you have to buy yourself. That'll easily cost you $30K. Same here.
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