Violins | Electric
Mira played until her fingers ached. Then she played some more.
The journey of the electric violin began in the early 20th century, paralleling the rise of the electric guitar. As jazz bands grew louder, violinists found themselves drowned out by brass sections and drums. electric violins
Buying an is only half the battle. You need to amplify it correctly. Mira played until her fingers ached
By the end, her case held seventy-three dollars and a half-eaten granola bar. But that wasn’t the point. As jazz bands grew louder, violinists found themselves
models that fit in a backpack [15, 24] to the pulse-lit acrylic Ted Brewer
There is a common misconception that an acoustic violin with a clip-on microphone is an "electric violin." Technically, that is an amplified acoustic violin.
model features a chest-support system (no chin rest needed!) and can go up to 7 strings, essentially turning the violin into a fretted guitar-violin hybrid What the Experts Say Learning Curve