Woof Notes
Woof Notes
16:50 on Monday, September 15, 2003
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(Andrew)
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Well, I`ve played the violin for 5 years now. I`m at Gr. 9 level, but I`m using a horrible insturment. The thing is, when I go to a music shop to test insturments, I dont know how to hear "woof" notes. My friend showed me once, but I cant seem to replicate it. What I know is:
You have to play a bunch of notes, acending, on a string to the top of the fingerboard. If the note is a "woof" note, then it wont sound open.
Does this sound correct, and if not, how should I test for woof notes?
Thanks
Andrew
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Re: Woof Notes
18:56 on Monday, September 15, 2003
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Re: Woof Notes
22:07 on Monday, September 15, 2003
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(Andrew)
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What exactly does a wolf note sound like? I`ve heard many variations trying to explain it, but they all seem to vary
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Re: Wolf Notes
07:00 on Tuesday, September 16, 2003
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(Martin Milner)
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Hi Andrew,
Not every violin will actually have wolf notes or tones, so you may not be hearing them because they`re not there. They`re more common in cellos and double basses. There is a cheap fix using a wolf note eliminator if you like the instrument in all other aspects.
I understand you`re planning to buy a new violin and want to avoid possible wolf notes? The easiest way is just to play all your scales, then a couple of pieces. If there`s a bad note in there, you`ll hear it.
More common on a violin is a dull note, one that just doesn`t sing like the rest. Common ones are B on the A string, or an F# on the D string. If these sound dull and fade away too quickly, try another violin.
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