12/31/2011

The Original Kinder Chinder Chinrest Cover: Large for 3/4 - 4/4 Violin Review

The Original Kinder Chinder Chinrest Cover: Large for 3/4 - 4/4 Violin
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the straps distract me sometimes so i had to use it more as a shoulder rest

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The Kinder Chinder is a lightly padded washable corduroy covering for the chinrest which extends around under the instrument to offer light padding for the shoulder as well. Comes in many different colors (color may not be specified). This is the original Kinder Chinder, not an imitation!

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Yamaha Pacifica Series PAC012DLX Electric Guitar, Old Violin Sunburst Review

Yamaha Pacifica Series PAC012DLX Electric Guitar, Old Violin Sunburst
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It's a good guitar.. the looks is just amazing.. glad i bought it.. the sound is brilliant for an intermediate player like me.. I use Fender Frontman, and the combination is just excellent!

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Solid Body Electric Guitar

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12/30/2011

Bowmaster for Violin or Viola, Large by Super Sensitive Review

Bowmaster for Violin or Viola, Large by Super Sensitive
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After playing violin for years and having several violin teachers my bowhand suffered a personality disorder. Trying to reclaim the beautiful tone I once had, I bought this contraption to help my bow changes, etc. It does work to make the bowhand less stressful.
The cons is that you can't fit your bow into your violin case, so you always will have to remove it before packing it into your instrument. It can interfere with the wiring around your bow and also the pad that is there.

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Perfect for beginners and all hand sizes, this rubber bow grip slides onto the bow to help players position the bow correctly.Great teaching aid!For Violin and Viola.

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Wire Slide-On Violin Mute Review

Wire Slide-On Violin Mute
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When I purchased this mute, I was given an approximate date of delivery. This was very important to me as it was a birthday present. Well, it came in a lot earlier than expected and my granddaughter had it in time for her birthday. Thank you so much for the swift delivery.

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This slide-on wire violin mute mounts onto the strings and slides onto the bridge for use. Made of brass and steel with rubber tubing for protection.

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12/29/2011

Pickup Transducer for Banjo, Mandolin, Guitar, Ukulele, Etc Review

Pickup Transducer for Banjo, Mandolin, Guitar, Ukulele, Etc
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I asked at a well known and respected guitar shop in the San Francisco area about installing a pickup in my Pono tenor ukulele which is very nice except that it projects sound back to the player poorly. The shop wanted to put in a similar style (stick on, unamplified piezo soundboard transducer) Fishman pickup for $175. That seemed unreasonable for a $300 instrument. So I found this pickup, read the one review, and figured I'd get it and try it out. Worst case if I didn't like it, I could just pull it out and have the Fishman installed and use this transducer on other instruments in emergencies. Well, it was easy to install and the ukulele sounds great when plugged into our Roland AC-90 acoustic amp. I don't feel like I'm missing anything except the brand name recognition. Try it. I bet you'll like it too.

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This is the perfect solution if you need to amplify your instrument and do not want to break the bank but still want a professional setup without having to call in a Luthier. This little transducer is a "hot" pickup and you will be very impressed with the quality at such an inexpensive price. Just mount the transducer inside your instrument with the supplied double stick tape and run the 1/4" jack out a hole that you make in your ideal location and thats it (Transducer has 12" cable to Jack). You can amplify your mandolin, banjo, violin, ukulele, guitar, bass, viola, cello, and just about anything else you can think of. This unit works with a standard 1/4" plug. You can connect it to your PA, mixer, or amplifier. It's that easy to have a professional look and the amplified sound your looking for at a very small price.

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Oscar Schmidt UC3 Concert Ukulele Case Review

Oscar Schmidt UC3 Concert Ukulele Case
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There comes a point in your ukulele playing career when you'll decide it's time to bring your joyously uptempo act out of the home and into the world. However, there are dangers that lurk out there such as walls, baggage carriers, and friends with hammers that can very quickly turn your instrument of choice into a heap of wood and string.
And like any hockey player or woeful parent-to-be will tell you, protection is of utmost importance.
**ENOUGH CUTE BANTER, HOW IS IT:**
Step in one of the very few vinyl hard-shell case I could find here on Amazon, the Oscar Schmidt UC3 Concert Uke Case (or "the Schmidts" as I affectionately call it). The construction quality is nearly identical to what you'd find on a hard-shell case for a guitar, with a solid brownish vinyl exterior and metal buckles. Inside, the case is roomy but padded well enough to protect pretty much any Concert sized Uke. I myself own a Lanikai traditional shaped uke and a Pineapple-shaped Flea Uke and both fit surprisingly well. There's a small box under the neck for your tuner and string needs, as you'd probably find on any other case.
I could definitely see this case being checked for plane trips, but then again, it's so small I don't know why it couldn't just be carry-on. It's rugged and light, although not so durable that I would recommend people use it as a cricket bat.
**OVERALL**
Ultimately I decided of the two evils, I'd rather be mistaken for lugging a midget guitar with the Schmidts than be mistaken for yet another traveling violinist (other cases won't have the curves, as you've probably seen). It'll fit most, if not all, CONCERT Ukes snugly and give you plenty of protection for any trips you might be planning. Plus, you'll look cool.
Yes, there are no pockets for cords or paper, but I'm sure you'll use your astute powers of intellect to carry a bag on your back. This is for protecting your uke and making you look cool, not for protecting your chord sheets for "I'm Yours" and "Somewhere over the rainbow."
So yes, recommended.


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Uke Concert Case

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12/28/2011

Foam Shoulder Rest for 4/4 Violin - Firm Review

Foam Shoulder Rest for 4/4 Violin - Firm
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Probably good fit for an adult, but something like this is usually more for a beginning student (typically children). I had to spend a lot of time modifying this to fit my 7 year old student who had managed to break/lose 2 other more expensive shoulder rests. I will be going a different direction in the future. At least it didn't cost much to try.

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These contoured foam rests easily attach with a rubber band and are available in six sizes and firm or soft.

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Heavy Rubber Practice Mute for Viola Review

Heavy Rubber Practice Mute for Viola
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A little small for my bridge (I play a 16.5 inch viola), but it fit my brother's 16 without a problem. After a little stretching, it fits a little better. I may cut a bit out of the side so it actually sits on the bridge. But the muting is great, and even with a tight fit, it doesn't seem to harm my bridge at all.

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This Heavy Rubber Practice Mute for Viola greatly reduces volume for apartment and late night practicing. Lightweight and safe. Five-prong.

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12/27/2011

Hill 4/4 Violin E String - Medium Gauge - Steel - Ball-End Review

Hill 4/4 Violin E String - Medium Gauge - Steel - Ball-End
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I have been very happy with my purchase of the Hill "E" string. The rest of the strings are Violin-O , and I've found that they complement each other well. It gives my violin a nice, sweet "sing-song" tone that I am very happy with.

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The famous "Hill" E 4/4 violin E string, from W.E. Hill and Sons, is a sought after steel E string, considered a standard my many musicians. Made in England.

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Rogue Violin Bass Gig Bag Review

Rogue Violin Bass Gig Bag
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I recently purchased a violin bass and needed a gig bag for which I bought this one. The case may be stylish, but it is in no way rugged. The nylon casing is equal to that of a windbreaker, and the foam padding is so thin that I can easily pinch my fingers together through one layer of the case. This case offers little protection for an instrument. When is a gig bag not a gig bag? When it's a stylish dust cover.

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While Rogues Violin Bass Gig Bag is designed first and foremost to protect your instrument, its also built to be stylish and durable. Features backpack-style straps for easy transport. Made with ballistic nylon and foam padding. Includes zippered pouch for carrying extra strings, tuner, etc.

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12/26/2011

Thomastik Dominant 4/4 Size Violin Strings, 4/4 Set, Steel E String, Ball End Review

Thomastik Dominant 4/4 Size Violin Strings, 4/4 Set, Steel E String, Ball End
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The strings work great on my violin and when I emailed Thomastik Enfield about what rosin I should use, they sent me some free rosin they were sampling. They are not very loud, but my solid spruce violin is plenty loud for the music I play.

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Comparable in sound to gut, without gut's disadvantage. These strings have a highly flexible, multi-strand nylon core and cater to artists who feel uncomfortable with steel strings. The resounding success of the Dominant string owes a lot to its similarity in tone and response to gut strings, without gut's inherent drawbacks. The sound of the Dominant string is full and mellow, yet rich in overtones. Its radiance, its ability to project sound without being metallic, comes to the fore both in arco and pizzicato. Other advantages are Dominant's effortless response to intricate fingering and its tuning stability even under extreme atmospheric conditions. But Dominant's beauty of tone is not as long-lasting as that of a steel string, a price the discerning musician will be prepared to pay for this quality of sound. Dominant strings should be changed at appropriate intervals to ensure continuity of tone color.

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Boss TU-80C Chromatic Tuner & Metronome Review

Boss TU-80C Chromatic Tuner and Metronome
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I like the accuracy of the tuner, and it "hears" my acoustic guitar quite well if I put it on the music stand so that it's angled toward me. As a metronome, however, it leaves much to be desired: (1) the volume is not adjustable and I consider it not loud enough, (2) it makes a cheesy electronic chirp instead of a mechanical-sounding knock as some of the electronic metronomes can, and (3) the rhythm is "dotted," i.e., it puts a milder electronic chirp in between the "main chirps" and there's no way to turn it off (but this can be somewhat remedied by setting it to 1-4 time).

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The BOSS TU-80 brings super-accurate LCD tuning to musicians at a very affordable price, while adding unique high-end features like a built-in metronome and Accu-Pitch�. The pocket-sized TU-80 runs on batteries and can tune almost any instrument, thanks to a chromatic tuning mode and ultra wide tuning range. It even tunes 7-string guitars and 6-string basses--putting the TU-80 in a class all its own.

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12/25/2011

Cremona SV-100 Premier Novice Violin, 1/10-Size Review

Cremona SV-100 Premier Novice Violin, 1/10-Size
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I bought this violin for my sister's 4th birthday. Very happy with it! It came in very nice condition. Case is REALLY nice. The bridge is a bit high but I plan on having it filed down. Not a professional violin, but definately good enough for a 4 year old! Overall, very good.

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The cost of getting started as an aspiring violin player never became more easy. The SV-100 1/10 successfully leaps over all boundaries of cost and sound. A great all-around value.

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SKB Violin 1/4 Deluxe Review

SKB Violin 1/4 Deluxe
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It was delivered fast and safe way.
The case is not firm compared to my old one.
But it works well so far.

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Violin 1/4 Deluxe

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12/24/2011

Comfort Shoulder Cradle 1/2-3/4 Violin Black & Gold Plastic Base Junior Shoulder Rest Review

Comfort Shoulder Cradle 1/2-3/4 Violin Black and Gold Plastic Base Junior Shoulder Rest
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My daughter has been using this shoulder rest for the past 1.5 years. It is easy to attach to the violin and does not fall off like the 'clip-on' type. It fits on her 1/4, 1/2 and 3/4 size violins (she is growing!). I would recommend it to others.

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The Junior Comfort Shoulder Cradle is an enhanced violin rest designed to provide greater comfort to violinists. It was developed based on human shoulder structure and theories of biomechanics. It helps set the locality of the instrument and ensure better support and grip to violinists while enhancing the beautiful tone of the instrument which makes the timbre sweeter and mellower. Young, learning violinists develop correct posture for a more graceful and enriched music experience. This innovative shoulder rest is ergonomically designed for both comfort and stability. It features an extremely comfortable foam pad and shock cord attached for no-slip security.

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Molinari 3/4 Size Student Violin with Super-Sensitive Strings (Wood Bow, Canvas Case) Review

Molinari 3/4 Size Student Violin with Super-Sensitive Strings (Wood Bow, Canvas Case)
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Violin arrived yesterday. Fingerboard is not attached straight(G string is barely over the fingerboard.) Bow is very cheaply made--hairs are sparse & 2 were already falling off when we opened the case. The strings are not angled right on the bridge--nearly impossible to play A string without including D or E!...Will need new bridge if cannot adjust. List price of 450 must be a joke, but for 155 I guess it'll do for a beginner.
UPDATE: The violin teacher said the violin's problems were unacceptable. We returned it to amazon & received a no-hassle refund.

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Start your student on an upgraded quality instrument that you can count on.Your teacher will thank you for purchasing a product with Super Sensitve Strings providing clear bright tonality and many years of playing enjoyment. This Molinari ALLIEVO SERIES violin features a nitro-finish, one piece spruce top, maple back & sides with ebony type fingerboard, pegs, chinrest, endpin, & alloy tailpiece.The 4 fine tuners make it easier for beginners to tune the strings. The super-sensitive strings provide a warm, full-bodied sound, and are often recommended by music teachers.Includes a round horsehair wood bow andcanvas zipper case with shoulder strap.Available in 4 sizes, for small children up to adults:1/4, 1/2, 3/4, 4/4

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12/23/2011

NS Design WAV 4 Violin Black Review

NS Design WAV 4 Violin Black
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Overall this is going to be a favorable Review; however, I certainly have a few reservations and then some positive advice.
Firstly, if you are in love with the sound of an acoustic violin... even a cheap basic student violin with steel strings... then the WAV 4, straight out of the box will terrify you with its heavy coarse raw electrical sound. But since the WAV 4 is `passive', that is, it doesn't have a built-in preamplifier and some elaborate onboard set of equalizers and effects switches and knobs, then you will almost certainly have to get or already have some kind of an pre-amp and amplification system. Depending on the controls on your amplifier/preamplifier, you might be able to minimize a great deal of that buzzy electronic sound character of the WAV 4.
My own setup may be unnecessarily complicated. You see, I use the same Input Cord for everything I play - a couple of electric guitars, an electric bass, and now the electric Violin. Changing instruments just takes resetting a few dials. I use a Bass Amplifier as my Preamp Stage, bringing the signal out from the Headphone Jack. Then it goes into a Alesis Nanoverb 16 Bit Digital Effects Unit, and then goes through a Peavey PV6 Mixer with LO Med and Hi adjusts on the channel. The Final Stage is runs to my headphones. I could probably pull the Bass Amp out of the setup and let the Alesis Digital Effects Processor handle the job of being a preamp, but sometimes it is good to leave well enough alone.
It turns out that the WAV 4 Violin likes about the same settings as my Bass Guitar, and for about the same reason. The worse Electronic Sound comes from high frequency components riding on the sound from the lowest strings. Turning the Treble of the WAV 4 all the way down brings out a fairly natural sound on the A and E Strings (the two highest strings on a violin), but so much high frequency stuff still rides on the G and D strings that one hardly suspects that these are supposed to be low notes. So on my first stage of amplification going through the bass amplifier, I turn down the Medium and the High filters and set up the Low knob to pass more Low than anything else, and I do the same with the Mixer Controls. Yes, it does knock some of the final volume off of the high strings, but plenty of that A and E high pitch gets through, so it is not really a problem. Besides, just a touch of Treble on the WAV 4 brings back plenty of A and E String volume.
It turns out that the rather affordable Alesis Nanoverb Effects Processor (I think I got it for a bit more than a hundred dollars) is just the right thing to have if you actually LIKE electric violin sound. I was able to adjust it for some really nice professional sounding effects - chorus with echo and all of that. But one can dial down these effects so they are barely noticeable while still being a bit helpful. For instance, a slight bit of `chorus', whether linear or non-linear, helps to fill in the Low Strings, giving some of the roundness back to the sound that is robbed by the electronics
I was not able to totally drive out the electronic sound and arrive at a perfect acoustic sound, but I got satisfied enough so that I did not have to throw the whole heap into the trash can. One will never be invited to play with a chamber orchestra or with an unplugged folk music recital, so keep your real violin if you still want all of that. However, when playing with an Electric Band, one can get close enough to the acoustic sound to satisfy for violin parts in songs that are supposed to have that natural sound. It might not be a perfect fit but remember its only rock and roll.
This sound stage setup work took about 5 hours. Then I had to get used to actually playing the WAV 4 Violin. It doesn't play like your standard violin. The Chin Rest is different, and there is that god-awful Shoulder Rest contraption, which turned out to be actually quite a diamond in the rough after I learned to deal with it (more on this below). Anyway, you can't just stick the WAV 4 under your chin and go like its your old fiddle.
The WAV 4 is heavy. It's a block of wood, hallowed out only as much as necessary to put in the Bridge Mounts, the String Things, and the Pickup Jack. Then the metal brackets for the Chin Rest and the Shoulder Rest are heavy enough to mount a sixteen inch cannon onto a battle ship. Given all this weight, the Shoulder Rest would need to be perfect so that one would be able to play without constantly needing to use the left hand for manually holding up and repositioning the violin, when, really, the job of the left hand should be exclusively taken up with dancing fingers upon the strings. But there was just no getting the Should Rest right... for the first several hours...
But I kept at it. The Cushion Part of the Shoulder rest is rubber foam glued on this thick curved metal blade, curved nicely on one side, but apparently shaped to go over the shoulder on the shoulder-most side, and so it guts inward. This is great if you play the violin absolutely sideways, with the violin positioned exactly over the shoulder, forcing your head around to create a permanent crick in the neck. Yeah, yeah... that is how one is supposed to play. All the Best Schools constantly reiterate that the Best Way must necessarily always be the most uncomfortable way. If what they instruct isn't hated and resented, then it can't possible be technically `correct'. However, in the Real World, a great many violin players fall away from such standards of school house perfection, and we play with the violin set more forward. Some people play the violin right under the chin, head and eyes forward. Well, for those Non-Conformists the Shoulder Rest jutting blade stabs them in the chest - giving them the punishment they so rightfully deserve! But really, that's not what they spent their money for, is it?
I was reading on the Ned Steinberger Site (NS Design apparently stands for Ned Steinberger Design) and I saw promotions for their Custom Shoulder Rest, which is flexible. Apparently they had received hundreds of thousands of complaints regarding their standard Shoulder Rests and so they redesigned the Shoulder Rest, but they are still selling Violins with the Old `Stabber/Punishment' Shoulder Rests. Anyway, I thought that my Shoulder Rest was one of the new Flexible ones (I should learn to read websites more carefully), but when I tried to bend it with my fingers, there was no give at all. So I tried to tweak it a little with a BFH (Very Big Hammer) and it snapped. Really, it was not malleable in the least. You would think it would bend a little before breaking, but, no. after five or six very sound blows - Snap! But the good news is that it is no longer stabbing me. The rubber pad glued to the bottom of the thing holds the pieces together. Anyway, I have emails out to Ned Steinberger and Johnson Strings asking about what I have to do to get one of the new Custom Shoulder Rests.
Well, even after breaking the Shoulder Rest which represented some progress in fixing the inherently flawed design, I still could not dial it in to the point where I could play the violin for longer than 20 seconds without having to stop to reposition the thing. The weight of the thing was making it inexorably slide down the chest. And constantly supporting the weight of this Battleship Violin... well, it was giving me a upper back ache and muscle fatigue in my left arm. I have to admit that I was getting a bit discouraged, but then I had this wonderful inspiration!
The Bar and Tee arrangement of the Shoulder Rest provided an excellent hook up spot for a simple strap that one could wear around one's neck. What I did was I tied off my Scapular Cord (A Scapular is a Catholic Religious thing that just happened to hang from a thick cord I had woven from 9 strands of wool yarn - a rather nice piece of rope, really) to a length that would just barely fit over my head and I passed it through the Chin Side of the Shoulder Rest Blade and over the Fastening Knob, and now all the weight of the violin hangs from my neck on that neck strap. It worked wonderfully well! I was finally able to get in a good practice, with the violin staying put long enough to warm up on the fingering and decide that, yes, indeed, it was an actual violin I was playing. And, with the Shoulder Rest looped through the Neck Cord, one does not need to put the WAV 4 Violin down... between songs, or rosining the bow, or whatever. One simply lets go and the smallish violin simply hangs down on one's chest, like a big jewelry pendant. If you wish to make your own neck strap, then any heavy cord or strap looped to be about 23 inches in diameter, just fitting over your head, would be suitable.
Oh, the WAV 4 Violin comes with the Bridge adjusted very low. I used those screwdriver adjusts to bring up the Bridge a bit to help with the kind of string modulation you do by wiggling your fingers on the string... if the bridge is too low, you lose a lot of that effect.
So, in summation, the WAV 4 probably sounds no more "electronic" than any of the other Electric Violins out there, and once you learn to strap the Shoulder Rest around your neck, then that horrible monstrosity of a Shoulder Rest actually becomes a positive attribute for selecting WAV 4 from amongst all of its competition. It makes me think of objections I have heard regarding Fender's FV-3 Electric Violin - that it was overly heavy and constantly needed to be repositioned. Well, with its standard acoustic style Shoulder Rest, there's not much that one can do about the weight - there is nothing that I can see to tie onto or hook up to in order to provide the Neck Strap relief available so easily on the WAV 4 Violin. Such is...Read more›

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4 String Solid-body electric violin with Polar pickup

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