Yes, the basic principle is the same, one important difference being that guitars have frets (strips of metal which divide the neck into discrete pitches of the scale) and violins have no frets (which gives the player the advantage of having complete control over determining the pitch, but also the disadvantage that he gets no help in determing where the that pitch is). Thanks for the question.
Has it to be hard for be switching from euphonium to violin? My teacher says that You've got to be kid to learn this instrument, but I know about a person who switched from a foresthorn (or who do you say it on English? is it frenchhorn or are they to different instruments?) to a violin and his 20. I am 18 and thinking about switching to it. What do you think?
It is hard to say how you would progress on the violin, but my advice would be: try! Maybe you can rent a violin or borrow one for a while, so that you can see how it goes before you make the investment of buying a new instrument or quitting your present instrument. Give yourself some time to try it out. Thanks for your comment.
yay, another series! looks like i am going to have to dig up my old guitar out of my closet and dust it off(and actually learn how to play the old thing)! hahaha!
The left handed technic is the same on the violin? probably yes, isn't it?
TabithaSts 3 years ago
Yes, the basic principle is the same, one important difference being that guitars have frets (strips of metal which divide the neck into discrete pitches of the scale) and violins have no frets (which gives the player the advantage of having complete control over determining the pitch, but also the disadvantage that he gets no help in determing where the that pitch is). Thanks for the question.
PianoWallaby 3 years ago
And another questiion.
Has it to be hard for be switching from euphonium to violin? My teacher says that You've got to be kid to learn this instrument, but I know about a person who switched from a foresthorn (or who do you say it on English? is it frenchhorn or are they to different instruments?) to a violin and his 20. I am 18 and thinking about switching to it. What do you think?
TabithaSts 3 years ago
It is hard to say how you would progress on the violin, but my advice would be: try! Maybe you can rent a violin or borrow one for a while, so that you can see how it goes before you make the investment of buying a new instrument or quitting your present instrument. Give yourself some time to try it out. Thanks for your comment.
PianoWallaby 3 years ago
yay, another series! looks like i am going to have to dig up my old guitar out of my closet and dust it off(and actually learn how to play the old thing)! hahaha!
TGracia93 3 years ago
Thanks for the nice comment! And, yeah, dust off your guitar!
PianoWallaby 3 years ago