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Vertical viola

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vertical viola
Other namesAlto Violin[1]
Classification
Playing range
Related instruments

The vertical viola, alto violin or upright viola, is a stringed instrument with the range of a viola that is played vertically in the manner of a cello.[1] It is the fourth-highest member of the violin octet (after the treble, soprano, and mezzo violins).

The standard viola is about as big as can conveniently be played under the chin. The physicist/instrument maker Carleen Hutchins,[2] working during the 1960s, reasoned that a viola played vertically could be made larger, and that a larger viola might produce a better sound. Based on principles of instrument design she had observed in top-quality existing instruments, Hutchins designed a viola about 6 cm (2 12 in) longer than the regular viola, intended to be played vertically like a cello. (Despite Hutchins's original intention, a few violists have played her viola horizontally.)

The fundamental acoustic principle underlying the vertical viola is that the main body resonance (resonance of the wood of the instrument) should match the second-highest string, and the main cavity resonance (resonance of the air the instrument contains) should match the third-highest string. On a viola these strings are D and G, respectively. The standard viola is too small to achieve this matchup of string frequency to resonance frequency (unless it has been modified w/ a hole-in-the-heart design).

The same design principle was used by Hutchins to design a complete family of eight stringed instruments, commonly called the violin octet, of which the vertical viola has been the most successful. Since all of the instruments are designed based on the violin, Hutchins gave the name alto violin to her vertical viola design.

Hutchins's instrument has attracted admiration for its power and beauty of tone. The cellist Yo-Yo Ma has employed a Hutchins vertical viola to perform and record Béla Bartók's Viola Concerto.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b Nardolillo, Jo (2014-03-14). All Things Strings: An Illustrated Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-8108-8444-1. Vertical viola. A variation on the viola designed by Carleen Hutchins as part of the new violin family. The vertical viola is 2.5 inches longer than a standard viola and is held vertically to be played like a cello. Also called an alto violin...
  2. ^ Campbell, Murray; Greated, Clive A.; Myers, Arnold (2004). Musical Instruments: History, Technology, and Performance of Instruments of Western Music. Oxford University Press. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-19-816504-0. Carleen Hutchins, the American physicist and violin maker, has designed a viola whose principal body resonances are in the same relative positions as those of the violin, but even this instrument has a body length of 510 mm, rather long to hold on the arm.
  3. ^ "The New York Album". Gramophone. No. 3. 1995. Retrieved 23 February 2024. As to the Bartok Concerto, Ma's decision to use a vertical viola, or alto violin (a large viola fitted with a long endpin and held like a cello) stems from his apparent dissatisfaction with the registral displacement: of the authorized cello version (recorded by Janos Starker on RCA, 3/92).
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