domenica 27 settembre 2009

Viola d'amore bow


Blind-of-a-Kind



This blind head is the ornament of a valuable Viola d’Amore, a OOAK piece on a OOAk baroque instrument. Her dimensions are about the same as a 16” doll’s head. She’s blind because love is blind, or maybe she’s an allegory of Music… don’t know. More to come on my friend Mauro’s new blog, address here below. OOAK doll artists, take note(s)!
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Questa testina cieca è l’ornamento di una preziosa Viola d’Amore, pezzo unico su uno strumento barocco unico. Le sue dimensioni sono circa quelle della testa di una bambola da 16”. È cieca perché l’amore è cieco, o forse è un’allegoria della Musica… non so. Ne saprete di più sul nuovo blog del mio amico Mauro, all’indirizzo qui sotto. Artisti OOAK, prendete note!

Published April, 24th, 2008 by Daniela Fabrizia Ferrando in Doll Cult-ure

http://dollculture.blogspot.com/

domenica 13 settembre 2009

On Dangerous Ground: the Viola d'amore in the movies


by Elaine Fine

Sunday, August 17, 2008



Imagine my surprise last night when the opening credits of this 1951 Ida Lupino-Robert Ryan Film Noir Michael brought home read "Music by Bernard Herrmann--Viola d'Amour played by Virginia Majewski." I have to admit that I spent the first "act" of On Dangerous Ground, because of my own particular musical orientation, waiting to hear what Herrmann did with the viola d'amore, and waiting for the appearance of Ida Lupino. I was intrigued and impressed by both when they finally appeared together. Hermann does not use the viola d'amore as a harmonic or polyphonic instrument, but he takes advantage of the instrument's range and colors in each of its distinct registers. To the unsuspecting ear it sounds like a viola much of the time, with exciting escapes to the high register and surprising forays into the low register.

Majewski (1907-1995), who I know from chamber music recordings that she made with Heifetz and Primrose, and from a 1990 interview by Roland Kato in the newsletter of the Viola d'Amore Society of America (Volume 19/2, 1995) was a very active studio musician in Los Angeles. She came to Los Angeles in 1938 as the principal violist of the MGM Studio Orchestra, and was involved with the viola d'amore in the 1930s, during its first 20th-century "Renaissance." Majewski was never sure why Herrmann wrote this music for the viola d'amore. She apparently recorded this score on a borrowed instrument: on the morning that she got the call to do the recording session, she found that when she opened her case, her viola d'amore had split its scroll (one of the dangerous consequences of keeping an 18th-century instrument at modern pitch). That she could play so beautifully on a borrowed instrument without any notice (she was probably sight reading) is quite a feat. Herrmann insisted that Majewski get solo billing in the credits for her performance, sharing his "card" with her.


http://musicalassumptions.blogspot.com/2008/08/on-dangerous-ground-viola-damore-in.html


mercoledì 9 settembre 2009

Bows



James Tubbs, viola bow (inscribed: Made by James Tubbs in his 85th year, 1919)


François Jude Gaulard, viola bow


Christian Friedrich Wilhelm Knopf, viola bow


Dominique Henry, viola bow








Viola d'amore by Natale Carletti, Pieve di Cento (Ferrara), 1965





www.tarisio.com