Apr 9, 2014

Old or New Violin? Musicians Can't Tell

A centuries-old Stradivarius, or a shiny new violin? Aficionados often say that older instruments sound better, but a scientific study has found that actually, expert players preferred new ones.

Soloists were also unable to tell the difference between new and old violins at any better rate than simple chance, said the study in this week's edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Ten professional violinists were asked to choose from six old and six new Italian violins, and decide which they would pick to replace their own for an upcoming tour.

The musicians were unaware which instruments were old or new, and the new ones were antiqued to give the appearance of age.

They had plenty of time to play each instrument, first in a rehearsal room and later in a concert hall.

Six chose new violins, and four chose old ones.

When researchers compared the violins by preference scores based on a top-four list compiled by each musician, new violins outscored old by a ratio of six to one.

"On average, soloists rated their favorite new violins more highly than their favorite old for playability, articulation, and projection, and at least equal to old in terms of timbre," according to the study.

"Soloists readily distinguished instruments they liked from those they did not but were unable to tell old from new at better than chance levels."

Read more at Discovery News

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