So much for conventional wisdom: Do Stradivarius Violins really sound better?

Hmmm….

it appears that concert violinists cannot tell from the sound alone whether they are playing a 300-year-old Stradivarius or an instrument made last week. And, for playing quality alone, the virtuoso will opt for the modern one when asked which fiddle they would like to take home.

These discordant findings emerge from experiments by Claudia Fritz, a researcher at the University of Paris, at an international violin competition in Indianapolis in 2010. She asked 21 musicians to play six different violins, three modern instruments and three by Italian maestros – one made by Guarneri del Gesu around 1740, and two made in Antonio Stradivari’s workshop around 1700.

The plot thickens further.

The researchers could find no link between the age and value of the violins and how they were rated by the violinists. The three old instruments had a combined value of $10m, a hundred times that of the modern violins. “They are beautiful instruments, but the prices are insane,” Fritz said. “The old versus new issue doesn’t make any sense.

“It doesn’t matter if the violin’s old or new, all that matters is whether it’s a good violin or a bad violin. Many modern violin makers are doing a great job.” One shortcoming of the study was that the violinists were asked to rate a particular instrument’s projection, how well its sound travels, themselves. Another was that only a few violins were tested.

But, as the researchers note, this latter was perhaps unavoidable. “Numbers of subjects and instruments were small because it is difficult to persuade the owners of fragile, enormously valuable old violins to release them for extended periods into the hands of blindfolded strangers.”

Kai-Thomas Roth, secretary of the British Violin Making Association, said that double blind tests, where neither experimenter nor musician knows which violin is played, had already shown people cannot distinguish a modern violin from a priceless work of art.

“There’s some myth-making that helps old instruments,” Thomas said. “If you give someone a Stradivari and it doesn’t work for them, they’ll blame themselves and work hard at it until it works.

So much for conventional wisdom.

Since this is a post about violins, a short violin solo by Anastasia Khitruck.

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Van Halen News: Track Listing for New Album, Tour Dates and a classic VH video

First up, track listing for the new Van Halen album A Different Kind Of Truth:

1. Tattoo
2. She’s The Woman
3. You and Your Blues
4. China Town
5. Blood and Fire
6. Bullethead
7. As Is
8. Honeybabysweetiedoll
9. The Trouble With Never
10. Outta Space
11. Stay Frosty
12. Big River
13. Beats Workin’

Album will be released 2/7/2012

Tour kicks off Feb 18th in Louisville, KY. Auburn Hills, MI is the band’s 2nd stop on Feb 20th.

Here is another classic VH video. Van Halen covering ZZ Top’s Beer Drinkers & Hell Raisers.

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Van Halen news update plus a classic VH Video

With all the depressing news in the world today, here is something that really cheers me up (since I’m a big time VH fan). Info shamelessly lifted from VHND:

JANUARY 3rd: 
*CONCERT DATES & CITIES ANNOUNCED for first wave of tour

JANUARY 10th: 
*FIRST SINGLE PREMIERE
*FIRST MUSIC VIDEO PREMIERE
*CONCERT TICKETS GO ON SALE

FEBRUARY 7th: 
NEW ALBUM RELEASE DATE

I think I’ll have to head out and catch show when Van Halen gets to Motown (or, more likely, Auburn Hills).

And to get fired up for the upcoming tour, here is a vintage VH video (the video quality isn’t the best, but the performance is great) of the band covering Elvis in Brazil back in ’83.

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Too cool.