Thanks for that it was interesting. Seth

--- On Thu, 7/3/08, Thomas A.Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Thomas A.Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [HG] BBC Article on Why a Stradivarius Sounds Good
To: "HG List" <hg@hurdygurdy.com>
Date: Thursday, July 3, 2008, 4:29 PM

Wood density key to violin sound
By Matt McGrath
Science correspondent, BBC News

The unique sounds of a Stradivarius violin may come down to the  
density of the wood it is made from.

Scientists say the patterns of the grain are markedly different from  
modern instruments.

It is believed that the seasonal growth of trees in the early  
seventeenth century was affected by a mini-Ice Age.

Stradivarius had the benefit of wood that was produced in conditions  
that have not been repeated since then, the journal Plos One reports.




It could be a difference in climate when the trees were harvested, or  
it could also be that the masters used some secret treatment on the wood
Dr Berend Stoel, Leiden University
The work by a team from the Netherlands represents the latest finding  
in ongoing efforts to understand the sound quality of these violins.
The musical instruments created in Cremona, Italy, by Antonio  
Stradivari in the early 1700s have acquired a matchless reputation  
for tone and clarity down the centuries.
Around six hundred of the violins, violas, guitars and cellos made by  
the Italian master survive; on the rare occasion they come up for  
auction they sell for millions.
There have been several suggestions as to why these instruments sound  
so good and why the modern world has thoroughly failed to replicate  
their quality.
It was once argued that Stradivari and others used wood from ancient  
churches or that they added a mysterious ingredient to the wood or  
used techniques that have since been lost.
But modern technology first developed to help people suffering from  
emphysema may have unlocked the riddle of these fiddles.
'Even growth'

Researchers at the Leiden University Medical Center in the  
Netherlands had developed a computer programme that analysed Computed  
Tomographic (CT) scans to see how effective certain treatments were  
in patients with emphysema.

One of the scientists involved was Dr Berend Stoel, a violinist with  
a keen interest in the secrets of the Stradivarius.

He adapted his program to work with violins and scanned five of the  
priceless instruments from Cremona as well as seven modern violins.

They show that while the overall density of the different instruments  
was similar, the 300-year-old instruments showed evidence of more  
even growth in the summer and winter. Dr Stoel explained its  
importance: "If you look at any piece of wood, as long as it's not  
tropical, you have these year rings.

"The differences between these rings are the density - the wood is  
more dense during the winter than it is during the faster growing  
period of the summer. That pattern is influencing the resonating  
quality of the wood."

The modern violins, according to Dr Stoel, show greater differences  
in their seasonal growth patterns. The older ones had more even  
grain, reflecting similar growth periods in winter and summer.

Climate question

Since differentials in wood density impact factors such as  
"vibrational efficacy" and the production of sound, this discovery  
may explain the superiority of the violins produced by Stradivari and  
his contemporaries.

Other researchers who have studied the activity of the Sun have  
pointed to a mini-Ice Age that occurred in the early 1700s.

Experts say that this reduced solar activity, called the Maunder  
Minimum, could have hampered the regular growth of trees.

Temperatures in Western Europe dropped by between 0.5C to 2C. When  
trees grow in cold conditions like this their wood is denser.

However Dr Stoel is not entirely convinced that the magic of the  
Stradivarius is down to climatic conditions.

"We found these differences. But where do they come from? It could be  
a difference in climate when the trees were harvested, or it could  
also be that the masters used some secret treatment on the wood, or  
it could be that over the course of three hundred years the violins  
just gets better in tone," he explained.

"It's possible that you could use this CT technique to select  
different types of wood that would be more like the wood that  
Stradivarius used. But if you are a lousy violin maker and use the  
best wood, you will still end up with a very bad violin."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/7484975.stm

Published: 2008/07/02 10:38:38 GMT

© BBC MMVIII

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