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22 Feb 2012

On the road to creating an affordable master instrument

- 9 Dec 2011
By Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (EMPA)   
Page 1 of 3

New financial support for the "fungus violin"

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image IMAGE: The blocks of wood are stored under controlled conditions in a climate chamber at Empa. Michael Baumgartner, the master violin maker from Basel, will later use the wood to create...

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What talented young violinist has not dreamt of playing on a Stradivarius, that non plus ultra of the violin-maker's art? Unfortunately, of course, these instruments are rare, and well beyond the budget of most musicians. "Imitations" of similar tonal quality are therefore very sought-after, and the Empa researcher Francis Schwarze has managed to achieve this feat with the help of a Swiss violin maker. By treating the wood with Physisporinus vitreus, a white-rot fungus which attacks and destroys certain structures in spruce, he was able to create a material with extraordinarily good tonal qualities. So good in fact that the new "fungus violin" put its own role model in the shade. At a specialist conference in 2009 two of the new instruments were compared in a blind test to a Stradivarius and both the jury of experts and the conference audience judged their sound to better than that of the violin made by the Italian Master of Cremona.

 
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