About a third of the people were there to take fiddle lessons, so one morning before lunch they had a session where fiddle students could practice playing for dancing. All the music was live this weekend - two fiddlers came just to play for the dance workshops and four more were teaching.
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The woman in this picture went to The Other College In The Same Town As Our Alma Mater (TOCITSTAOAM), which is - surprise - the only college in the country where you can take hardanger fiddle lessons for credit. In her playing-for-dance critique, the old-guy Norwegian fiddler told her something I didn't understand about how she should use her bow to make the dancing peppier. I mean, I understood the words (thanks to the translator) but not the content. The old guy is one of the best fiddlers in Norway - he played an absolutely stunning evening concert.
The hardanger fiddle has a very distinctive sound, in part because it has a set of extra strings that run under the bridge and aren't bowed; instead, they vibrate sympathetically. This gives the sound a droney quality, like a bagpipe (but not as grating, don't worry). The other difference is that it's played with almost continuous double stops - with the bow on two strings at once, so one hardanger fiddle sounds like at least two regular violins. To make that easier, the bridge is a little flatter than a normal violin. You can hear a bit of
the old guy's CD on Amazon. And here's my
new favorite CD, from a young fiddler (download a clip of it
here).
2 comments:
He also said some really nice things to her about her playing. Of course I don't remember what they were because I was thinking...I'm tired....but still. Nice to be complimented by a master.
Yeah. She's so freaking talented.
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