The Right Way To Tune A Violin

The classical  has four strings. These are tuned in fifths, meaning that each string has a five-note interval from each other. The first string, the thinnest and the one lowest when the violin is held at playing position, is the E string. The relatively thicker string, the second one above the E string, is the A string. The third one above the A string noticeably thicker than E and A string is the D string; and the last and the thickest one above it is the G string. These strings have graduated sounds which means to state that the thinner the string the higher the pitch and the thicker the string, the lower pitch and the more sonorous the sound. To tune a violin, the player has to begin with the A string. Tuning in the A string first is the most common practice because aside from it being an open string, the A string is conveniently stable enough, This means to say that even if the player is just using a pitch fork to tune, he or she need not worry about A string loosening up and going out of tune again before he has the ability to use it as a reference point in tuning the other strings. The usual practice of the tuning order is the A string, E string, A string, D string, A string, G string back again to the A string. After individual string tuning is done, the violinist can now tune it by playing double stops on both A and E strings, A and D strings, and D and G strings. Fine-tuning adjustments should be done before going to the next pair of strings to tune

 

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