At
aiwendel's birthday party on Saturday there was a considerable amount of impromptu music-
I played the violin seriously when I was a child. I started at age seven or thereabouts, was very lucky in the availability of good teachers, and by the time I was about fifteen I'd got pretty good at it: they told me I was well beyond Grade 8 standard, though for reasons I don't recall the only exam I'd ever actually taken was Grade 7 some years earlier. Then I gave up, mostly on the grounds that I was getting tired of the constant pressure from teachers to put more of my time and effort into it so I could reach a really high standard: I had lots of other things I wanted to do with my time and effort too, and had more or less decided by that point that my future lay in computers rather than violin-
I maintained an interest in general musicianship, dabbling with keyboards and guitar and sporadically trying my hand at composition, but I never really regretted giving up the violin. A few years later, when I had a brush with RSI, it struck me as significant that my left wrist had a lot more trouble than my right: that's the one that curls round at a really silly angle when playing the violin, and it seemed likely to me that this wasn't coincidence. I've often suspected that if I'd kept the violin up, my left wrist would really be in trouble now, whereas in fact I recovered from the RSI (eventually) and now only have to take normal sorts of precautions.
Since then I've occasionally been tempted into having a go on someone else's violin when one was lying around. The last time I tried was around 2004 or so, if I remember rightly, and I remember finding it strangely incongruous that my right hand could still pretty much remember how to do the bowing, but my left hand no longer naturally formed the alternating short-
So when I had another opportunity on Saturday I was rather more reluctant to even try. However, against my better judgment and after some egging-
My initial attempts were just embarrassing. My left hand had all the problems I remembered from my last attempt, but now my right hand had forgotten how to bow competently too. Nobody else seemed to complain, for some bizarre reason, but I knew it was out of tune, scratchy and clumsy. The trouble with doing things at which you're hopelessly out of practice but used to be really good is that your standards tend not to have dropped in line with your skill, so I could still remember what good violin-
Later in the evening, though, I found a lot of it coming back to me –
The next morning, however, all the embarrassment came back. I don't often get that ‘oh god, what did I do last night?’ feeling after parties, but yesterday morning I suddenly felt as if I'd made a huge, attention-
On the other hand, curiously, my left wrist felt fine this time (though my right shoulder was killing me for most of yesterday, but that seems less likely to be caused by violin-
I suspect it's probably still a bad idea, on balance: just because I didn't manage to hurt my wrist noticeably in one evening doesn't mean I wouldn't still do it cumulative damage if I kept it up for longer, and really, I do depend on my wrists…
I was never any good at all at the violin, but I never found it hurt my wrists - of course YMMV with that, as with many other things. And buying a violin that you later find you can't use would probably be silly, and possibly also irritating in a "I have a violin and I want to play but I shouldn't" way.
That's why I said "cheap" – indeed, I certainly wouldn't want to put any remotely serious amount of money into the idea until (unless) I was sure it was going to be worthwhile!
Playing tunes from my memory is something I've done a lot of – most of my guitar-dabbling consisted of playing my own guitar arrangements of songs I knew from my (or other people's) CD collection, concocted out of my own imagination rather than by the more traditional method of getting hold of official or unofficial tab transcriptions from elsewhere. (As a result they tended to be essentially instrumental translations of songs, in that what I tended to be able to remember and hence what I reproduced on the guitar was the vocal melody plus as much of the accompaniment as I could fit alongside it, rather than the more usual approach of having the guitar play just the accompaniment and leaving the voice part to the voice.) It's just that on the guitar I had to do it by working the fingering out in advance; on the violin, it turns out, I can improvise it in real time to a large extent.
I am teaching myself (v slowly) to play my mum's acoustic guitar. In order to sing along to one of the first two songs in it I first learned the two chords needed, and then *using the guitar* picked out the tune of the song to work out what I was singing. I'm *hopeless* at sight-singing, even when I can sight-read to play something. It's weird. I'm already getting better at picking out individual notes on the guitar (which is much like doing the same on the bass, which I am also not very good at) but I think it's going to be a *long* time before I get the hang of chords. Not least because I keep reading the fingering diagrams back-to-front.
I don't play my bass much, I've not played mum's guitar much (though I have at least got it new strings and restrung it), and I barely touch the cornet, but I still feel overall glad to have them more often than guilty for not playing them more.