Sie sind auf Seite 1von 9

 

(https://stringsmagazine.com)

Home (https://stringsmagazine.com)  Stories (https://stringsmagazine.com/category/stories/)

(https://servedbyadbutler.com/redirect.spark?
MID=168183&plid=1072912&setID=208213&channelID=0&CID=353490&banID=519818052&PID=0&textadID=0&tc=1&mt=1577377924686281&sw=1536&sh=864&spr=1.25&hc=

Luthier Joseph Curtin Leads the Violin World’s Politest


Revolution
OCTOBER 7, 2016

By Patrick Sullivan
Joseph Curtin at Sharon Que’s studio doing acoustical measurements of Maud Powell’s violin (from the Henry Ford Museum)

Luthier Joseph Curtin leads the violin world’s politest revolution

He’s calm, soft-spoken, and well-mannered. But if the violin world has revolutionaries, Joseph Curtin (http://josephcurtinstudios.com) must surely be counted among them.

For years, the Michigan luthier has been deeply involved in provocative experiments pitting new violins against old Italian instruments. Using smoked goggles and cloth screens,
double-blind studies run by Curtin, French scientist Claudia Fritz, and other researchers have found talented soloists unable to reliably distinguish new instruments from centuries-
old masterpieces.

They’ve published a series of scienti c papers—with another likely to appear in a major journal this winter—that have grabbed media headlines and delighted makers who think new
violins don’t get the credit they deserve.

Others have been shocked and even angered by the ndings, and Curtin himself admits he was initially a little disconcerted.

“It’s one thing to read in a paper that people can’t tell old from new, but to hear really good players utterly confusing an instrument nished two weeks ago with a golden-era Strad,
it just didn’t seem possible,” Curtin says, speaking by phone from Ann Arbor, where he lives. “It really shook me up.”

But for the 63-year-old luthier, that incendiary research is just one part of an iconoclastic career. Curtin’s penchant for nontraditional materials, nontraditional designs, and
unorthodox partnerships have sparked change and helped win him a MacArthur Fellowship.

The Toronto-born Curtin began his musical career as a violinist, only to abandon his professional-performance plans at the blunt advice of his teacher. At 22, he began studying the
viola with Rivka Golani and instrument making with her husband, Otto Erdesz, the talented and colorful Hungarian luthier.
Luthier Joseph Curtin

Advertisement
(https://servedbyadbutler.com/redirect.spark?
MID=168183&plid=944350&setID=304016&channelID=0&CID=133544&banID=519733446&PID=0&textadID=0&tc=1&mt=1577377924654938&sw=1536&sh=864&spr=1.25&hc=c

Curtin nished his rst instrument at 25 and went on to build a world-class reputation, making violins for the likes of Erick Friedman, Ilya Kaler, Cho-Liang Lin, and Yehudi
Menuhin.

He’s shaken up instrument design with ideas like protective veneers for soundposts and bridge feet. And he’s currently developing prototypes of laminated bridges, adjustable necks,
and other innovations aimed at making life easier for players. “I am preparing to bring to market a line of ultralight violins and violas that bring these various concepts together,
and this is very exciting to me,” he explains.

Still, research and acoustic measurement are clearly key passions for Curtin—which is all the more striking given that he is not a formally trained scientist.

“I don’t even have a university degree,” he says. “But the great thing about violin research is how collaborative it is. I feel my contribution is to be a team member.” In the double-
blind tests of old and new violins, for example, Curtin and Fritz are equally involved in the experiments’ design and write up. “During the experiments, she handles the blind testing
while I do the acoustical measurements,” Curtin says. That enthusiasm for experimentation also led Curtin to co-found the Violin Society of America’s Oberlin Acoustics Workshop
with Fan-Chia Tao, research and development director at the string-making company D’Addario. Tao is also part of the violin-testing acoustic research team led by Fritz and Curtin.

The Oberlin workshop, which just nished its 15th year, aims to drive innovations in violin making by embracing scienti c methods to measure both instruments’ sound and player
preferences. Curtin has also worked with University of Michigan physicist Gabriel Weinreich, sound engineer John Bell, and industrial designer Alex Sobolev to try to digitally
recreate a Stradivari. And, inspired by an approach devised by violin maker Martin Schleske, Curtin worked with furniture-designer Garry Venable to create a portable tool—the
Impact Hammer Rig—that other luthiers can use for laboratory-grade acoustical measurements.
Yet as excited as Curtin is by the science of sound, he’s sometimes unnerved by the reaction to controversial ndings. The response to the rst “old violins versus new” study in
which he was involved was intense. One prominent violinist blasted that study’s use of hotel rooms instead of concert halls, arguing that pitting new instruments against Strads in
such a setting was like trying to compare a Ford and a Ferrari in a Walmart parking lot.

“The criticism after the rst experiment in Indianapolis was really strong and quite stressful for me,” Curtin says.

But the team continued its research and worked to address critiques. Curtin says he’s heartened by the more sedate response to a follow-up study in Paris that employed rehearsal
rooms and a concert hall, which produced equally provocative results.

Curtin, Fritz, and their collaborators recently submitted another paper evaluating projection differences between new and old instruments. It could be published in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences within months. “I’m very excited about the results but I can’t discuss them yet,” Curtin says.

Whatever the ndings, he doubts owners of old Italian instruments need worry about their investment. “The Strads have gone on marching higher and higher,” Curtin says.

“But of course their value has nothing to do with their sound. People will continue to value beautiful old things. It doesn’t mean they won’t also value beautiful new things.” More
fundamentally, Curtin says he understands the reluctance to surrender the romantic idea that old Italian violins have tonal qualities that can never be matched by new instruments.

“There’s a sense that violin making is one of the last cathedrals of mystery, so why take the mystery out of it?” he says.

“But there’s another way to look at it. The more you know about something, the more interesting it becomes.”

Comments

0 Comments Sort by Oldest

Add a comment...

Facebook Comments Plugin

Share On
Share 533 Like 533

Guardar (https://es.pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?guid=23D1ryMHULV8-1&url=https%3A%2F%2Fstringsmagazine.com%2Fluthier-joseph-curtin-leads-the-violin-worlds-politest-
revolution%2F&media=https%3A%2F%2Fstringsmagazine.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2016%2F10%2FIMG_1567-
e1475892779567.jpg&description=Luthier%2BJoseph%2BCurtin%2BLeads%2Bthe%2BViolin%2BWorld%E2%80%99s%2BPolitest%2BRevolution)

Tweet

Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox

email address

Subscribe

PREVIOUS ARTICLE (HTTPS://STRINGSMAGAZINE.COM/STRINGS-SESSIONS-PRESENTS-SILK-ROAD-ENSEMBLE/)

 Strings Sessions Presents: Silk Road Ensemble (https://stringsmagazine.com/strings-sessions-presents-silk-road-ensemble/)


NEXT ARTICLE (HTTPS://STRINGSMAGAZINE.COM/THE-SPICCATO-BARIOLAGE-PASSAGE-OF-MENDELSSOHNS-VIOLIN-CONCERTO-IS-ONE-CHALLENGE-AMONG-MANY/)

The Spiccato Bariolage Passage of Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto Is One Challenge Among Many (https://stringsmagazine.com/the-spiccato-bariolage-
passage-of-mendelssohns-violin-concerto-is-one-challenge-among-many/)

Related Posts

 

(https://stringsmagazine
killer vocals into a triplecom/the
ddle mix/)
oconnor band brings (https://stringsmagazine
passage
challengeofamong
mendelssohns
many/)com/the
violin concerto
spiccato isbariolage
one (https://stringsmagazine
makers approach to varnish/)
com/a look at parisian violin
The O’Connor Band Brings Killer Vocals into a Triple- The Spiccato Bariolage Passage of Mendelssohn’s A Look at Parisian Violin Makers’ Approach to
Fiddle Mix (https://stringsmagazine.com/the- Violin Concerto Is One Challenge Among Many Varnish (https://stringsmagazine.com/a-look-at-
oconnor-band-brings-killer-vocals-into-a-triple- (https://stringsmagazine.com/the-spiccato- parisian-violin-makers-approach-to-varnish/)
fiddle-mix/) bariolage-passage-of-mendelssohns-violin-concerto-
is-one-challenge-among-many/)

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Format

Print + Digital

Type

New Order

SUBSCRIBE
(https://store.stringsmagazine.com/products/holly?utm_source=stsidebar&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=sub%26save)
(https://store.stringsmagazine.com/products/holly?utm_source=stsidebar&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=sub%26save)

TRENDING STORIES (HTTPS://STORE.STRINGSMAGAZINE.COM/PRODUCTS/HOLLY?


UTM_SOURCE=STSIDEBAR&UTM_MEDIUM=WEBSITE&UTM_CAMPAIGN=SUB%26SAVE)

(https://store.stringsmagazine.com/products/holly?utm_source=stsidebar&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=sub%26save)
(https://store.stringsmagazine.com/products/holly?utm_source=stsidebar&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=sub%26save)
(https://store.stringsmagazine.com/products/holly?utm_source=stsidebar&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=sub%26save)
It’s Never Too Late to Pick Up an
Instrument—Here are 5 Tips for Adult
Beginners
(https://stringsmagazine.com/its-never-too-late-to-pick-up-an-instrument-here-are-5-tips-for-adult-beginners/) (http://stringsmagazine.com/its-never-
too-late-to-pick-up-an-instrument-here-
are-5-tips-for-adult-beginners/)

Learn the Di erence Between Violin and Fiddle


(http://stringsmagazine.com/learn-the-di erence-between-violin-and-
ddle/)
(https://stringsmagazine.com/learn-the-difference-between-violin-and- ddle/)

A Guide to Choosing the Right Violin Strings


(http://stringsmagazine.com/a-guide-to-choosing-the-right-violin-
strings/)
(https://stringsmagazine.com/a-guide-to-choosing-the-right-violin-strings/)

A Guide to Buying a Bow (http://stringsmagazine.com/a-guide-to-buying-a-bow/)

(https://stringsmagazine.com/a-guide-to-buying-a-bow/)

Ask the Expert: How to Stop Your Pegs from Slipping


(http://stringsmagazine.stringlettermusic.com/ask-the-expert-
how-to-stop-your-pegs-from-slipping/)
(https://stringsmagazine.com/ask-the-expert-how-to-stop-your-pegs-from-slipping/)
(https://servedbyadbutler.com/redirect.spark?
MID=168183&plid=1056907&setID=208214&channelID=0&CID=347717&banID=519804564&PID=0&textadID=0&tc=1&mt=1577377924804427&sw=1536&sh=864&spr=1.25&hc=
(https://servedbyadbutler.com/redirect.spark?
MID=168183&plid=518427&setID=208214&channelID=0&CID=133544&banID=519381792&PID=0&textadID=0&tc=1&mt=1577377924834794&sw=1536&sh=864&spr=1.25&hc=7

(https://stringsmagazine.com/) (https://store.stringsmagazine.com/) (https://www.facebook.com/StringsMagazine)

(https://www.instagram.com/stringsmagazine/) (https://twitter.com/stringsmagazine)

ADVERTISE (HTTP://STRINGLETTER.COM/) / SUBSCRIBER SERVICES & CONTACT US (HTTPS://STRINGSMAGAZINE.COM/SUBSCRIBER-SERVICES/) / RENEW (HTTPS://SERVICE.QFIE.COM/STRINGS/CLSSTRLOOKUP.ASP)


/ SUBSCRIBE (HTTPS://STORE.STRINGSMAGAZINE.COM/PAGES/SUBSCRIBE-TO-STRINGS) / JOBS (HTTP://STRINGLETTER.COM/COMMUNITY/COMPANY-NEWS/EMPLOYMENT/)
/ NEWSLETTER (HTTPS://STRINGSMAGAZINE.COM/NEWSLETTER/) / PRIVACY POLICY (HTTP://STRINGLETTER.COM/PRIVACY-POLICY/)
/ WHOLESALE MAGAZINE DISTRIBUTION (HTTP://STRINGLETTER.COM/RETAILER/)

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen