Widenfalk | Svensk version

lars@widenfalk.com      

Page 5/6
Slowly, as he watched his violin take shape, Lars' thoughts turned to Stradivarius and his violins, and it came back to him that Stradivarius' creations often had their own individual names connected with birds. Once the stone violin was polished gleaming black, the name was obvious: it had to be Blackbird! A bit pretentious, perhaps: the blackbird is the most beautiful of songsters. But still. And since the blackbird's bill is yellow, the perfect solution was of course a bridge of the yellowest ivory that could be found: mammoth! This also saved the artist from clashing with nature conservancy interests, concerned about the threat to the elephant.

After many trials and tribulations, contact was established with a Russian artist, who in his turn had the right contacts in the interior Siberia, way out on the taiga and deep in the permafrost. A suitable piece was obtained and dispatched to Lars' studio in Medelpad, Sweden. It was an exciting moment when the bridge - cut with a fret-saw - was fitted and the strings tightened. The first notes sounded, Lars felt a frisson run through him and the black stone violin trembled into life.

Previous | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Next