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This funny-lookin' dealie is proof of Bertolt Bercht's assertion that 'art is not pretty.'
Since this was my first foray, I wasn't overly concerned with materials; the body is made from
an oak floorboard. The fingerboard, which I got at an Oakland, CA repair shop for about fifteen
dollars, is some kind of hardwood, perhaps maple. The bridge is poplar or something like that,
and the body is finished with black spray paint and a spray laquer.
Despite the shortcomings is design and construction, the darn thing actually plays. The sound
is a little tinny and synthesizer-y, but still workable. It's difficult to play, though - I had
to construct a Rube-Goldberg-like contraption out of metal bars and clamps to hold it in place.
Like cello #2, this cello uses bass guitar tuners on the
headstock instead of pegs. In this case, I used the cheapest ones I could find. Since I went
ahead and just did everything instead of thinking about it first, I discovered that once I'd
drilled the holes for the tuners, the tuner for the C (leftmost) string would stick right out
at the player's temple. So I carved a hole in the headstock so that the C tuner could be angled
to sit inside it and thus no longer be a threat to the player's health.
The string guides are hex bolts that I found in the trunk of my car, and that oh-so-lovely sheen
is from the Testors model paint which I mistakenly thought would look cool.
On this cello, I started experimenting with ideas that I continued with on
instruments. After messing around for a few days I got familiar with carving
curves, cutting and shaping my own bridges, fiddling around with tailpieces
transducers, and general body constructions.
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