Category: Rustic Homebrew
What does it do? - this is a two-stringed electric fiddle made from the amputated leg of an old table and some old guitar parts. And some Meccano. It's made entirely of things I had lying around the house and garden, the only thing I had to buy was the bow, which was the cheapest factory second I could lay my hands on. It sounds vaguely violin-ish, but in what I think is quite a good way. It's seen a good bit of usage on stage and in the studio.
This is the first attempt. The neck was much too fat to play at this stage.
Strings anchored by strips of Meccano.
3-ply plastic strips are shielded with foil and connected to ground via the Meccano to reduce hum from the single-coil pickup. With no body to enclose the output jack and volume control, an old die-cast box was fitted to the side.
Front view of the one-a-side headstock.
Addition of crudely-carved chin-rest and corderouy-upholstered shoulder pad.
Rear view of head, tuners mounted upside-down to conserve space.
The slimmed-down neck makes the top notes accessible to people with normal fingers.
Originally this was to be played under the chin, but it was found to be easier to have it mounted vertically on a microphone stand like a tiny 'cello. Parts of a mic clip are now permanently attached to the rear for ease of mount and dismount. It was also found to be useful to mark the notes faintly on the fingerboard with pencil, and wear a head-mounted torch when playing the instrument under stage lighting. Mark can be seen demonstrating this in the picture at the top of the article.
Future Developments? - I quite like the idea of having a quartet of these, one for each leg of the table.
Oh my lord, looks like a bloody good larf playing that, my word, whatever will you come up with next?
ReplyDelete