01592ngm a22003731 450000100160000000500170001600700100003300800410004301000160008402000230010003500230012303500110014603500200015704000270017704900090020405000100021309000150022309900130023824501050025126000460035630000430040244000090044550000270045450000320048150000260051352005140053965000120105370000150106571000480108071000460112871000210117496600100119599900130120599688737010231120260227104102.0vf cbaho 830204s1982 nyu057 e 0vleng c a82707102 /F cFor sale ( 200.00) a(TU)000688737UTK019 a722945 a(OCoLC)09412491 aALA BooklistcDLCdTKN aTKN9 aML800 aML800b.G7 aML800.G704aThe Great violin mysteryh[videorecording] /cWHA-TV and WGBH ; producer and director, Barry Stoner. aNew York, N.Y. :bTime-Life Video,c1982. a1 videocassette (57 min.) :bsd., col. 0aNova aTitle from data sheet. aIntended audience: General. aIssued as VHS 1/2 in. aIn search of the secret of the elusively majestic voices of the great violins of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, follows the trail of individuals who have pondered the mystery and who have revealed some of the nuances that give an Amati or Stradivarius its elegant tone. In the second half, physicist Jack Fry maximizes the tools of modern science to experiment on dozens of factory-made violins until he is able to adjust the brightness and responsiveness of an instrument with a few manipulations. 0aViolin.1 aFry, Jack.2 aWHA-TV (Television station : Madison, Wis.)2 aWGBH (Television station : Boston, Mass.)2 aTime-Life Video. aprimo c434d434