The motion is called “sawing”. The tones produced by a sawed string instrument are called “sawtooth waves”. That’s what causes us to perceive the piercing tones as extraordinary. Very few natural phenomena produce audible sawtooth waveforms.
I especially enjoyed that added touch of the ledger lines being sawed through, as well as the violin.
This reminds me very much of Dick Dale “King of the Surf Guitar” who would wear out several plectrums per performance and frequently break thick guitar strings with his savage, staccato picking style. Modern listeners might know his “Miserlou” song used in the movie “Pulp Fiction”. Hear it on YouTube or any music streaming service.
BasilBruce over 2 years ago
Charlie Daniels, eat your heart out.
in-dubio-pro-rainbow over 2 years ago
“SAW” you playing with verve…
Imagine over 2 years ago
Played that a bit too sharp.
KenseidenXL over 2 years ago
I think it would catch fire first….
annqueue over 2 years ago
The inevitable question, what piece is he playing?
Zebrastripes over 2 years ago
I told you, Horace, gently, gently….
pcmcdonald over 2 years ago
Did you hear what I sawed?
Chris over 2 years ago
played too many notes at once.
InTraining Premium Member over 2 years ago
now slam it to the floor and jump on it to complete your finale as the music shows…!
JoshHere over 2 years ago
The Brutish Musician Side of the Horse
mistercatworks over 2 years ago
The motion is called “sawing”. The tones produced by a sawed string instrument are called “sawtooth waves”. That’s what causes us to perceive the piercing tones as extraordinary. Very few natural phenomena produce audible sawtooth waveforms.
I especially enjoyed that added touch of the ledger lines being sawed through, as well as the violin.
battycomic Premium Member over 2 years ago
Is that a bow or a saw he’s using?
Perkycat over 2 years ago
LOL! The song was great until the music…..and the violin…..died.
BigBoy over 2 years ago
You can’t hide Horace. We all saw that
Ermine Notyours over 2 years ago
Where did you get the horse hair for that bow?
mistercatworks over 2 years ago
This reminds me very much of Dick Dale “King of the Surf Guitar” who would wear out several plectrums per performance and frequently break thick guitar strings with his savage, staccato picking style. Modern listeners might know his “Miserlou” song used in the movie “Pulp Fiction”. Hear it on YouTube or any music streaming service.
JH&Cats over 2 years ago
Horace you are on fire tonight!
Asriel over 2 years ago
Litarlly knife