OK – Now, it is time to learn about peg components and how they function.
Each peg has three main parts:
the Crown, the Stem, and the String Hole.
The Crown is also known as the Head. The function of the crown is to present a stable, flat area, in order to permit easy grasping and turning by your fingers. I will return shortly, but Scroll is here and he has a bulletin!
Hi everyone! Remember? I mentioned that I would appear throughout the Quest, whenever it is useful to have you scroll to specific knowledge that you already have registered. Also, I couldn’t resist hanging around because the scroll is close to the pegs, and scrolls are among the pictures that follow on the next pages. I am sure that my contributions at this time will be appropriate.
Peg told you about the practical function of the Crown as a logical place from which to handle the peg. I am here to encourage you to scroll back to specific knowledge that you registered earlier in the Foundation Layer. Fear not, I am not going to ask you to perform the “Gravity of Gravity,” a comical, but useful jingle.
Now that you have avoided singing and most certainly sighed a sigh of relief, I would like to ask you: does the word Leverage ring a bell? There are many types of Leverage. In your Leverage mental-file folder, please scroll carefully to the definition of Leverage that can be categorized as Mechanical Leverage. You will need to master the art of using mechanical leverage in order to create your playing position.
Learning Focus Practice Tutorial Weight in Motion Gravity Leverage Balance
Potential and Kinetic Energy The R’s of Remembering Practice Purpose Music Staff Evolution
Music Clef Origins Scroll History Peg Information Bowed String Instrument History
Friction Bass Tuning Mechanism Modern-Day Violin Family Bridges Through the Ages
Potential and Kinetic Energy The R’s of Remembering Practice Purpose Music Staff Evolution
Music Clef Origins Scroll History Peg Information Bowed String Instrument History
Friction Bass Tuning Mechanism Modern-Day Violin Family Bridges Through the Ages