Note locator for stringed instruments

Music – Accessories – Teaching devices

Reexamination Certificate

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C084S47000P, C084S48500R, C084S31400N

Reexamination Certificate

active

06452080

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention (Technical Field)
The present invention relates to the field of teaching aids for stringed instruments.
2. Background Art
Many stringed instruments, including the violin, viola, cello and stringed bass, necessitate that the player use his/her fingers to stop the strings against the fingerboard, thereby producing different notes. Given the absence of frets on these instruments, one of the most difficult issues for the novice is to learn the correct placement of the fingers on the string, so that the notes thus played sound in tune. Traditionally, students learn by trial and error, slowly training the auditory and tactile senses in order to achieve the proper finger positions. However, this is a long and arduous process often leading to frustration for the beginning student, as well as the teacher. Many devices have been invented to speed the novice's learning of the correct placement of the fingers.
The beginning student of stringed instruments faces two formidable challenges: the apprehension of basic musical material, and the acquisition of the instrumental technique necessary to play this material. The material of Western music comprises a set of twelve discrete musical tones known as the “chromatic scale.” These notes can be named according to various systems: Do, Re, Mi, etc., or A, B, C through G, with the indications “sharp” or “flat,” as necessary. Proceeding in sequence either up or down the chromatic scale, the thirteenth note takes the same name as the first, and is said to be its “octave.” Continuing in the same direction repeats the cycle of twelve notes in another octave, with the range of audible frequencies being approximately eight octaves. However, in a composition, one note is usually selected to be the principal note, and the composition is said to be in the “key” of that note. To reinforce the principal note, various sets of notes called “scales” are utilized. Of many possible scales, the most common is called the “major scale,” which is the set of seven of the twelve chromatic notes having specific relations to the principal note. This is most clearly seen at the piano keyboard, where the seven white keys in each octave together form the major scale starting on C, with the five black keys being extraneous to this scale. If a note other than C is selected as the principal note, a different set of seven notes is selected so as to always maintain the same distribution of tones relative to the principal note. One of the main tasks of a student of any instrument is to learn the specific notes necessary to play in a variety of different scales and keys.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,845,686, entitled “Intonation Guide for Player of String Instrument,” trains the player's tactile sense by means of a signal element, a circuit therefor, and a series of pressure-activated tabs mounted on the fingerboard of the instrument. When the player places a finger, a tab closes a circuit which results in a signal to the player informing him or her as to the accuracy of the finger placement. This device necessitates extensive preparation of the fingerboard. The continual signaling proves to be a distraction to the player, and its complicated apparatus makes it both impractical and expensive for the novice.
Other devices teach the posture and use of the fingers without reference to specific locations along the string. These include those described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,619,470, to Harris, entitled “Hand-Positioning Device for Violinists;” U.S. Pat. No. 3,724,314, to Columbo, entitled “Finger Training Device for Stringed Musical Instruments;” U.S. Pat. No. 3,726,175, to Kaplan, entitled “Apparatus for Instruction of Stringed Instrument Positioning;” and U.S. Pat. No. 3,726,176, also to Kaplan, entitled “Apparatus for the Instruction of Hand Angulation in Playing Stringed Instruments.” However, this approach is abstract, rather than concrete. The result of these inventions is that the player may indeed appear to have the proper technique while still playing badly out of tune.
Some patents disclose inventions aimed at reducing the possibility of error on the part of the player by restricting the notes which are possible to play. One such device, described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,023,460, to Kuhnke, entitled “Intonation Aid for the Violin, Viola and Cello and Other Instruments of the Violin Family,” is a molded plastic sleeve containing a series of stops (essentially frets) which fits between the fingerboard of the instrument and the strings. When the string is depressed behind a stop, the correct note results. Unfortunately, the string vibrates against the plastic, producing an unwanted buzzing. Since the stop is raised, the string tends to roll underneath the player's finger, thereby undermining the very precision which the device aims to improve. Additionally, the player must place his/her finger behind the stop, thereby learning a placement of the fingers distinct from that of the instrument without this device. Similarly, the device described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,345,851, to Aalfs, entitled “Articulated Fingerboard for a Stringed Musical Instrument,” is a fingerboard with a plurality of raised areas which define the discrete locations where the player must place the fingers. With this device it is difficult to play out of tune, but due to the alternation of raised and lowered surfaces, it is also difficult to move the finger along the length of the string. The device disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,204,454, to Severn, entitled “Instructional Apparatus for Stringed Instrument,” features a keyboard placed over the strings of the instrument which operates a series of depressible plungers which stop the string. In this case, the fingers operate the device, rather than the musical instrument, and have no contact with the string itself. These three devices suffer from the generic defect that the technique thus cultivated is distinct from that which is used for the playing of the instruments in their common form.
Other devices provide visual clues to the player. U.S. Pat. No. 4,417,497, to Nicklaus, entitled “Stringed Musical Instrument Teaching Device and Process,” describes a fingerboard bearing a metal rack into which are placed magnetized trapezoidal markers, each of which defines an area for the placement of the fingers and which bears the name of the note thus created. The fact that the markers define a relatively wide area of the fingerboard (1 cm or more) results in a great imprecision. Also, the necessity of variously applying and removing the markers makes it cumbersome. Having a similar feature and suffering similar defects is the device receiving U.S. Pat. No. 4,291,606, to LePage, entitled “Musical String Instrument.” This device features rectangular pieces of contrasting colors secured to the fretboard between each fret. The device revealed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,712,464, to Kregg, entitled “Stringed Instrument Finger Positioning Guide,” is a rigid flat surface affixed beneath the strings of a fretted musical instrument and which bears colored spots to mark the finger positions for playing a variety of chords. The fact that this device is flat and bears slots to engage the nut and frets of the instrument makes it unsuitable for the curved and fretless fingerboards of the violin family. Similarly, the device receiving U.S. Pat. No. 5,458,040, to Glucker et al., entitled “Teaching Device for Stringed Instruments,” is a mock fretboard external to the instrument which bears template cards illustrating note positions and is used for practice.
Certain devices, including U.S. Pat. No. 3,854,370, to Sapinski, entitled “Training Aid for Stringed Musical Instrument;” U.S. Pat. No. 4,286,495, to Roof, entitled “Musical Instrument Training Device;” and U.S. Pat. No. 4,807,509, to Graham, entitled “Electroluminescent Fret Grid for Stringed Instruments” are electrical devices which use luminescent displays to mark the notes on the fingerboard. These devices are expensive and complicated, and involve a radical reconfiguration of the instrument its

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