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Heck, I think it's time we got a Strad and a well-built contemporary clone in the same room and put the player behind a curtain. The player can randomly pick up a violin and play a short piece, and a listener group can try to guess which one is which. Will they hear a difference?The Great Violin A/B/X Test:Tester #1: "They all sounded like screeching cats to me."Tester #2: "Clearly, Violin B had the rich air and deep, punchy transients of a master instrument." (Violin B was the modern clone.)Tester #3: "The test was unscientific, because the player did not use the same bow for each violin."Tester #4: "The Strad had slightly more body and a cleaner decay, but the difference was obvious." (Chose the Strad correctly only 70% of the time.)Tester #5: (Passed out on beer before the tests were done.)Conclusion: Go out in the sunshine and play frisbee or something.
it's worth at least remembering that for the most part what makes a Strad really sound like a Strad is the player, not the wood. The tonal advantage is latent and must be coaxed out of the instrument by an expert violinist.
A violin isn't a complicated piece of electronics, but any physical phenomenon depending on so many variables (the interrelationship between the player, his bow, the violin's strings & soundboard, the acoustic and the human ear) would produce an unbelievably complex prospect for "white paper" analysis.
And as far as I can tell, an analogy between a violin and a source component doesn't actually exist.