The first time Mira saw an electric violin, she laughed.
It was a confessional. No wood to hide behind.
That winter, Mira played a solo show in a converted garage. A hundred people came. She opened with the Chaconne—acoustic, perfect, a prayer. Then she unplugged Elise, set her down, and picked up Static.
“Is that a violin ?” a child asked, tugging his mother’s sleeve.
The crowd leaned forward.
It was lighter than she expected. Almost fragile. The pawnshop owner, a man with one eyebrow and no small talk, threw in a tiny practice amp and a cable that looked like a dead snake. “Don’t blame me if it screams,” he said.
It was a creature . A low, electric sigh that filled the room like smoke. She drew the bow across the E string, and instead of a bright soprano, she got a crystalline shard of light—sharp, endless, capable of cutting through any city noise. She played a D major scale, and the notes hung in the air, then decayed into a warm, artificial fuzz.
The first time Mira saw an electric violin, she laughed.
It was a confessional. No wood to hide behind.
That winter, Mira played a solo show in a converted garage. A hundred people came. She opened with the Chaconne—acoustic, perfect, a prayer. Then she unplugged Elise, set her down, and picked up Static.
“Is that a violin ?” a child asked, tugging his mother’s sleeve.
The crowd leaned forward.
It was lighter than she expected. Almost fragile. The pawnshop owner, a man with one eyebrow and no small talk, threw in a tiny practice amp and a cable that looked like a dead snake. “Don’t blame me if it screams,” he said.
It was a creature . A low, electric sigh that filled the room like smoke. She drew the bow across the E string, and instead of a bright soprano, she got a crystalline shard of light—sharp, endless, capable of cutting through any city noise. She played a D major scale, and the notes hung in the air, then decayed into a warm, artificial fuzz.