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Cecilio CEVN-2NA Style 2 Silent Electric Solid Wood Violin with Ebony Fittings in Metallic Red Mahogany, Size 3/4

  • Based on 938 reviews
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Availability: 11 left in stock
Fulfilled by KK Music Store

Arrives Nov 29 – Dec 5
Order within 11 hours and 29 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Size: 3/4-size


Color: Metallic Red Mahogany


Features

  • Size 3/4, style 2 electric / silent violin in metallic red mahogany varnish
  • Hand-carved solid maple wood body with ebony fingerboard, pegs, chin rest and tailpiece with 4 detachable nickel plated fine tuners
  • Powered by a 9V Alkaline battery (included)
  • Includes: lightweight hard case, Brazil wood bow with unbleached genuine Mongolian horsehair, quality rosin cake, a bridge, aux cable, and headphones
  • 1 Year Warranty Against Manufacturer's Defects

Description

Whether you're practicing, recording in studio or performing on stage, the Cecilio electric violin outfit offers excellent functionality and style. It provides violinists of all levels with the ability to practice confidently without disturbing others. The outfit features a 1/8" output jack that allows you to connect to most guitar amps or PA systems (1/4" to 1/8" cable included), volume control that allow you to choose the ambience you want, headphone jack for practice and a line-in jack for practice with a background track. This violin package includes a well-padded lightweight hard case, a bow, rosin, bridge, pickup, aux cable, and headphones. Great for Student, Intermediate and Professional Violinist.

Brand: Cecilio


Size: 3/4-size


Color: Metallic Red Mahogany


Item dimensions L x W x H: 32 x 12 x 5 inches


Top Material Type: Maple, Mahogany, Ebony


Back Material Type: Maple


Finish Type: Varnish


Instrument: Guitar, Violin


Item Weight: 5 Pounds


Operation Mode: Electric


Item Weight: 5 pounds


Product Dimensions: 32 x 12 x 5 inches


Item model number: 3/4CEVN-2NA


Batteries: 1 9V batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: August 3, 2011


Back Material: Maple


Color Name: Metallic Red Mahogany


Top Material: Maple, Mahogany, Ebony


Number of Strings: 4


Size: 3/4-size


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Nov 29 – Dec 5

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Very Nice Product With a Few Minor Flaws
Size: 4/4-size Color: Metallic Pearl White
Overall, the violin is a wonderful product, but it does have some minor flaws. I ordered mine in pearl white, and the paint coat could of used a bit more help; the scroll was a little messy and there were a few thin cracks in the painting along the fingerboard and neck of the violin and along some of the seams. This was kind of expected (being it is white, they are more noticeable) and it may be from the paint drying or dry conditions. The cracks are thin and not in obvious places so it was not much of an issue, but ordering a darker color may hide these flaws altogether. When the violin arrived, the bridge was not in place, rather on the side and not in any packaging, indicating it may of been set before being shipped. I'm not sure if it was supposed to be, but it was not difficult to put back on (I recommend if you don't know how, take it to a music shop and they will do it for free, along with tuning your instrument). The only issue was when I put the bridge on and started to tune, I noticed the tailpiece rattled. The fine-tuners were not entirely secured and was causing a rather annoying buzz while plucking or playing the instrument. If you look closely at the fine-tuners, there is a second knob that attaches the tuners to the tailpiece. All I had to do was tighten these (it's easier if you remove the tuning screw first and loosen your strings) and screw back in the tuning knob. This fixed the problem, but it took 30-45 minutes to fix the tuners and bridge and tune the violin. The violin is slightly heavier then an acoustic and even though it would seem to be off balance because it is missing the left upper bout, it surprising isn't that noticeable. The headphones that come with it work, but are of very poor quality, and it wouldn't hurt to invest in a nicer $10-$20 pair if you plan to use headphones (in-ear headphones work also and that is what I'm currently using). It uses a 9-volt battery for the battery pack, and comes with one which was very convenient. The rosin isn't what it shows, and actually seems to be pretty nice and comes with a box. The bow is of nice quality and works fine, but I personally will try to find a wooden or fiberglass bow that matches with the violin. I was surprised to see it came with a nice cleaning cloth and cover. The case is comes with a in-bedded box above the scroll for your rosin and other small objects, two bow slots, a Velcro strip to hold your instrument in the case, and a outside zipper for music, although it is too small to fit music in and close it fully without folding it. There isn't much room in the case for your shoulder rest (I suggest using an Everest shoulder rest, they are affordable, lasting and work with my acoustic and electric violins). It does come with a amplifier cable, and the quality seems nice but it ins't significantly long. The pegs, tailpiece and chin-rest are what looks to be ebony, but the fingerboard seems to be painted wood (the fingerboard matches fine and doesn't stand out but looking closely, it does look different from the tailpiece or chin-rest). The Mother of Pearl inlay on the tailpiece and end of the pegs adds a very nice touch to the instrument, but on one of the pegs part of the thin strip of metal surrounding it fell off. It isn't that noticeable and I'm not too worried about it, but it would be nice if the manufacture checked the instrument for minor flaws such as this and not-so-good paint jobs before shipping it off. The violin seemed a little cheaper in quality then my acoustic violin also made by Cecilio but overall I am very satisfied by the product. I was very excited about getting this violin and the shipping was fast (I selected free 5-8 day shipping and it came in 3 days, but different areas may have different shipping times. If you live in a larger community, I suggest choosing free shipping rather then paying $10-$25+ for faster shipping) The sound is great and it is significantly quieter then an acoustic. All in all, it is a great buy and nicely priced for the quality you get. Other then its minor flaws, I love the instrument and recommend it to anyone looking to get a good quality electric violin for a nice price. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2014 by Paul O

  • So you want to buy a cheap violin...
Size: 4/4-size Color: Metallic Red Mahogany
If you are already a violinist, and you want a cheap electric for quiet practice and/or easy recording/amplification, go for it-- this is a functional and competent electric that comes with a case and a working bow, a decent case, steel strings, and micro-tuners. The sound is okay, and it's ready to go out of the box. You might want some bridge adjustment, but you might want that with any violin. It's a great deal for an electric. This review is more for people who are looking for a "starter" violin. A solid-body electric violin like this is actually a great way to start/test your interest because it is very quiet, and is easy to integrate with computer-based lessons and recording. It's also cheap, and kind of like the difference between a digital keyboard and a real piano, except for the fact that all the issues of tuning, setup, intonation, playing action, etc, are still very emphatically NOT digital, and very real. One of the worst mistakes well-meaning parents make is buying bad instruments for their kids. They figure "no sense spending money on the good stuff", and so start junior off with some cheap, ugly-sounding, badly-intonated, unplayable, wheezy, buzzy piece of junk. Junior, of course, gets discouraged in her efforts to learn "twinkle twinkle little star" on an out-of-tune, difficult-to-play, bad-sounding instrument, and parent and child alike give up on music until the kid gets to college and starts doing remixes and loop-based stuff on a laptop. Bad instruments are not good beginner instruments. Beginners, more than anyone, need capable and competent instruments. Brilliant musicians can get great sound out of a cardboard box or a Gatorade bottle. They have already done the hard stuff. They know the scales and modes and chords inside and out. They know the instruments and what they sound like and what they are capable of, in a visceral sense. A 10-year-old does not. You can't just hand a child a cheap instrument, a tuner, and an instruction manual, and expect good results. One in a billion savants will be a natural genius, but most people need competent hardware. This is a cheaply-made violin, but it is capable of being a decent one. 99% of the difference between junk instruments and competent instruments is setup, tuning, and playing action. This will never be a world-class heirloom violin, but it can be a competent and adequate violin, if it is properly set up and tuned. Somebody somewhere needs to understand string action, intonation, and tuning. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2012 by yep

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