The Open String makes it possible for communities to create conservatory quality instruments for themselves
This violin is a gift!
For children in under-served communities across the world, it’s a lifeline
A path towards excellence and a gateway to possibilities beyond imagination
The latest technologies meet the art of Stradivari and 500 years of violin-making tradition
Upcycled materials transform into conservatory-quality instruments in the hands of recipients
It will touch the lives of thousands.
OUR MISSION
Youth
When children play string instruments together, science and math scores go up, communication improves, violence goes down and the social health of communities improve.
The Open String works with established music programs in under-served areas worldwide to provide essential instruments for children to play music.
Purpose
Distributed manufacturing allows music programs to make their own instruments.
The Open String creates a platform of creative autonomy for children and their communities.
Innovation
Advanced technologies and manufacturing techniques make fine instrument production accessible locally.
The Open String makes it possible for communities to create conservatory quality instruments for themselves.
Sustainability
Communities use repurposed, recycled and responsibly harvested materials to create exceptional instruments.
The Open String approach to instrument making can carry on for generations and create greater health for communities and their environment.
OUR STORY
OUR BEGINNINGS
The Antonio Stradivarius 'Braga' violin on which our instruments are modelled
In the 1990’s, Robert Brewer Young was a violin maker’s apprentice in the studios above Carnegie Hall. He offered free bow rehairs and instrument repairs to blind musicians playing on the streets and subways of New York. Aware of the importance of music for community life, he expanded his assistance to various music programs around the city, breathing a new life into their broken instruments. When a flood in East Harlem damaged instruments in Robert Gasparri’s music program, he helped to recover and restore them. Gasparri’s students would later perform on those instruments in Carnegie Hall with Isaac Stern.
Charitable support was then provided to the Blind School in Calcutta and musicians in Sarajevo who were performing throughout a time of war. By organising international donations of instruments, strings, and fittings for players performing in harsh conditions, Robert realised that a simple gesture like collecting strings from violin shops and sending boxes of supplies to these destinations had an impact which was transformative for a community.
The Open String, Inc. was established in New York in 2014 as a US 501(c)3 non-profit organisation.
In Argentina, The Open String, Inc. supported the Orchestra Ludueña, where over 150 children living in an underprivileged neighbourhood make music together. In San Francisco, it supported three thriving music programs for the children of recent immigrants of Central and South America. In the Philippines, donations of supplies and instruments were combined with an instrument repair course.
OUR GOAL
There are well-established, effective music programs, orchestras and motivated music teachers around the world. What is lacking - and what we make - are high-quality instruments accessible to children.
With the support of the Cambridge Department of Engineering, we have developed advanced technologies that combine with traditional violin making to create fine instruments based on Antonio Stradivari’s c.1726 ‘Braga’ violin. We have also established an atelier in Cremona, the birth place of Stradivari, associated with the Museo del Violino, to further the research and production.
Thanks to these state-of-the-art technologies, distributed manufacturing of fine instruments has become a scalable reality for the first time.
The children themselves are involved in the final stages of crafting their own instruments, giving them a personal connection to the violin.
The violin is often associated in our minds with Western classical music yet its origins spread far beyond this. Its roots are in India, although it soon made its way to Europe, creating a vast array of musical traditions along the way. With a rich history in many cultures, the violin has the potential to be developed in ways that we are still only beginning to discover and imagine.