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kalango.com/en Reviews with ekomi.co.uk

Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico - Rozini

Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico Rozini A316081
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico
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Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico - Rozini

Rozini
Item number
A316081
weight (net):
0,8 kg

out of stock

558,00 *

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Série Profissional - Pro cavaquinho by Rozini with active Fishman pickup and chromatic tuning... more

Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico - Rozini

item number: A316081
finish: gloss
material: solid / lam. wood
pick-up: active
neck: cedrela
fretboard / bridge: pau-ferro
rib / back: pau-ferro
soundboard / top: abeto - swedish spruce (solid)
frets: alpaca
tuning pegs: gold-plated
strings: steel (J93 D Addario)
total length: 630 mm
scale length: 340 mm
nut width: 30 mm
max. width of rib: 85 mm
weight (net): 0,8 kg
MPN RC07ATNE

Série Profissional - Pro cavaquinho by Rozini with active Fishman pickup and chromatic tuning device

Pro instrument by Rozini, gorgeous design and very high-quality processing and a present, assertive, warm and guitar-like sound due to its wider body. The active 3-band electronic will surprise you - used in a low dosage,  the cavacos gentle nature is beautifully reflected.


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Customer reviews for "Cavaquinho Profissional eléctrico"

(1)
16 Jan 2016
good for the job that you would buy it for

I’m not a skilled Cavaquista. If fact I still very much getting to grips with it, but I have been playing a repairing guitars and basses for many years, so forgive me if this is more of a technical review. It’s what I am best at.

I don’t give much kudos to “hand made” instruments. They are only as good or bad as the craftsman who made it (and there are poor craftsmen), how he felt on that day, and the materials available. Taking this one from the sturdy triangular carton I see that the finish has the perfection that can only be achieved in a factory that has spent 20 years getting its tooling right. There is not a single ripple, sag, sand paper mark, or evidence that 2 joints didn’t quite meet. Every Rozini will be the same as the next. Some might see that as soulless. I see it as confidence that the things I CAN’T see are likely to be well made too.

I have also learned to stay away from anything with “Professional” in its name because if I need to be TOLD this, it usually isn’t. Luckily, in Europe I have little choice!

Neck,
I have seen lower end Rozinis with a couple of jagged frets but these are well dressed.
Action.
1st fret 0.4mm’ 18th fret 1.9mm
Neck bow 4 (forth string) 0.25
Neck bow 1st string. 0.15mm
Nothing buzzes on any string on any fret. I also checked at each held fret, the string clearance at the next higher fret. It starts at 0.2 and gradually decreases as we play higher. In short:- the neck is slightly convex as it should be, its more convex on the side where the bigger strings need to move more, and as you play higher up where the strings vibrate less, there is less clearance. It’s pretty perfect, which is only annoying to people who like to adjust things.

Body depth
If you are moving from ukulele you will notice that the body is deeper. While it’s not the deepest cavaco I’ve seen, at 80mm it’s even deeper than some other Rozini models. It’s never going to fit in a Uke bag. Try one of the specialised hard cases instead.

Bracing
Looking inside the sound hole with my dentist mirror, O.M.G. it’s a beast! 2 large braces run across the body (or top-to-bottom as you hold it) - one under the neck, and the other between sound hole and bridge. 2 wide, flat braces run flat-side on to the top, between the bridge and the neck the stop the body sagging under tension. Personally I would have used the wood in the other orientation (thin side on). In theory that would give you more resonance and more stiffness, but I suppose they do that for a reason. These aren’t shaped or scalloped in any way and I don’t suppose they need to be. Sitting under the bridge are 3 of the most delicately thin and scalloped ribs possible. This is the only part that concerns me, because even the joint between the 2 pieces of wood which form the top are only reinforced with a sliver of 6mm pine. What will stop the bridge slowly twisting towards the neck? I understand that they want to keep the mass down and that many companies do this but I am still scared.
For you rock-&-roll players there is plenty of wood thickness to mount an end pin for a strap.

Playing
It feels heavier than my passive (less expensive) cavaquinho. At first it feeds slightly harder to play but after a while it seems more forgiving so it works out. The sound is a little less mellow and a little more shouty or thin. One part of the tone compromise of an active pickup is what happens when you cut holes and screw 2 heavy lumps of plastic into the body. You will lose some of the resonance. That said, when I get to the point when anyone is listening to my tone instead of the notes, I’ll let you know.

Amplifier
Fishman has an excellent rep though. They use a pickup which is in direct contact with the bridge. It sounds a little sterile but much less chance of feedback than a mic or passive pickup. There is a built in tuner which is handy but don’t forget to turn it off or it will drain the battery. I tried removing the battery and the output is nil from the jack.

So overall:- No regrets. Maybe not the most mellow acoustic instrument for top class choro, but a good dependable stage instrument to hammer out samba songs to.

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In Brazil, people not only play drums and percussion: The most common instrument is... more

"Rozini"

Rozini

In Brazil, people not only play drums and percussion:
The most common instrument is probably the acoustic guitar. No matter if traditional 6-string guitar or like preferred in Samba and Choro with 7 strings, ROZINI has the righ instruments.

ROZINI also offers bandolins or the viola caipira, a 10-string instrument which is very popular in Brazil, and of course a large variety of Cavaquinhos. The little allrounder is suitable for (almost) every music style: you can play it in any Samba session in a small round, the Samba de mesa, when accompaning a big Samba school, or as a virtuoso solo instrument playing Choro. The cavaquinho is a small instrument with endless possibilities.

Rozini

ROZINI was born as a result of an association of various luthiers and is nowadays one of the largest and renowned producers of stringed instruments of Brazil. The instruments are handmade in serie-production in São Paulo.


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