
What's the word you hear?
Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing word. There are up to 10 questions.
Climate makes cellos less tuneful - 6th January 2023 View All
The impact of climate change is far-reaching, but few will have considered how harmful it is to our ability to make music. In Switzerland, this concern's now unsettling artisanal instrument makers.
The raw material is sourced in the Risoud Forest, which blankets the sub-alpine Jura mountain range demarcating the French-Swiss border. Many of the trees are centuries old and the timber is ideally suited to crafting into string instruments, like acoustic guitars and violins. However, the wood's tonal qualities are being affected by decreasing precipitation and increasing warmth, something which forest ranger Francois Villard is acutely aware of.
Francois Villard: "Global warming is the problem. The average annual temperature, when I arrived here in the Vallee de Joux, 30 years ago, we had an average annual temperature of 5-6 degrees. Now we are way over."
What makes these particular spruce trees so ideal for the instrument-making craft is their specific characteristics, which stem from the terrain and altitude where they traditionally flourish.
Theo Magnin is a tree gatherer.
Theo Magnin: "For musical instruments, you need very tight veins and that's why the more the trees grow in altitude, between 1000 metres and 1200 metres high above the sea level, the veins will be very tight."
Out of every 300 trees felled locally, just one or two will make the grade, having the appropriate resonance for a cello or violin, and Magnin's fearful that climate change will destroy that delicate number.
Theo Magnin: "With global warming and the lack of water, I don't know what we're going to find as resonance wood, high quality wood in the next few years. It's becoming a disaster with the woods drying."
Despite experimenting with a number of alternative options, skilled carpenter Philippe Ramel remains convinced that the best acoustic quality emanates from the wood of the Risoud Forest's illustrious trees.
Philippe Ramel: "It's the air inside the guitar that will, with the vibration of the string, begin to move and which will cause the soundboard to vibrate like the skin of a drum. So we want the best possible vibratory qualities and the Risoud forest guarantees that."
Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing word. There are up to 10 questions.
Read the sentences. Put them in the same order as the news report. There are 4 sentences.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct preposition. There are up to 4 questions.
Make sentences. Select each word in the correct order. There are up to 3 questions.
Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing phrase. There are up to 5 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct verb. There are 5 questions.
Read the sentences. Find the spaces between the words. There are up to 5 questions.
Read the sentences. Find the missing capital letters. There are 5 sentences.
Put the sentence parts in the correct order. Each sentence is in 4 pieces. There are up to 5 questions.
Answer questions about the news report. Select the correct answer from 4 options. There are 5 questions.
The letters of one word are in the wrong order. Read the sentence. Spell the word correctly. There are up to 10 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct vowel for each space. There are up to 5 sentences.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct word. There are up to 5 questions.
Read the sentence. Select the missing word. Check your answer.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct preposition. There are up to 5 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct noun. There are up to 5 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct verb. There are up to 5 questions.
Complete the sentences. Select the correct linking word. There are up to 5 questions.
Check how fast you can read this news report. Choose your speed and read each line of text. Practise to improve your reading speed.
Listen to the newsreader read out each line and then practise saying it. Record your own voice line by line and submit your voiceover.
Either you did not allow SensationsEnglish to access your email address or your social account doesn't have that, please provide it here.
By clicking “Create Account” above you are accepting our Terms of Service & Privacy Policy.