What early 70's rock bands had violins?


I am trying to find any bands from late 60's to early 70's that had violin or electric violin.
jbaussie
Jethro Tull, Loggins and Messina (Al Garth and Richard Greene were the players; Al went to the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Greene..dunno).

Charlie Daniels....
Some pretty brain fry poop (violin isn't exactly a staple of generic rock) came out in the early 70's that might stretch alot of people's definition of rock to a breaking point. Haven't seen these listed yet:

-PFM, "Per Un Amico" might be a good start, "Cook" is not recorded as well, but is a scorching a live record, the "Cook" versions of "Four Holes in The Ground" and "Alta Loma 9 til 5" are anthemic monsters (if you dig Lou Reed Rock and Roll Animal, the best ELP or Focus this stuff will kill you).

-Arti + Mestieri, 1st two "Tilt" and Giro di Valser" still stand as a couple of the most advanced classically informed instumental rock records made. Fantastically skilled players, great ideas and very Italian.

-Wolf, Darryl Way, the violinist from Curved Air made a quantum leap by splitting and forming this band. All three releases are excellent (and mostly instrumental). "Saturation Point" (their 2nd) is my favotite, any Ponty/Holdsworth/Mahavishnu/Zappa head should get a deluxe buzz off this one.

Other supoib violin rock came from:
-Strynx
-Stomu Yamashta (the ones w/ his wife on Violin and Hugh Hopper on bass)
-Edition Speciale
-Zao, (the French 70's band)
-Roxy Music (Viva)
-East of Eden (1st two w/ Dave Arbus)
-Esparanto (start w/ Danse Macabre)
-Alquin, (Mountain Queen)
-King Crimson ("Lark's Tongues", "Starless and Bible Black" and "Red" might seem like twisted nightmares, but they're damn good records).