The document discusses evidence that early 16th century lutes may have had membranes attached to produce a buzzing tone quality valued in Renaissance music. It also notes observations of membranes depicted in art from the period and experiments attaching membranes to reproductions.
The document discusses evidence that early 16th century lutes may have had membranes attached to produce a buzzing tone quality valued in Renaissance music. It also notes observations of membranes depicted in art from the period and experiments attaching membranes to reproductions.
The document discusses evidence that early 16th century lutes may have had membranes attached to produce a buzzing tone quality valued in Renaissance music. It also notes observations of membranes depicted in art from the period and experiments attaching membranes to reproductions.
The document discusses evidence that early 16th century lutes may have had membranes attached to produce a buzzing tone quality valued in Renaissance music. It also notes observations of membranes depicted in art from the period and experiments attaching membranes to reproductions.
Source: Early Music, Vol. 3, No. 4 (Oct., 1975), p. 417 Published by: Oxford University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3125431 . Accessed: 19/12/2010 10:26 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at . http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=oup. . Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
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Consort of Viols, and the many businessmen, schoolteachers, doctors and
whoever else fills the Register of Early Music. Of course few young people can afford to buy expensive instruments, and I would never disparage the opportunities that universities provide for them. But how are they to carry on when they graduate?
On the sound of early
16th-centurylutes
We have noticed some evidence that
might indicate different early 16thcentury practices for achieving an artificial rasp to the tone of the lute. At the end of Gombosi's translation of Vidal's introduction to his collection of the repertoire of Vincenzo Capirola appears the statement: 'that you make it so that the first fret almost touches the strings, and so on to the end, because as the frets are nearer to the string, the strings sound like a harp, and the lute appears better'. Could this refer to anything else but the buzzing sound of the bray harp which was so common at the time? The low action of a modern flamenco guitar also leads towards this kind of effect. In Durer's painting The Feast of the RoseGarlandsat the National Gallery in Prague, there is an angel playing a lute which appears to have an irregularly shaped membrane between the strings and the body, and it seems to be attached at the neck-body join. The painting seems to have been subject to damage as there is considerable discolouration, and we admit that this may be an alternative explanation. His silver point drawing of an Angel with Lute dated 1497, also shows a light band on the body next to the neck under the strings, but there is no indication here that the band is raised above the soundboard as there is in the painting. We have tried putting such a membrane on one of our lutes and it certainly gives each note the appropriate percussive and buzzing effect without seriously deadening the strings if one keeps to the lower positions. The effect was much more pronounced on the bass strings than on the trebles and our experience is identical to a literal interpretation of Virdung's (1511) names for
the strings which Uta Henning trans- of volume of the rauschpfeifen.
lates (Lute SocietyJournal, 1973) as Big German speakers may also be interBuzzer, Intermediate Buzzer, Small ested to hear Professor Berner's Buzzer, Big Singing String, Small Sing- theories concerning the Dorian mode ing String and 'Fifth' String. A basis of the windcap instruments, which membrane with such a function might he partially supports by quoting the be the identity of the mysterious humorous description of the crum'second bridge' between the bow and horns in Agricola. the neck on medieval bowed instruProfessor Berner is retiring this year ments, which appears too often in but his successor, Dr Krickeburg, will no doubt offer the same generous facilipaintings to ascribe it to artists' error. If the buzzing type of tone quality ties to students. Dr Krickeburgis greatly was universally desired on lutes of the interested in the attempts of English time, the membrane device could have crumhorn makers to produce 'real' been an expedient on lutes whose necks crumhorns. had come up too far to accomplish this JAMES FURNER, 5 GableCourt,Lawrie end by adjusting fret heights. If the ParkAvenue,Sydenham,SE26. membrane was removable and had the purpose of offering alternative tone Details of Victor Nerinckx's qualities, we would have expected it to bagpipes appear more often in the illustrations In EarlyMusic of April 1974 I read an of the period. article about the bagpipe-maker Victor A buzzing tone quality was certainly Nerinckx. I should like to draw attenesteemed on wind instruments of the tion to the fact that the Chanter is not time. We can only agree with Joan in C-sharp but in C. The lowest tone of Rimmer when discussing the bray harp the Chanter is G. If this is not the case described in the Talbot Manuscript it's due to the reed and not to the (GalpinSocietyJournal, XVI, 1963, 70): Chanter, as the author of the article, 'The rich buzzing sound induced by the M. Lutgerink, mentions. We have made brays, which was a matter for scorn to a fingering-table for this Chanter, so seventeenth century ears, was of course that Dutch and Flemish folk-songs can valued in the [Renaissance] hey-day of be it. The can be on drones played this kind of harp'. tuned in G or A, according to the key of DJILDA ABBOTT the song one wants to play. EPH SEGERMAN If there are any difficulties with the Northern Renaissance Instruments, 18 reeds information will be supplied by M20 8UY. MoorfieldRoad,Manchester Hans Goddefroy, flautist of the ensembel for ancient music 'Au Joly Trumpet-like crumhorn tone Bois', Strijpsestraat 4 Eindhoven I have just returned from visiting the Nederland, tel. 040 (Eindhoven) 510872 Musikinstrumenten Museum in West or Frans v/d Hurk. Berlin. The Director, Professor Dr Victor Nerinckx is very busy and preBerner, kindly allowed me to play at fers arrangements by telephone and for some length the Naumberg crumhorns callers to collect the bagpipes. and rauschpfeifen. Some of the readers He wants to build the 'grande of Early Music may not be aware that cornamuse' with drones 1.50m long. If these instruments have been restored to could give information about anyone excellent playing condition and that the this instrument please write to me. museum makes generous provision for FRANS VAN DE HURK, Oranjestraat 3, musicians to play them. This includes Eindhoven,Holland. cornetti and shawms. Although these instruments have I would appreciate comments from been played in concert, there is hitherto anyone who has used viol kits successno recording of them and fellow crum- fully. hornists may be pleasantly surprised to PAULINE DURICHEN, 37-B Roland hear the full, trumpet-like tone of these Avenue, Kitchener, Ontario, Canada original crumhorns and the flexibility N2G 1K5. 417
The Galpin Society Journal Volume 35 Issue 1982 (Doi 10.2307 - 841247) Review by - Bo Lawergren - The British Museum Yearbook 4 - Music and Civilisationby T. C. Mitchell