Piccolo

The piccolo is a type of transverse flute that is pitched an octave above the concert (or standard) flute. It has a range of nearly three octaves and reaches the highest pitches of a modern orchestra. It is usually used for special effects in orchestras but is more widely used in concert and marching bands. It is played in the same manner as a flute would be played.

History: The piccolo was originally made out of wood and was featured in man prominent composers' works. One of the earliest pieces to use the piccolo was Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. However, the most familiar use of the piccolo is in the end of John Philip Sousa's "The Stars and Stripes Forever."

Piccolo picture from Virginia Commonwealth University ©
and history from
ThinkQuest ©

 


Piano


Cristofori's "gravicembalo col piano e forte" was designed after the pattern and usage of the harpsichord to meet the demands of the ever more technical keyboard literature. Many developments by many independent builders and design engineers since 1700 resulted in a wide variety of cabinet styles, ton e s , and touch characteristics . Many combinations were rejected through the years, so that the "modern piano" is the result of a natural selection of the most popular features to date, and is still changing.

The pianoforte did not attract much attention in the early 1700's. Builders simplified the action for ease of manufacture , eliminating the escapement and the check, the two features most essential to good control over dynamics and articulation. The pianoforte was simply grouped with other keyboard novelties of the day and few were made. In the 1760's and 1770s more significant advancements began to appear on the scene. For example, Johann Andreas Stein of Vi enna included an escapement on his piano that pleased Mozart in 1777. Johann Christian Bach was the first to perform in public on the pianoforte in England. His promotion of the small, "square" pianos of Johannes Zumpe made th em fashionable. By the late 1770's, hundreds of the Zumpe-style pianos were being made each year by various s builders in England. It was a small, rectangular Instrument with a simple action without escapement or check. The sound was louder and brighter than a clavichord and more capable of musical expressiveness than a spinet (small harpsichords popular at that time).

By the late 1700's, John Broadwood and Company had made many improvements by taking a scientific approach to design. Broadwood's "grand" piano action had escapement and check.

His scale was engineered by a scientist for proper string length, composition, and striking point of the hammer. The large, harpsichord shaped case was sturdy, and concern was given to the balance of string tension. At that time, some manufacturers began to build various types of upright pianos. A number of devices for sustaining or altering the tone were added. Several dozen manufacturers In London were producing less than 40 pianos per year each by 1800. In contrast, Broadwood, with a factory employing 300 technician, was then making 400 pianos per year.

Between 1791 and 1815, 135 keyboard instrument builders are listed in Vienna, and many changes were being made in the piano. Key color changed to white with black sharps, having previously been the reverse. Cases became heavier as longer, thicker, higher tension strings were used with large hammers. By 1820 the typical Viennese grand piano was nearly 2.5 meters long, with a range of 6 or 6 1/2 octaves, and had two to six pedals each activating some devise to alter the tone of the instrument.

Around 1800, iron bracing began to be used to strengthen the frame the which allowed the use of heavier hammers on thicker, higher tension strings. Many types of hammer coverings were tried to replace the harsh toned leather covered style of early days . By the middle of the 19th Century, felt over wood became the norm for hammers. Improved actions were more complex for grands and included a sticker or stick reaching up from the end of the key to operate the upright pianos, which at that time were more like awkward, upended grands.

In the early 1800s a smaller upright "cottage piano' and a larger 'square piano' were developed for the popular market. Large numbers of there were sold In England and France to those who could not afford a satisfactory musical instrument but were enthused by the piano's charm and appeal.

America began receiving pianos in the 1770's. The first built was in 1775 by Johann Behrent in Philadelphia. The first American piano patent was applied for In 1796. The first U.S. born piano manufacturer was Jonas Chickering. He started his firm in 1823 and became successful  and innovative In piano design. His full cast iron plate for the grand made possible more advances In string tension and a resultant big piano sound. Heinrich Steinweg immigrated to New York from Germany in 1853. The Steinway and Sons piano company that he developed made significant improvements in reliability and resilience.

In the 1860s, Steinway applied the new piano technology to the uprights, opening a new era of piano manufacture. Specialty houses began to supply standardized parts to manufacturers. Expensive, technical procedures were replaced by efficient assembly line techniques. Quality pianos could then be built by every size of manufacturing firm. Traditional European builders resisted these changes and American manufacturers, after the Steinway model, took the lead in world trade. Square grands consisted of 90% of the U.S. market in the 1860's, but were almost entirely replaced by grands and especially the uprights by the 189O's.

Most pianos built after 1900, and many of the pianos of the 1890's and 1880's reflect modern technology, style, and performance. They are similar to the modern piano of today in most respects. Reblitz (1974, p.l) divides pianos into three chronological periods: 1700-1830 "antique", 1850-1900 "Victorian", and 1900 to now "modern". These demarcations generally are characterized by the style of cabinetry as well as the maturity of the action design and quality of the tone production of each period. That the piano has been popular can be exemplified by the fact that over 5000 different brands have been produced (Reblitz, 1965).

The 19th Century was also an age of innovation, trial, and error in piano design. Every style and combination imaginable was attempted, including building into the piano a harpsichord, an organ, or harmonium, disguising the piano as some other type of furniture, or installing innumerable devises to alter the tone. One Interesting experimental category is the "Sostente Pianos", referring to the attempt to make a sustained sound like the organ or the violin. Methods attempted include:

Endless bows . A bow that revolves continually is pressed against the string on demand. A few of the many examples include: Clavecin-Vielle, Paris, 1708; Lyrichord, Plenius, 1741; Bogenhammerklavier, Grenier, 1779; Claviola, U.S.A., 1802; and many others through 1892.

Compressed Air. After the hammer Is struck, the string continues to vibrate by a jet of compressed air: Anemocorde, Paris, 1789, others through 1871.

Transmitted Vibrations. An elastic body like music wire will vibrate if a rod connected to it is rubbed: Harmonichord, Dresden, 1809 (a rotating drum touching the strings); Coelison, Bohemia, 1821 (keys attached directly to the strings) and others.

Quick and Repeated Movement of the Hammers. Included optional attachments that used a mechanical device to have the hammers, or smaller auxiliary hammers or strips of cloth or leather make repeated strokes against the string: Piano tremolopone , Paris, 1844; Melopiano, 1873 Armonipiano, France; and others.

The Combination of Hammer Striking the String and Free Vibrating Reeds. Piano a prolongement; Piano Scande, Paris, 1853; Piano a sons soutenus, and others.

Electronic Principle. Electrochord, Bohemia, Forster Co., 1932; Electronic Piano, Phillips Co, 1958 (no strings, no hammers , no sound board). Electronic instruments with piano like touch and tone have become very popular In the 1980's.

In the 1890's, the "reproducing pianos" started to gain popularity. The earliest type of player was a device that was pushed in front of the piano. While the operator pumped the foot treadles, the player mechanism played on the keys with wooden "fingers". In the early 1900's manufacturers began Installing player mechanisms inside the large upright t and the grand pianos. By 1904, mechanisms and rolls were developed that more effectively reproduced the special nuances of the performer. One such, the Welte-Mignon (Germany) was available in 115 brands of pianos. Many famous artists made piano roll recordings, most of which are still available today.  The popularity of reproducing pianos reached its peak In the early 1920's. After The Depression, sales never recovered due to alternatives to reproduced music that were less cumbersome and expensive, such as the gramophone and the radio. Player pianos are still manufactured today In many styles, both old fashioned and modern, large and small Some play the old style paper rolls, others use electronic media such as tape or disk.

In an effort to recover from the devastation of the Great Depression, manufacturers who remained created new styles to stimulate interest. Like the markets of the 18th Century, the mid-20th Century emphasis had to be on economy rather than quality, and appearance rather than performance. Thus, the great number In the 1930's and 1940's of varying styles of small pianos such as the "baby grand" (small horizontal piano).

Piano pictures and history from Cantos ©

 

Cello

The name 'violoncello' first became current in the mid-17th century, but bass violins of one kind or another are mentioned in several treatises of the 16th and early 17th centuries, jambe de Fer (1556, p.610 referred to the 'bas de violon', Zacconi (1592, p.218) to the 'basso di viola da braccio', Praetorius (ii, 2/1619, 'Tabella universalis', p.26) to the 'bass viol de braccio' and Mersenne (ii, 1637, p.185) to the 'basse de violon'. The term 'violone' is often found in Italian church archives of the same period (e.g. those of Santa Maria Maggiore, Bergamo) to refer to a bass violin rather than a bass (or doublebass) viola da gamba (see Bonta, 1978), and it is as a diminutive of this that the instrument now known as the violoncello is recognized. The earliest known use of the term 'violoncello' is in Giulio Cesare Arresti's Sonate op.4 (Venice, 1665).

Five String CelloThe instrument originated in the early 16th century as a member of a whole family of instruments, of different sizes and with varying compasses, known as 'viole da braccio'.

The bass instrument thus acquired its modern tuning of C-G-d-a (an octave below the viola), which had been described by H. Gerle (Musica teusch, Nuremberg, 1532).

The earliest known makers of instruments that would be recognized today as cellos were Andrea Amati (d before 1580) of Cremona, Gasparo da Salo (1540-1609) of Brescia and his pupil Giovanni Paolo Maggini (c1581-c1632). Their instruments were considerably larger than the standard modern cello, some having a body length of 80 cm or more (surviving examples have been reduced in size).

The dimensions of the cello nevertheless continued to fluctuate during the rest of the century, varying between 73 and 80 cm, with a preference for the larger model, David Tecchler was still making fine examples of the larger model in Rome in the mid-18th century, it did not arrive at the now normal length of about 69 cm until the necks of the whole violin family were lengthened during the 18th century.

Other modifications made to the violin family during the 18th century were due to changing concepts of the sound required. The neck and fingerboard were lengthened and curved more sharply, the bridge was raised, and thinner and tauter strings gave the cello a clearer and more responsive tone.

Cello resting on floor between kneesThe principal factors governing the development of cello playing technique were its structural and functional membership in the violin family and the size necessitated by its compass, which inevitably led to some approximation to viol technique; the cello could only be played upright, like the viola da gamba. By the last quarter of the 17th century viol players, especially in France, had developed highly flexible and refined left-hand and bowing techniques.

At first the cello player sat with the instrument placed between his legs on the floor  or stood with it leant against his body or supported with a strap. Occasionally it was placed on a stool, and some pictures show it held in a horizontal position, perhaps to play pizzicato or merely to pose. The grip round the neck, with the fingers falling obliquely on to the strings, and the purely diatonic fingering, with four fingers filling in the intervals between the 5ths in which the instrument was tuned, both derived from violin playing. This technique was good enough for the simple demands made of the instrument in the 16th century, when the violin family occupied a musically and socially humble position, being used principally for dance music. However, as the rise of monody, thorough bass and concertante style around 1600 gave the violin an increasing importance, the cello, too, was called upon to perform a more complex role, demanding'a technique more suited to the length of its strings and the position in which it was held. The instrument was from then held without the aid of the left hand, leaving it more free to execute fast passages and changes of position, while the fingers came down on the strings vertically, making double stopping possible.

Boccherini with no endpinTowards 1700 it became usual for the player to place the instrument between his knees and support it with his calves, in the traditional posture of the bass viol player. This high position permitted him to draw back the neck towards himself, so that the left hand could approach the strings from the side instead of from behind and could thus reach the whole area of the fingerboard without difficulty. Since the place where the bow touched the strings (the 'point of contact') was also raised, the entire length of the bow could be used. This way of holding the cello made possible the introduction .(cl720) of the practice of using the thumb as a movable saddle in the upper registers, thus making the entire compass of the instrument more accessible. Thumb position is first described in Michel Corrette's Methode (1741).

Courette's MethodeBecause of the length of its strings, the purely diatonic fingering of the violin is not at all suitable for the cello, and this fingering was changed, after a transitional, still diatonic, stage (which used the first, second and fourth, or first, second and third fingers) to a system with regular semitone intervals between one finger and the next, with the option of extending the interval between the first and second fingers to a whole tone.

There are no instruction manuals from this period (the earliest dates from the mid-18th century, and such works, being designed for amateurs, are anyway rudimentary), and the researcher is forced to base any deductions on such evidence as can be gleaned from a detailed study of the demands made by the repertory.

Until the second half of the 18th century cello bowsticks were either straight or convex, like those of the viol and the violin. The usual grip was 'overhand', with the palm of the hand turned downwards - the same grip as that used with smaller members of the violin family. Tourte fixed the length of the cello bow at 72 to 73 cm, with playing hair of 60 to 62 cm.

In Italy, where the viol had been completely replaced by the violin by the beginning of the 17th century, cello technique remained related to violin technique for an exceptionally long time; it was there that the cello first became a solo instrument.

Cello pictures and history from CelloHeaven ©

 

Recorder

The recorder is a member of the fipple flute family of instruments. Fipple flutes are wind instruments with a fipple, or block in the blowing end, hence its German name blockflute. The block creates a narrow windway which channels a sharp stream of air into the bore and helps give the recorder its characteristic clear, reedy sound. Other members of the fipple flute family include the flageolet, whistle, and three holed tabor pipe.

Very Early Recorders
Whistle-type instruments have been made for thousands of years, as evidenced by an instrument made from a sheep bone, which was found in an Iron Age tomb in England. However, most of these early instruments were not recorders in the sense that we think of them (that is, an instrument with eight finger holes, seven at the front and one at the back). The date at which the first true recorders came into existence in Europe has been the subject of heated academic debate. It was probably in the mediaeval period about 600-700 years ago, but even that is open to conjecture, as no very early instruments survive intact. Many so-called "recorders" seen in paintings cannot be identified as such with 100% certainty, and even the most famous surviving example of an early recorder, which was found in a moat in Dordrecht, Holland in 1940, is sadly fragmented. The Dordrecht recorder has been dated to the early 15th century (the house where it was found was abandoned in 1418); however, in the absence of anything to compare it with, it is impossible to tell whether it was at all representative of other instruments made during this period.

Of course, this is all bad news for students of mediaeval music. While attempts have been made to make copies of so-called "mediaeval recorders", (including recorders with windcaps like crumhorns, none of these instruments can truly be called authentic: there simply isn't any hard evidence as to what mediaeval recorders sounded like. The best we can say is that they were probably simple instruments with a strong tone and small range of notes. Renaissance Recorders The earliest recorders that we have hard evidence for - ie. intact surviving instruments -  date from the late Renaissance period (16th century). These instruments can be and are satisfactorily reconstructed.

Renaissance recorders often come as a bit of a shock to people who are accustomed to the softer, more refined sound of the usual Baroque instruments. Renaissance recorders are very much consort instruments, and have a much louder, more robust sound, especially in the lower register. They also sound somehow "woodier" than Baroque instruments. The payoff for the volume and the strength in the lower notes is a smaller range: most Renaissance recorders have a range of an octave and a sixth, as opposed to a bit over two octaves for a Baroque recorder. In practical terms this is not usually a problem, as consort music of the Renaissance period, being written for the instruments then available, is unlikely to require a larger range.

Renaissance recorders have a large bore, much bigger than that found in Baroque recorders. Often referred to as cylindrical, it is actually very slightly tapered. Renaissance instruments feature a much plainer profile than most people are used to, with almost no decorative carving. The original instruments were made in one piece, but modern copies are usually made in two pieces for convenience, often joined by a brass or wooden ring at the base of the head joint. Interestingly, there was no hard and fast rule in Renaissance times as to which hand went "on top": some surviving instruments have two bottom holes, one for left and the other for right handed musicians. The unused hole was filled with wax to seal it off according to the musician's preference.

Baroque Recorders
These are the recorders all of us are used to: the highly turned, sophisticated "flutes" of the Baroque period. In the 17th century the recorder underwent a period of transition: the bore became more sharply conical, tapering out from bottom to top, and makers started striving for a larger range and a more refined, flexible sound which would be suitable for playing solos. Much of the great solo recorder repertoire dates from this period. Recorders were also used in orchestral music at this time.

In the early 18th century, the transverse flute (traverso) started gaining in popularity. The biggest disadvantage of the recorder is the fact that it is a very soft instrument; transverse flutes were louder and had a bigger range, making them more suitable for the orchestral music then beginning to come into vogue. The recorder was gradually played less and less until it almost disappeared; by the 19th century it was played rarely, and then mostly as an historical curiosity. The art of making recorders virtually disappeared and, as anyone who has ever tried to make one can attest, they are deceptively sophisticated instruments. The instrument did not come back into fashion until the early music revival of the late 19th and early 20th century, when Arnold Dolmetsch virtually had to reinvent the wheel.

The Recorder Today
In the late twentieth century,  the recorder is more popular than at any other time of its existence.  Millions of instruments are manufactured annually, and there is a large and imaginative modern repertoire.  Recorders are made after historical models,  and radical advances by makers are opening up new possibilities for the instrument .

Recorder picture from Moeck Recorders ©
and history from
Dragon Early Music ©

 

Harpsichord

The harpsichord is a musical instrument whose strings are plucked from a keyboard and which sits on a table or stand while being played. They have been made in varying shapes, sizes and sounds over the years. They were called virginals in Elizabethan England, a term today reserved in English for harpsichords whose strings are parallel to the keyboard.

1300

drawing, Velislav Bible, 1340The ancestor of the harpsichord was the psaltery. When played with a plectrum held in one hand, and the strings damped by the other hand, it couldwood carving, Kefermarkt, Austria handle rapid organal parts. In this example, it is being plucked with both hands, playing with a harp and bells. From the attention the player is paying to the harpist, she is obviously playing a subordinate part.

The psaltery is occasionally shown being played flat on a lap, but it is then easily confused with the dulcimer, which was struck with hammers like a xylophone.

By the late 1300s, a keyboard was being added to the psaltery, at right angles to the soundboard in a manner similar to portative organs of the time. It remained a small hand-held instrument and had the Latin name clavicytherium. This is probably the instrument referred to as an exaquir in 1387, "an instrument like an organ which sounds by means of strings".

1400

What we know today as a harpsichord seems to have evolved in the early 1400s in Flanders. The earliest ones had the thick cases typical of later Flemish instruments, but were small by later standards and had no jack rail. Their complex plucking mechanisms survive in a set of drawings c1440 by Henri Arnaut in Burgundy. Some of these plucked the strings with a quill like the psaltery, some with metal plectra, and at least one struck the strings with a metal staple in the manner of the dulcimer. The earliest surviving representation is an altar carving from Germany ca.1425. The second is from England: a beautiful stained glass window attributed to John Prudd c1440 in the Beauchamp chapel of St.Mary's Church, Warwick England that clearly shows its Flemish influence in the case decoration.

 

1500

By 1500, however, Italian makers have taken over. All harpsichords appear to be plucked by simple jacks sliding in a guide between a keyboard and a jack rail. The Italian case is light and the stress of the strings supported by internal knees. The keyboard range has doubled from the earlier northern instruments. And, the harpsichord has taken the musical world by storm.

Some 40 instruments survive essentially intact from the 1500's. Almost all are Italian. This may be because in later centuries, northern instrument makers moved towards heavier, longer strings that would have pulled their early instruments apart. Italian instruments kept light short strings throughout the harpsichord era, and could continue to adapt their old instruments to later tastes. But, the earliest references to harpsichords are all from north of the Alps.

Most early Italian harpsichords were single strung, some had an octave string set; only a few had doubled fundamental strings. Some, such as the earliest surviving unmodified harpsichord, by Domenicus Pisaurensis (Domenic of Pisa) of 1533, have both nut and bridge on a soundboard. This is the instrument of the 'father of music', Wm. Byrd, and the other English virginalists.

Harpsichords were very variable in pitch at this time. There seems, however, to have been a tendency to cluster around two scales. These probably sounded about a fourth apart, with the lower one matching the pitch of the lute.

muselaar, Jan VerMeer c1660Early in the 1500s, a small form of the harpsichord appears in Italy, the spinetta, with single strings parallel to the keyboard. It has a pentagonal outline, and both ends of the strings rest on a soundboard. (The instrument attributed to Queen Elizabeth I is an Italian pentagonal spinetta.) They were made in Flanders as well, as shown in a delicate painting by Caterina de Hemessen in 1548.

About 1560, the Flemish began making the spinetta bigger, with a rectangular outline. The most popular instrument of this type was called a muselaar, and sounded like a lute. Others sounded like the Italian instruments, but had a wider range.
 

Also at this time, the Flemish made the first known efforts to vary the sound of the basic harpsichord. The muselaars had a set of metal pins which could be slid up to the strings near one end. Two-manual harpsichords appear by 1580, with the spinetten sound on the upper manual and a lute sound on the lower (but not as much so as the muselaar). The Flemish also made elaborate virginal pairs an octave apart - these could be played as two entirely separate instruments, as a two manual instrument, or be coupled together to sound as one.

1600

Faby, Bologna, 1677
By 1640, two fundamental strings played together predominated in Italian practise and most of the old ones were converted to this style. (The oldest surviving harpsichord, by Hieronymus Bononiensis in 1521, was originally single strung.) Italian practise then remained largely unchanged as long as the harpsichord was used. Further development of harpsichords was based on the Flemish models of the late 1500s.

During this century, the harpsichord range was increased. Most early instruments cover less than 4 octaves, this was gradually expanded to 5 octaves. Often this was done by retuning the bass octave to omit sharp notes, thus reaching deeper notes with no change to the instrument. In this 1677 instrument, the range has been extended by splitting the lowest two sharp keys and squeezing two new sets of strings into an existing design.

1700

18th century French rebuild of a 1623 Ruckers
photo courtesy Michael MeacockThe number of strings increased, large instruments often having three choirs per note. And, the choirs were now designed to be easily selected by the player in various combinations for different sound effects.

Two manual instruments became more common (but were always in the small minority). Usually the choirs used by an upper manual were voiced more quietly than those used by the lower, allowing choice of a forte-piano contrast as well as a tonal contrast.

Despite these changes, however, the essential mechanical layout and sound of the Flemish instruments of the mid-1500s were retained in northern instruments during the 1700s. This was the instrument for which the Couperins, J.S.Bach, Handel, Haydn, and the other great northern composers wrote.

Only in Spain and Portugal was there any significant development of the Italian harpsichord, the range was increased to the 5 octaves used by Domenico Scarlatti.

1800

Essentially, use of the harpsichord ceased by 1800. The precision and clarity of the baroque had been replaced by mush and bombast.

1900

Several German firms experimented with plucked pianos late in the 1800's. By 1900, a young Polish pianist, Wanda Landowska, had figured out how to make good music with them and, in 1912, the French firm of Pleyel brought out a model designed for her. Ralph Kirkpatrick and others used similar instruments to join her in developing a wholly new sound that blended piano and organ techniques of the time. A French violinist, Arnold Dolmetsch, made a number of instruments at several workshops based on English harpsichords of the late 1700s, but without their sonority - they attracted few admirers. Some of the surviving large harpsichords were modified by replacing a set of strings by strings an octave below normal pitch - at least one such modified instrument was attributed to J.S.Bach.

Ruckers/Taskin harpsichord by Frank Hubbard, 1976The revival of the instruments with the sound that ravished three centuries of the world's most discerning musicians began with Frank Hubbard's studies with Hugh Gough in 1948, his research that culminated in his "Three Centuries of Harpsichord Making" of 1965, and all the apprentices he trained. By the late 1900s, many craftsmen made instruments as musical as the old, and many performers played them as well as the old.

 

 

 

 

Harpsichord pictures and history from John Sankey ©