Middle Ages Instruments
Middle Ages Instruments
The
Cittern
The Cittern The Cittern, a Renaissance
instrument that may be a descendent of the citole, is
equipped with metal strings. It was considered an
instrument fit for rustics, such as cobblers and tailors.
The Citole and Gittern are two plucked string instruments with rounded pear shape and four or five strings
are illustrated in the late thirteenth century Cantigas
de Santa Maria manuscript belonging to King Alfonso X
"The Wise" of Castile. The neck is fretted, the strings
are gut and are often played with a plectrum. Their
tuning may have been similar to t that of medieval lutes
(c f a d'). It was frequently used for singing and
dancing and is often pictured with the medieval
fiddle.
A double-reed wind instrument (predecessor of
the modern oboe) with expanding bell, made of wood and
possibly derived from the Middle-Eastern surna. The shawm
had a piercing sound that was said to have terrified the
crusaders. It was often paired with trumpets and drums
and played by professional musicians for ceremonial
occasions, outdoors or in large halls. In all varieties
of the instrument the reed was fixed onto a disc, made of
wood or metal.
This wind instrument, also known as a duct
flute, may have developed from more primitive pipes with
five or six holes and no thumb hole. The medieval
recorder had a rear thumb hole and seven fingerholes in
front, a wide cylindrical bore that produced a mellow
sound that blended well in ensembles. Recorders had two
holes for the little finger, allowing for right- or
left-handed players. The unused hole was then plugged
with wax. By the 15th century the recorder was made in
different sizes for consort playing and by the 17th
century, the recorder was made in three sections with a
narrower bore and more piercing sound than the earlier
instrument.
Middle
Ages Instruments
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