Tromba marina: Czech Republic musical instrument
A tromba marina which is also known as marine trumpet is a triangular bowed string musical instrument that is used in the medieval and ren...
http://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2013/12/tromba-marina-czech-republic-musical.html
A tromba marina which is also known
as marine trumpet is a triangular bowed string musical instrument that is used
in the medieval and renaissance Europe that was highly well-known in the 15th
century in England and survives into the 18th century. The musical
instrument is made up of a body, a neck that is in the shape of a truncated
cone that is resting on a triangular base. The instrument is a often 4 to 7 feet’s
long and it is a monochord. The tromba marina is played without stopping the
string, but performing natural harmonics by slightly touching the string of the
instrument with the thumb at nodal points. The name of the instrument comes
from the sound that is similar to that of the trumpet because of the unusual
construction of the bridge and the similitude of the contours to the marine
speaking-trumpet of the middle ages.
The body of the musical instrument is
widely either of three sides of wood that are joined in a lengthened triangle
shape having the peg box at the top; or a body of three to six ribs, a frontal
soundboard of the instrument and differentiable neck of the instrument. In many
cases, the beneath end of the instrument is open, some historical version of
the instrument has sound holes. The single string, widely the D string of a
cello, most usually is tuned to C three octaves below middle C. it fixes at the
soundboard and moves over one foot of the bridge, thereby leaving the foot of
the instrument to vibrate easily and freely on a plate of ivory or glass set
into the soundboard of the instrument, producing a brassy buzz. From the
irregular shape, the bridge of the instrument was also referred to as the shoe
as it is thick and high at one side of the instrument on which rested the
string and low and narrow at the other that was left lose so that it vibrated
against the belly of the instrument with every movement of the bow. A string
that is called ‘guidon’ is tied against the playing string of the instrument
below the bridge and runs up to the peg box where it is packaged around a peg. The
guidon corrects the balance of the bridge by pulling the playing string.
In the days of Micheal Praetorious,
the length of the tromba marina was 7’3’’ and there are three sides at the base
that is measured 7’’, tapering to the neck. First, there was only one string on
the musical instrument, which is generally a D cello string. The heavy bow that
is analogous to that of the cello is used between the highest position of the
left hand at the nodal point and the nut of the head.
When the trumpet was used extensively
in churches found in Germany, nuns usually replaced the tromba marina due to
the women were not permitted to play trumpets. The musical instrument was
discarded in the first half of the 18th century and was only to be
seen being used by the street musicians.