Lute: Chad musical instrument
Lute is a generic name for any string instrument that have the strings running in a plane parallel to the sound table, more specifically t...
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Lute is a generic name for
any string instrument that have the strings running in a plane parallel to the
sound table, more specifically to any plucked string instrument that has a neck
and a deep round back or more specifically to an instrument that is from the
category of the European lutes. The European lute and the modern near-eastern
oud both came from a common father through diverging evolutionary paths. The
lute is used in a specific type of instrumental music from the medieval to the
late Baroque eras and was the most essential musical instrument for secular
music in the Renaissance. It is also an accompaniment, mostly in the vocal
works often realizing a basso continuo or performing a written-out
accompaniment. The player of this musical instrument is known as letenist or
lutanist and a maker of the musical instrument is known as the luthier. The
word ‘lute’ and ‘oud’ are derived from the Arabic word ‘al-ud’. Recent research
made by Eckard Neubauer opined that the ‘ud’ may turn to be an Arabized version
of the Persian name ‘rud’ that means ‘string’, ‘string instrument’ or ‘lute’.
It has also been said that the wood in the name may have differentiated the
instrument by its wooden soundboard from skin-faced predecessors.
source: shipbrook.net
Lutes are made almost from
the wood; the soundboard of the instrument is a teardrop-shaped thin flat plate
of resounding wood. In all lutes, the soundboard has a single ornamented sound
hole under the strings known as the ‘rose’. The sound hole is not open rather
it is covered with a grill in the form of an intertwining vine or a decorated
knot that is carved completely out of the wood of the instrument’s soundboard.
The shells of the instrument are gathered from thin hardwood called ribs and
are joined edge to edge to create a deep rounded body for the instrument. There
are braces that are put inside the soundboard of the instrument that gives it strength.
The neck of the instrument
is produced of light wood with a veneer of hardwood to make available the
durability that is need wed by the fretboard underneath the string of the lute.
The lute’s fretboard unlike most othe modern string instruments is mounted flush
with the top. The pegbox for lute prior
to the Baroque era was wired back from the neck of the at almost 90 degree to
help in holdfing the low tension strings firmly against the nut that is
traditionally gummed in place, although it is held in place by strings pressure
only. The tuning pegs of the instrument are simple pegs of hardwood that could
be tapered and are held in place by friction in holes drilled through the
pegbox of the lute. Just like other instruments that use friction pegs, the
wood for the pegs is important. As the wood undergoes the unpleasant
dimensional changes through age and loss of humidity, it must be have a
reasonably circular cross-section to perform properly- as they are no gears or
any other mechanical aids for the tuning of the instrument. The shape of the
lute belly is almost complex, having a system of barring in which braces are
placed perfectly vertical to the strings at a particular lengths along the
overall length of the belly, the ends that are angled quite precisely to be
adjacent the ribs on any side for structural motives. The thickness of the
belly differs, but generally is made at about 1.5 mm to 2 mm. Some luthiers
tune the belly of the instrument as they build, and they remove mass and adapt
bracing to manufacture desirable sonic results. The belly of the instrument is
almost never finished, although in some cases, the luthier may size the top of
the instrument with a very thin coat of shellac or glair to help keep it neat.
The belly of the lute joins directly to the rib without having any linning
gummed to the sides and a cap and the counter cap are gummed to both outside
and inside the bottom end of the bowl to give rigidity as well as gluing
surface.
The bridge of the
instrument is sometimes made with a fruit wood, which is attached to the
soundboard specifically at 1/5 to 1/7 the length of the belly. The bridge does
not have any separate saddle but holes that are bored into it to which the
strings of the instrument attach directly. The bridge of the instrument is made
to be reduced in height and length with the small end grasping the treble and
the higher and wider end carrying the basses. The bridges are usually
ornamented black with carbon black in a binder that is usually shellacked and
often have printed decoration. The scrolls or any other decoration on the end
of the instrument bridges are integral to the bridge of the lute and are not
added afterward as on some renewed guitars.
The frets of the lute are
produced of loops of guts that are tied around the neck of the musical
instrument. They fray with use andshould be replaced from time to time as they
fray. A few axtra partial frets of woods are usually glued to the body of the
instrument and this permits the stopping of the highest pitched courses up to a
full octave that is higher than the open string, but these are considered
anachronistic by some. Handed down the choice between nylon and gut, many
luthiers prefer the use of gut as it is acceptable to the sharp angle at the
edge of the fingerboard.
The strings of the
instrument were historically produced of animal gut, often from the small
intestine of sheep; sometimes with the combination of a metal, and are still
produced of gut or a synthetic replacement with the metal windings on the
lower-pitched strings of the lute. Modern producers of the instrument make both
gut and nylon strings and is both in common use by the players of the instrument.
Gut is more trustworthy for playing period pieces, but unfortunately it is also
more easily affected to irregularity and the pitch lack of firmness due to the
changes in humidity. Nylon gives better tuning firmness, although it is seen as
chronologically wrong by purist because the tone quality varies from the sound
of earlier gut strings. The strings of the lute are tuned in courses of two
strings each, but the highest-pitched course often made up of only a string
that is called ‘chanterelle’. In the later Baroque lutes, two upper courses are
single. The courses of the instrument are numbered serially starting from the
highest pitched to the lowest so that the chanterelle is the first course and
the next pair of string is the second course. The course of the instrument are
tuned in notes of the same pitch for high and intermediate pitches, although for
the lower pitches one of the two strings is normally tuned to an octave higher.
The two strings of a course are almost stopped and plucked together as if they
are one string.
The origin of the lute is
difficult to understand because of not being clearly stated and the
organologist Curt Sachs differentiated between the short-necked lute and the
long-necked lute variety: both are said to be chordophones with a neck as
differentiated from the harp and the psalteries. Smith and others disagreed
that the long-necked variety is not supposed to be called lute because it
existed for at least a century before the invention of the short-necked
instrument that suddenly evolved into what is now known as the lute. The
lon-necked lute was not called lute until after the 19th century.
Many types of necked chordophones were being used in the old Greek, Egyptian
and Iran also the Hittite, Roman, Bulgar, Turkic, Chinese and Armenian
cultures. The lute built its familiar look as Barbat in Persia, Armenia and in
Byzantium starting in the early 7th century when it was replaced
with a wooden soundboard. As early as the 6th century, the Bulgars
took the short-necked type of the instrument that is called ‘Komuz’ to the
Balkans and in the 9th century, Moors took the ‘oud’ to the Spanish
empire. In about the year 1500, much Spanish, Catalan and the Portuguese
lutenist took to the ‘vihuela de mano; this is a viol-shaped instrument that is
tuned like the lute, although both instrument continued in co-existence. This
musical instrument also found its way into the parts of Italy that were under
the Spanish domination where it was called the ‘viola da mano’. Another essential
thing to know about the transfer of the lute from Arabian to the European
culture might have been in the largest island of the Mediterranean Sea, where
it was brought either by Byzantine or later by Saracen musicians.
Medieval lutes were 4 or 5
course musical instruments that are plucked with the use a ‘quill’ as the
plectrum. There were of many sizes and by the end of the renaissance, about
seven sizes of the instrument were recorded. The primary function of the lute
was the accompaniment of songs in the middle ages, although very small music
that is securely attributed to the lute survives from the time before 1500. In
the past few decades, probably in the 15th century, to play the
renaissance polyphony on a single musical instrument, the players of the lute
slowly abandoned the quill to choose the plucking of the instrument with the
fingertips of the hand and the number of the courses was increased to six and
more. The lute was seen as the premier solo musical instrument of the 16th
century, although it continued with the accompaniment of the singers also. By
the end of the renaissance, the number of the courses of the instrument
increased to ten and during the baroque era, the number continued to increase
until it reached 14.
Over the courses of the
Baroque era, the lute was highly relegated to the continuo accompaniment and
was suddenly superseded in that role by the keyboard instruments. The lute
almost stopped being used after 1800. Some kind of lute was still being used
for some time in Germany, Ukraine and Sweden.
The lute enjoyed a revival
with the growing of interest in historical music over the world and throughout
the century. That renewal of interest was further boosted by the early music
movement in the 20th century. The revival of this musical instrument
was engineered by some people such as “JulianBream, Hans Neemann, Walter Gerwig
and Suzanne Bloch. During the early days of the known music movement, many
lutes were built by available luthiers that specialized on the classical guitars.
Such lute were produced with the construction that is similar to the classical
guitar with fan bracing, heavy tops, fixed fret and lined sides and all of them
are anachronistic to that lutes that has existed. The lutes that are carved in
the present day are undeniably quite similar to those that survived and were
kept in the museum or private collection. They are custom made and that is why
they are much more expensive than the mass produced modern instruments like the
guitar even though it is not more expensive than the violin. Different from the
past, there are many types of lute that are seen today; 5 courses medieval
lutes as well as the renaissance lute which has 6 to 10 courses in many pitches
for solo and group performance of the renaissance works. In the 13th
century, the lutes were in widespread use in Europe till today and documents
opined numerous early performers and composers of music with this musical
instrument.
The lute as
a musical instrument has many shapes and sizes with differing strings and
courses and with no particular standard for tuning them. Meanwhile, the
following seems to have been usually true of the renaissance lute. A 6 course
renaissance tenor lute can be tuned in the same pattern and intervals as a
tenor viol, with intervals of a perfect fourth between all the courses of the
instrument except the 3rd and the 4th that varies only by
a major third. For lutes that have more than six courses, the extra courses
would be added on the low end of the instrument. Due to the large number of the
strings, lutes possess very wide necks and it is hard to stop the strings of the
instrument beyond the sixth course, so any additional course on the instrument
were normally tuned to pitches useful as bass note instead of continuing the
regular pattern of fourth and these lower courses and usually played without
stopping during any performance. As such, 8 course tenor renaissance lute can
be tuned to [(D'D) (F'F) (G'G) (Cc) (FF) (AA) (dd) (g)], and a 10-courselute
can be tuned to [(C'C) (D'D) (E♭'E♭) (F'F)
(G'G) (Cc) (FF) (AA) (dd) (g)].
Modern lutenists tune to a specific type of
pitch standards starting from the A = 392 to 470 Hz depending much on the type
of instrument they are playing with. No attempt of a universal pitch standard
has existed during the era of the lute’s historical fact of being well liked.
The standards differed over time and also from place to place.
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