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Archicembalo

The archicembalo /ɑːrkiˈɛmbəl/ (or arcicembalo, /ɑːriˈɛmbəl/) was a musical instrument described by Nicola Vicentino in 1555. This was a harpsichord built with many extra keys and strings, enabling experimentation in microtonality and just intonation.

Reproduction of the archicembalo

Construction edit

The archicembalo had two manuals, but unlike those on a normal harpsichord these two keyboards were used to provide extra pitches rather than a timbral difference. Both manuals contained all of the usual white and black keys, but in addition each black key was divided into two parts so that a distinction could be made between a sharp or flat note. The lower manual also included black keys between B and C, and between E and F. In total, 36 keys were available in any octave, each of which was tuned to a different pitch, as shown in the diagram of the lower manual.[1]

Tuning edit

 
Diagram of the archicembalo's tuning in cents.

There were two systems of tuning the archicembalo considered by Vicentino:

  1. The most important was the extended quarter-comma meantone temperament—which, given such a wide gamut of fifths, becomes almost exactly a system of 31 equal divisions of the octave (see 31 equal temperament). This arises because after a cycle of 31 quarter-comma-tempered fifths, the 32nd pitch is remarkably close to a pitch that already exists in the system. Thus, five of Vicentino's 36 possibilities became practically redundant in this system. He suggested that these five be tuned instead according to the second manner described below.
  2. Vicentino offered an alternative tuning in which the upper keyboard was tuned a quarter-comma higher than the lower, allowing pure fifths by playing chords across the manuals, giving a limited system of triadic just intonation. This tuning still permits modulation to a wide range of keys, but not in a completely circular fashion as with the first tuning described above, and still only modulates by the meantone-tempered fifth, not by the pure fifth.

The observation that extended quarter-comma meantone temperament almost exactly approximates 31 equal was recognized by Huygens in 1661, published in 1691. He says that after making this discovery, he found an earlier mention of the idea in Salinas' report on a 31 tone Italian keyboard, presumably Vicentino's archicembalo.[2]

Vicentino's description of his first tuning has some puzzling statements if it is understood as 31 equal. He says that the major third from C to E is made closer to pure if it uses the slightly lower pitched C on the front keyboard with the slightly higher pitched E from the back keyboard. This is puzzling because in pure 31 equal all the major thirds should have been almost exactly pure already. Karol Berger's analysis of this suggests that he may actually have used a somewhat unequal tuning for his extended meantone system, varying perhaps from 0.2 comma smaller than pure to 13 comma larger than pure.[3][4]

Uses edit

Vicentino used his archicembalo to test his own theories of tuning, and realize the more obscure ancient Greek genera, which had been neglected for centuries. In addition to his experiments, he found it very helpful for accompaniment of vocalists and instrumental players, as it was capable of coping with the subtle intonational differences inherent in musical practice in a way that no keyboard instrument had before.

For composers of the time, the archicembalo made total modulatory freedom a possibility without sacrificing the purity of meantone temperament's just thirds as with 12-tone equal temperament. This was exploited by those who learned to play it, such as Luzzasco Luzzaschi. Contemporary composers had been writing vocal music in a very chromatic style for some time, but it was instruments such as the archicembalo that permitted them to explore the instrumental possibilities of chromaticism with a purity of intonation.

Spelling and pronunciation edit

Vicentino named his instrument the archicembalo[5] with possible reference to Greek prefix ἀρχι-, which means "major, principal" (as in the word architect).[6] Vicentino's advocate Ercole Bottrigari in his Il Desiderio (1599) also used the spelling 'archicembalo'.[7] In most modern English lexica the same instrument has been called arcicembalo (however, without explanation of this non-authentic spelling),[8] while others use Vicentino's spelling,[9] or offer both as alternatives.[10] The spelling 'archicembalo' is preferred in the English translation of the treatise.[11] German music dictionaries consistently give 'archicembalo'[12] as well as the largest Italian Enciclopedia della musica Ricordi.[13] The German scholar Manfred Cordes, who dedicated the book to Vicentino's music system, rebuilt the historic instrument and made a set of 'live' audio recordings using it, gives archicembalo throughout his book.[14] Another German scholar in his article prefers 'arcicembalo', while at the same time pointing out that Vicentino himself used the prefix arci- in another place, to describe an organ with similar functions called an 'arciorgano', and that the Italian language does not make a hard-and-fast distinction between the two forms.[15]

 
Clavemusicum omnitonum (Vito Trasuntino, Venice 1606) - Bologna, International museum and library of music

Surviving archicembali edit

Only one keyboard instrument using his 31-note-to-the-octave system survives from the Renaissance: the "Clavemusicum Omnitonum Modulis Diatonicis Cromaticis et Enarmonicis",[16] built by harpsichord maker Vito Trasuntino of Venice (1526 – after 1606) in 1606 intended to play the diatonic, chromatic and enharmonic melodies (moduli). It is on display at the International museum and library of music in Bologna. The Clavemusicum is accompanied by a tuning device, called TRECTA CORDO, that clearly shows an uneven division of the octave, with the usual meantone temperament for the first row of upper keys with C#, Eb, F#, G# and Bb.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Casimiri II 173 foldout music 28 NB.23. Alternate Exhibit Objects. Library of Congress Vatican Exhibit
  2. ^ Cohen, H. F. (11 November 2013). Quantifying Music: The Science of Music at the First Stage of Scientific Revolution 1580–1650. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 222. ISBN 978-94-015-7686-4.
  3. ^ Berger, Karol (1980). "Theories of chromatic and Enharmonic Music in Late 16th Century Italy - Chromatic systems (or non-systems) from Vicentino to Monteverdi". Early Music History. UMI Research Press. In the same rows [in] which one plays the perfect fifths, there will one find also the major thirds more perfectly tuned than those which we use. [translated]
  4. ^ Lindley, Mark (1990). "An Historical Survey of Meantone Temperaments to 1620". Early Keyboard Journal. 8. It is often said that Nicola Vicentino divided the octave into 31 equal parts on his archicembalo and arciorgano. This is dubious. The claim is made in behalf of the first of the two tunings he prescribed for his archicembalo in 1555. It is true that the 31 division virtually matches 1/4-comma meantone temperament (the major thirds differing by less than a cent), and that Vicentino said that parts of his first tuning matched the normal practice of good masters. He also said, however, that some of the major thirds in his other tuning were 'more perfectly tuned than those which we use', and this is hardly compatible with a reading that would require the major thirds in the first tuning to have been virtually pure. The advocates of that reading have been obliged to say that, 'Part of Vicentino's system does not seem to make sense' and that his own microtonal compositions are full of mistakes. Vicentino's first tuning may nonetheless be considered an irregular variant of 14-comma meantone temperament, inasmuch as his 31 'dieses' (so he called them) had to average 1/31-octave and he said that, 'from every key [of the keyboard] no consonance is lacking'.[page needed]
  5. ^ In L'antica mvsica ridotta alla moderna prattica (Roma, 1555): il nostro instrumento, detto Archicembalo (f.11v), nel trattato del quinto libro sopra lo stormento, da me detto Archicembalo (f.16v), come è l'Archicembalo nostro (f.17v). For more authentic entries of 'archicembalo' see the digitalizated version of the Vicentino's treatise at Thesaurus musicarum italicarum 2005-09-09 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ As in the article "Archicembalo (ital. Erzchembalo)" found in Riemann Musiklexikon. 12th revised edition. Sachteil. Mainz, 1967, S.49;
  7. ^ Bottrigari, Il Desiderio.
  8. ^ As e.g. in the article "Arcicembalo, arciorgano", in: Harvard Dictionary of Music. Second edition revised and enlarged by Willi Apel. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1969, p.48 (and in all later reprints); Oxford Companion to Music, ed. by Alison Latham. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002, p.58; in Henry W. Kaufmann and Robert L. Kendrick, "Nicola Vicentino", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers 2001. Accessed online at www.oxfordmusiconline.com; Lorenzo Bianconi. "Gesualdo, Carlo, Prince of Venosa, Count of Conza", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001; and Sibyl Marcuse, Musical Instruments: A Comprehensive Dictionary, corrected edition. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1975, p.80.
  9. ^ Edmond Strainchamps, "Luzzaschi, Luzzasco", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001; Henry W. Kaufmann, "More on the Tuning of the Archicembalo", Journal of the American Musicological Society 23 (1970), pp.84–94.
  10. ^ Edwin M. Ripin. "Arcicembalo [archicembalo]". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001.
  11. ^ Ancient Music Adapted to Modern Practice. Translated, with introduction and notes, by Maria Rika Maniates. Edited by Claude V. Palisca. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1996 (for numerous entries of [English] usage 'archicembalo' in this book see the index on p.475).
  12. ^ (1) "Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart". Allgemeine Enzyklopädie der Musik. Bd.3. Kassel: Bärenreiter-Verlag, 1954, Sp.415 u.a.O. (2)-Riemann MusikLexikon. 2nd completely revised edition. Sachteil. Mainz, 1967, S.49; ib., Personenteil L-Z. Mainz, 1961, S.849; (3)-Brockhaus Riemann Musiklexikon. Vol.1. Mainz: Schott; Munich: Piper, 1995, S.51; (4) Peter Niedermuller, "Vicentino". In: Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Allgemeine Enzyklopädie der Musik. 2nd ed. Personenteil. Vol.16. Kassel, Basel, 2006, pp. 1540–1543.
  13. ^ Enciclopedia della musica Ricordi. Vol.1 Milan: Rizzoli Editore, 1972, pp.115–116; Vol.2. Milan: Rizzoli Editore, 1972, p.122; Vol.6. Milan: Rizzoli Editore, 1972, p.318.
  14. ^ Cordes, M. Nicola Vicentinos Enharmonik. Musik mit 31 Tönen. Graz, 2007. Contains CD with complete music examples of 'enharmonic' genus found in the Vicentino's treatise.
  15. ^ Volker Rippe, "Nicola Vicentino—Sein Tonsystem und seine Instrumente. Versuch einer Erklärung", Die Musikforschung 34 (1981), pp.393–412. Citation on pp.397–398; see also Dizionario Garzanti della lingua italiana, Milan: Garzanti Editore, 1963, entries "archi-" and "arci-".
  16. ^ "See the original inscription at" (JPG). Bolognawelcome.com. Retrieved 19 April 2021.

References edit

  • Alves, Bill, "The Just Intonation System of Nicola Vicentino", 1/1: Journal of the Just Intonation Network 5, No. 2 (Spring 1989), pp. 8–13.
  • Kaufmann, Henry W., "More on the Tuning of the Archicembalo", Journal of the American Musicological Society 23 (Spring 1970), pp.-84–94.
  • Pio, Stefano, Viol and Lute Makers of Venice 1490–1630/Liuteria Veneziana 1490-1630, English translation by Marina De Marchi and Robert Schoen. Venice: Venice Research, 2011. ISBN 9788897039617. www.veniceresearch.com

External links edit

  • Lower manual plan. Casimiri II 173 foldout music 28 NB.23. Alternate Exhibit Objects. Library of Congress Vatican Exhibit
  • The Archicembalo of Nicola Vincentino (pdf - 2.4mb) Marco Tiella. The English Harpsichord vol.1, nr. 5 (1975)
  • Marco Tiella. International Conference in Musicology, Kraków (2003)
  • Clavemunicum omnitonum modulis diatonicis cromaticis et enearmonicis (Vito Trasuntino - 1609) on display at the International museum and library of music of Bologna

archicembalo, archicembalo, ɑːr, arcicembalo, ɑːr, musical, instrument, described, nicola, vicentino, 1555, this, harpsichord, built, with, many, extra, keys, strings, enabling, experimentation, microtonality, just, intonation, reproduction, archicembalo, cont. The archicembalo ɑːr k i ˈ tʃ ɛ m b el oʊ or arcicembalo ɑːr tʃ i ˈ tʃ ɛ m b el oʊ was a musical instrument described by Nicola Vicentino in 1555 This was a harpsichord built with many extra keys and strings enabling experimentation in microtonality and just intonation Reproduction of the archicembalo Contents 1 Construction 2 Tuning 3 Uses 4 Spelling and pronunciation 5 Surviving archicembali 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksConstruction editThe archicembalo had two manuals but unlike those on a normal harpsichord these two keyboards were used to provide extra pitches rather than a timbral difference Both manuals contained all of the usual white and black keys but in addition each black key was divided into two parts so that a distinction could be made between a sharp or flat note The lower manual also included black keys between B and C and between E and F In total 36 keys were available in any octave each of which was tuned to a different pitch as shown in the diagram of the lower manual 1 Tuning edit nbsp Diagram of the archicembalo s tuning in cents There were two systems of tuning the archicembalo considered by Vicentino The most important was the extended quarter comma meantone temperament which given such a wide gamut of fifths becomes almost exactly a system of 31 equal divisions of the octave see 31 equal temperament This arises because after a cycle of 31 quarter comma tempered fifths the 32nd pitch is remarkably close to a pitch that already exists in the system Thus five of Vicentino s 36 possibilities became practically redundant in this system He suggested that these five be tuned instead according to the second manner described below Vicentino offered an alternative tuning in which the upper keyboard was tuned a quarter comma higher than the lower allowing pure fifths by playing chords across the manuals giving a limited system of triadic just intonation This tuning still permits modulation to a wide range of keys but not in a completely circular fashion as with the first tuning described above and still only modulates by the meantone tempered fifth not by the pure fifth The observation that extended quarter comma meantone temperament almost exactly approximates 31 equal was recognized by Huygens in 1661 published in 1691 He says that after making this discovery he found an earlier mention of the idea in Salinas report on a 31 tone Italian keyboard presumably Vicentino s archicembalo 2 Vicentino s description of his first tuning has some puzzling statements if it is understood as 31 equal He says that the major third from C to E is made closer to pure if it uses the slightly lower pitched C on the front keyboard with the slightly higher pitched E from the back keyboard This is puzzling because in pure 31 equal all the major thirds should have been almost exactly pure already Karol Berger s analysis of this suggests that he may actually have used a somewhat unequal tuning for his extended meantone system varying perhaps from 0 2 comma smaller than pure to 1 3 comma larger than pure 3 4 Uses editVicentino used his archicembalo to test his own theories of tuning and realize the more obscure ancient Greek genera which had been neglected for centuries In addition to his experiments he found it very helpful for accompaniment of vocalists and instrumental players as it was capable of coping with the subtle intonational differences inherent in musical practice in a way that no keyboard instrument had before For composers of the time the archicembalo made total modulatory freedom a possibility without sacrificing the purity of meantone temperament s just thirds as with 12 tone equal temperament This was exploited by those who learned to play it such as Luzzasco Luzzaschi Contemporary composers had been writing vocal music in a very chromatic style for some time but it was instruments such as the archicembalo that permitted them to explore the instrumental possibilities of chromaticism with a purity of intonation Spelling and pronunciation editVicentino named his instrument the archicembalo 5 with possible reference to Greek prefix ἀrxi which means major principal as in the word architect 6 Vicentino s advocate Ercole Bottrigari in his Il Desiderio 1599 also used the spelling archicembalo 7 In most modern English lexica the same instrument has been called arcicembalo however without explanation of this non authentic spelling 8 while others use Vicentino s spelling 9 or offer both as alternatives 10 The spelling archicembalo is preferred in the English translation of the treatise 11 German music dictionaries consistently give archicembalo 12 as well as the largest Italian Enciclopedia della musica Ricordi 13 The German scholar Manfred Cordes who dedicated the book to Vicentino s music system rebuilt the historic instrument and made a set of live audio recordings using it gives archicembalo throughout his book 14 Another German scholar in his article prefers arcicembalo while at the same time pointing out that Vicentino himself used the prefix arci in another place to describe an organ with similar functions called an arciorgano and that the Italian language does not make a hard and fast distinction between the two forms 15 nbsp Clavemusicum omnitonum Vito Trasuntino Venice 1606 Bologna International museum and library of musicSurviving archicembali editOnly one keyboard instrument using his 31 note to the octave system survives from the Renaissance the Clavemusicum Omnitonum Modulis Diatonicis Cromaticis et Enarmonicis 16 built by harpsichord maker Vito Trasuntino of Venice 1526 after 1606 in 1606 intended to play the diatonic chromatic and enharmonic melodies moduli It is on display at the International museum and library of music in Bologna The Clavemusicum is accompanied by a tuning device called TRECTA CORDO that clearly shows an uneven division of the octave with the usual meantone temperament for the first row of upper keys with C Eb F G and Bb Notes edit Casimiri II 173 foldout music 28 NB 23 Alternate Exhibit Objects Library of Congress Vatican Exhibit Cohen H F 11 November 2013 Quantifying Music The Science of Music at the First Stage of Scientific Revolution 1580 1650 Springer Science amp Business Media p 222 ISBN 978 94 015 7686 4 Berger Karol 1980 Theories of chromatic and Enharmonic Music in Late 16th Century Italy Chromatic systems or non systems from Vicentino to Monteverdi Early Music History UMI Research Press In the same rows in which one plays the perfect fifths there will one find also the major thirds more perfectly tuned than those which we use translated Lindley Mark 1990 An Historical Survey of Meantone Temperaments to 1620 Early Keyboard Journal 8 It is often said that Nicola Vicentino divided the octave into 31 equal parts on his archicembalo and arciorgano This is dubious The claim is made in behalf of the first of the two tunings he prescribed for his archicembalo in 1555 It is true that the 31 division virtually matches 1 4 comma meantone temperament the major thirds differing by less than a cent and that Vicentino said that parts of his first tuning matched the normal practice of good masters He also said however that some of the major thirds in his other tuning were more perfectly tuned than those which we use and this is hardly compatible with a reading that would require the major thirds in the first tuning to have been virtually pure The advocates of that reading have been obliged to say that Part of Vicentino s system does not seem to make sense and that his own microtonal compositions are full of mistakes Vicentino s first tuning may nonetheless be considered an irregular variant of 1 4 comma meantone temperament inasmuch as his 31 dieses so he called them had to average 1 31 octave and he said that from every key of the keyboard no consonance is lacking page needed In L antica mvsica ridotta alla moderna prattica Roma 1555 il nostro instrumento detto Archicembalo f 11v nel trattato del quinto libro sopra lo stormento da me detto Archicembalo f 16v come e l Archicembalo nostro f 17v For more authentic entries of archicembalo see the digitalizated version of the Vicentino s treatise at Thesaurus musicarum italicarum Archived 2005 09 09 at the Wayback Machine As in the article Archicembalo ital Erzchembalo found in Riemann Musiklexikon 12th revised edition Sachteil Mainz 1967 S 49 Bottrigari Il Desiderio As e g in the article Arcicembalo arciorgano in Harvard Dictionary of Music Second edition revised and enlarged by Willi Apel Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1969 p 48 and in all later reprints Oxford Companion to Music ed by Alison Latham Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 p 58 in Henry W Kaufmann and Robert L Kendrick Nicola Vicentino The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Accessed online at www oxfordmusiconline com Lorenzo Bianconi Gesualdo Carlo Prince of Venosa Count of Conza The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 and Sibyl Marcuse Musical Instruments A Comprehensive Dictionary corrected edition New York W W Norton amp Company Inc 1975 p 80 Edmond Strainchamps Luzzaschi Luzzasco The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Henry W Kaufmann More on the Tuning of the Archicembalo Journal of the American Musicological Society 23 1970 pp 84 94 Edwin M Ripin Arcicembalo archicembalo The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Ancient Music Adapted to Modern Practice Translated with introduction and notes by Maria Rika Maniates Edited by Claude V Palisca New Haven and London Yale University Press 1996 for numerous entries of English usage archicembalo in this book see the index on p 475 1 Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart Allgemeine Enzyklopadie der Musik Bd 3 Kassel Barenreiter Verlag 1954 Sp 415 u a O 2 Riemann MusikLexikon 2nd completely revised edition Sachteil Mainz 1967 S 49 ib Personenteil L Z Mainz 1961 S 849 3 Brockhaus Riemann Musiklexikon Vol 1 Mainz Schott Munich Piper 1995 S 51 4 Peter Niedermuller Vicentino In Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart Allgemeine Enzyklopadie der Musik 2nd ed Personenteil Vol 16 Kassel Basel 2006 pp 1540 1543 Enciclopedia della musica Ricordi Vol 1 Milan Rizzoli Editore 1972 pp 115 116 Vol 2 Milan Rizzoli Editore 1972 p 122 Vol 6 Milan Rizzoli Editore 1972 p 318 Cordes M Nicola Vicentinos Enharmonik Musik mit 31 Tonen Graz 2007 Contains CD with complete music examples of enharmonic genus found in the Vicentino s treatise Volker Rippe Nicola Vicentino Sein Tonsystem und seine Instrumente Versuch einer Erklarung Die Musikforschung 34 1981 pp 393 412 Citation on pp 397 398 see also Dizionario Garzanti della lingua italiana Milan Garzanti Editore 1963 entries archi and arci See the original inscription at JPG Bolognawelcome com Retrieved 19 April 2021 References editAlves Bill The Just Intonation System of Nicola Vicentino 1 1 Journal of the Just Intonation Network 5 No 2 Spring 1989 pp 8 13 Bill Alves The Just Intonation System of Nicola Vicentino Kaufmann Henry W More on the Tuning of the Archicembalo Journal of the American Musicological Society 23 Spring 1970 pp 84 94 Pio Stefano Viol and Lute Makers of Venice 1490 1630 Liuteria Veneziana 1490 1630 English translation by Marina De Marchi and Robert Schoen Venice Venice Research 2011 ISBN 9788897039617 www veniceresearch comExternal links editLower manual plan Casimiri II 173 foldout music 28 NB 23 Alternate Exhibit Objects Library of Congress Vatican Exhibit The Archicembalo of Nicola Vincentino pdf 2 4mb Marco Tiella The English Harpsichord vol 1 nr 5 1975 Musical Experience gained through Working with the Archicembalo Reconstruction pdf 1 5mb Marco Tiella International Conference in Musicology Krakow 2003 Margo Schulter on Vicentino s keyboards Clavemunicum omnitonum modulis diatonicis cromaticis et enearmonicis Vito Trasuntino 1609 on display at the International museum and library of music of Bologna Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archicembalo amp oldid 1194332118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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