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Wikipedia

Classical guitar

The classical guitar (also known as the nylon-string guitar or Spanish guitar) is a member of the guitar family used in classical music and other styles. An acoustic wooden string instrument with strings made of gut or nylon, it is a precursor of the modern acoustic and electric guitars, both of which use metal strings. Classical guitars derive from the Spanish vihuela and gittern of the fifteenth and sixteenth century. Those instruments evolved into the seventeenth and eighteenth-century baroque guitar—and by the mid-nineteenth century, early forms of the modern classical guitar.

Classical guitar
Front and lateral view of a typical modern classical guitar
String instrument
Classification String instrument (plucked)
Hornbostel–Sachs classification321.322–5
(Composite chordophone sounded by the bare fingers or fingernails)
Developedmodern classical guitar was developed in the late 19th century in Spain.
Playing range
Related instruments
Musicians

For a right-handed player, the traditional classical guitar has twelve frets clear of the body and is properly held up by the left leg, so that the hand that plucks or strums the strings does so near the back of the sound hole (this is called the classical position). However, the right-hand may move closer to the fretboard to achieve different tonal qualities. The player typically holds the left leg higher by the use of a foot rest. The modern steel string guitar, on the other hand, usually has fourteen frets clear of the body (see Dreadnought) and is commonly held with a strap around the neck and shoulder.

The phrase "classical guitar" may refer to either of two concepts other than the instrument itself:

  • The instrumental finger technique common to classical guitar—individual strings plucked with the fingernails or, less frequently, fingertips
  • The instrument's classical music repertoire

The term modern classical guitar sometimes distinguishes the classical guitar from older forms of guitar, which are in their broadest sense also called classical, or more specifically, early guitars. Examples of early guitars include the six-string early romantic guitar (c. 1790–1880), and the earlier baroque guitars with five courses.

The materials and the methods of classical guitar construction may vary, but the typical shape is either modern classical guitar or that historic classical guitar similar to the early romantic guitars of France and Italy. Classical guitar strings once made of gut are now made of materials such as nylon or fluoropolymers, typically with silver-plated copper fine wire wound about the acoustically lower (d-A-E in standard tuning) strings.

A guitar family tree may be identified. The flamenco guitar derives from the modern classical, but has differences in material, construction and sound.[1][2]

Today's modern classical guitar was established by the late designs of the 19th-century Spanish luthier, Antonio Torres Jurado.

Contexts

The classical guitar has a long history and one is able to distinguish various:

Both instrument and repertoire can be viewed from a combination of various perspectives:

Historical (chronological period of time)

Geographical

Cultural

  • Baroque court music, nineteenth-century opera and its influences, nineteenth-century folk songs, Latin American music

Historical perspective

Early guitars

 
Guitars from the Museum Cité de la Musique in Paris (which houses almost 200 classical guitars)[3]

While "classical guitar" is today mainly associated with the modern classical guitar design, there is an increasing interest in early guitars; and understanding the link between historical repertoire and the particular period guitar that was originally used to perform this repertoire. The musicologist and author Graham Wade writes:

Nowadays it is customary to play this repertoire on reproductions of instruments authentically modelled on concepts of musicological research with appropriate adjustments to techniques and overall interpretation. Thus over recent decades we have become accustomed to specialist artists with expertise in the art of vihuela (a 16th-century type of guitar popular in Spain), lute, Baroque guitar, 19th-century guitar, etc.[4]

Different types of guitars have different sound aesthetics, e.g. different colour-spectrum characteristics (the way the sound energy is spread in the fundamental frequency and the overtones), different response, etc. These differences are due to differences in construction; for example, modern classical guitars usually use a different bracing (fan-bracing) from that used in earlier guitars (they had ladder-bracing); and a different voicing was used by the luthier.

There is a historical parallel between musical styles (baroque, classical, romantic, flamenco, jazz) and the style of "sound aesthetic" of the musical instruments used, for example: Robert de Visée played a baroque guitar with a very different sound aesthetic from the guitars used by Mauro Giuliani and Luigi Legnani – they used 19th-century guitars. These guitars in turn sound different from the Torres models used by Segovia that are suited for interpretations of romantic-modern works such as Moreno Torroba.

When considering the guitar from a historical perspective, the musical instrument used is as important as the musical language and style of the particular period. As an example: It is impossible to play a historically informed de Visee or Corbetta (baroque guitarist-composers) on a modern classical guitar. The reason is that the baroque guitar used courses, which are two strings close together (in unison), that are plucked together. This gives baroque guitars an unmistakable sound characteristic and tonal texture that is an integral part of an interpretation. Additionally, the sound aesthetic of the baroque guitar (with its strong overtone presence) is very different from modern classical type guitars, as is shown below.

Today's use of Torres and post-Torres type guitars for repertoire of all periods is sometimes critically viewed: Torres and post-Torres style modern guitars (with their fan-bracing and design) have a thick and strong tone, very suitable for modern-era repertoire. However, they are considered to emphasize the fundamental too heavily (at the expense of overtone partials) for earlier repertoire (Classical/Romantic: Carulli, Sor, Giuliani, Mertz, ...; Baroque: de Visee, ...; etc.). "Andrés Segovia presented the Spanish guitar as a versatile model for all playing styles"[5] to the extent, that still today, "many guitarists have tunnel-vision of the world of the guitar, coming from the modern Segovia tradition".[6]

 
19th century guitar made by Manuel de Soto y Solares, held by Spanish guitarist Rafael Serrallet

While fan-braced modern classical Torres and post-Torres style instruments coexisted with traditional ladder-braced guitars at the beginning of the 20th century, the older forms eventually fell away. Some attribute this to the popularity of Segovia, considering him "the catalyst for change toward the Spanish design and the so-called 'modern' school in the 1920s and beyond."[5] The styles of music performed on ladder-braced guitars were becoming unfashionable—and, e.g., in Germany, more musicians were turning towards folk music (Schrammel-music and the Contraguitar). This was localized in Germany and Austria and became unfashionable again. On the other hand, Segovia was playing concerts around the world, popularizing modern classical guitar—and, in the 1920s, Spanish romantic-modern style with guitar works by Moreno Torroba, de Falla, etc.

The 19th-century classical guitarist Francisco Tárrega first popularized the Torres design as a classical solo instrument. However, some maintain that Segovia's influence led to its domination over other designs. Factories around the world began producing them in large numbers.

Characteristics

  • Vihuela, renaissance guitars and baroque guitars have a bright sound, rich in overtones, and their courses (double strings) give the sound a very particular texture.
  • Early guitars of the classical and romantic period (early romantic guitars) have single strings, but their design and voicing are still such that they have their tonal energy more in the overtones (but without starved fundamental), giving a bright intimate tone.
  • Later in Spain a style of music emerged that favoured a stronger fundamental:
    "With the change of music a stronger fundamental was demanded and the fan bracing system was approached. ... the guitar tone has been changed from a transparent tone, rich in higher partials to a more 'broad' tone with a strong fundamental."[7]
  • Thus modern guitars with fan bracing (fan strutting) have a design and voicing that gives them a thick, heavy sound, with far more tonal energy found in the fundamental.

Style periods

Renaissance

Composers of the Renaissance period who wrote for four-course guitar include Alonso Mudarra, Miguel de Fuenllana, Adrian Le Roy, Grégoire Brayssing [fr], Guillaume de Morlaye, and Simon Gorlier [fr].

Instrument

Four-course guitar

Baroque

Some well known composers of the Baroque guitar were Gaspar Sanz, Robert de Visée, Francesco Corbetta and Santiago de Murcia.

Examples of instruments
  • Baroque guitar by Nicolas Alexandre Voboam II: This French instrument has the typical design of the period with five courses of double-strings and a flat back.[8]
  • Baroque guitar attributed to Matteo Sellas : This Italian instrument has five courses and a rounded back.[9]

Classical and romantic

From approximately 1780 to 1850, the guitar had numerous composers and performers including:

Hector Berlioz studied the guitar as a teenager;[10] Franz Schubert owned at least two and wrote for the instrument;[11] and Ludwig van Beethoven, after hearing Giuliani play, commented the instrument was "a miniature orchestra in itself".[12] Niccolò Paganini was also a guitar virtuoso and composer. He once wrote: "I love the guitar for its harmony; it is my constant companion in all my travels". He also said, on another occasion: "I do not like this instrument, but regard it simply as a way of helping me to think."[13]

Francisco Tárrega

The guitarist and composer Francisco Tárrega (November 21, 1852 – December 15, 1909) was one of the great guitar virtuosos and teachers and is considered the father of modern classical guitar playing. As a professor of guitar at the conservatories of Madrid and Barcelona, he defined many elements of the modern classical technique and elevated the importance of the guitar in the classical music tradition.

Modern period

At the beginning of the 1920s, Andrés Segovia popularized the guitar with tours and early phonograph recordings. Segovia collaborated with the composers Federico Moreno Torroba and Joaquín Turina with the aim of extending the guitar repertoire with new music.[14] Segovia's tour of South America revitalized public interest in the guitar and helped the guitar music of Manuel Ponce and Heitor Villa-Lobos reach a wider audience.[15] The composers Alexandre Tansman and Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco were commissioned by Segovia to write new pieces for the guitar.[16] Luiz Bonfá popularized Brazilian musical styles such as the newly created Bossa Nova, which was well-received by audiences in the USA.

"New music" – avant-garde

The classical guitar repertoire also includes modern contemporary works – sometimes termed "New Music" – such as Elliott Carter's Changes,[17] Cristóbal Halffter's Codex I,[18] Luciano Berio's Sequenza XI,[19] Maurizio Pisati's Sette Studi,[20] Maurice Ohana's Si Le Jour Paraît,[21] Sylvano Bussotti's Rara (eco sierologico),[22] Ernst Krenek's Suite für Guitarre allein, Op. 164,[23] Franco Donatoni's Algo: Due pezzi per chitarra,[24] Paolo Coggiola's Variazioni Notturne,[25] etc.

Performers who are known for including modern repertoire include Jürgen Ruck, Elena Càsoli, Leo Brouwer (when he was still performing), John Schneider, Reinbert Evers, Maria Kämmerling, Siegfried Behrend, David Starobin, Mats Scheidegger, Magnus Andersson, etc.

This type of repertoire is usually performed by guitarists who have particularly chosen to focus on the avant-garde in their performances.

Within the contemporary music scene itself, there are also works which are generally regarded as extreme. These include works such as Brian Ferneyhough's Kurze Schatten II,[26] Sven-David Sandström's away from[27] and Rolf Riehm's Toccata Orpheus etc. which are notorious for their extreme difficulty.

There are also a variety of databases documenting modern guitar works such as Sheer Pluck[28] and others.[29][30]

Background

The evolution of the classical guitar and its repertoire spans more than four centuries. It has a history that was shaped by contributions from earlier instruments, such as the lute, the vihuela, and the baroque guitar.

The last guitarist to follow in Segovia's footsteps was Julian Bream and Julian Bream will be 73 years old on July 15th 2006. Miguel Llobet, Andrés Segovia and Julian Bream are the three performer personalities of the 20th century. Do not understand me wrong, we have many guitarists today that are very excellent performers, but none with such a distinct personality in their tone and style as Llobet, Segovia and Bream. In all instrumental areas, not just the guitar, there is a lack of individualism with a strong tendency to conformity. This I find very unfortunate since art (music, theatre or the pictorial arts) is a very individual and personal matter.[31]

— Bernard Hebb, Interview

History

 
 
History of guitars
(exhibited at Deutsches Museum)

Overview of the classical guitar's history

The origins of the modern guitar are not known with certainty. Some believe it is indigenous to Europe, while others think it is an imported instrument.[32] Guitar-like instruments appear in ancient carvings and statues recovered from Egyptian, Sumerian, and Babylonian civilizations.[33] This means that contemporary Iranian instruments such as the tanbur and setar are distantly related to the European guitar, as they all derive ultimately from the same ancient origins, but by very different historical routes and influences.

During the late Middle Ages, gitterns called "guitars" were in use, but their construction and tuning were different from modern guitars. The guitarra latina in Spain had curved sides and a single hole. The guitarra morisca, which appears to have had Moorish influences, had an oval soundbox and many sound holes on its soundboard. By the 15th century, a four-course double-string instrument called the vihuela de mano, which was tuned like the later modern guitar except on one string and similar construction, first appeared in Spain and spread to France and Italy. In the 16th century, a fifth double-string was added. During this time, composers wrote mostly in tablature notation. In the middle of the 16th century, influences from the vihuela and the Renaissance guitar were combined and the baroque five-string guitar appeared in Spain.[34] The baroque guitar quickly superseded the vihuela in popularity in Spain, France and Italy and Italian players and composers became prominent. In the late 18th century the six-string guitar quickly became popular at the expense of the five-string guitars. During the 19th century, the Spanish luthier and player Antonio de Torres gave the modern classical guitar its definitive form, with a broadened body, increased waist curve, thinned belly, and improved internal bracing.[35] The modern classical guitar replaced an older form for the accompaniment of song and dance called flamenco, and a modified version, known as the flamenco guitar, was created.

 
Gittern (1450)
 
Vihuela
(vihuela book by Luis Milan, 1536[36])
 
Baroque guitar[37] with rounded-back
(engraving by Etienne Picart, 1680)

Renaissance guitar

Alonso de Mudarra's book Tres Libros de Música, published in Spain in 1546, contains the earliest known written pieces for a four-course guitarra. This four-course "guitar" was popular in France, Spain, and Italy. In France this instrument gained popularity among aristocrats. A considerable volume of music was published in Paris from the 1550s to the 1570s: Simon Gorlier's Le Troysième Livre... mis en tablature de Guiterne was published in 1551. In 1551 Adrian Le Roy also published his Premier Livre de Tablature de Guiterne, and in the same year he also published Briefve et facile instruction pour apprendre la tablature a bien accorder, conduire, et disposer la main sur la Guiterne. Robert Ballard, Grégoire Brayssing from Augsburg, and Guillaume Morlaye (c. 1510 – c. 1558) significantly contributed to its repertoire. Morlaye's Le Premier Livre de Chansons, Gaillardes, Pavannes, Bransles, Almandes, Fantasies – which has a four-course instrument illustrated on its title page – was published in partnership with Michel Fedenzat, and among other music, they published six books of tablature by lutenist Albert de Rippe (who was very likely Guillaume's teacher).

Vihuela

The written history of the classical guitar can be traced back to the early 16th century with the development of the vihuela in Spain. While the lute was then becoming popular in other parts of Europe, the Spaniards did not take to it well because of its association with the Moors.[38] Instead, the lute-like vihuela appeared with two more strings that gave it more range and complexity. In its most developed form, the vihuela was a guitar-like instrument with six double strings made of gut, tuned like a modern classical guitar with the exception of the third string, which was tuned half a step lower. It has a high sound and is rather large to hold. Few have survived and most of what is known today come from diagrams and paintings.

 
Baroque guitar on The Guitar Player (c. 1672), by Johannes Vermeer
 
Early romantic guitar by Jean-Nicolas Grobert (1830)

Baroque guitar

"Early romantic guitar" or "Guitar during the Classical music era"

The earliest extant six-string guitar is believed to have been built in 1779 by Gaetano Vinaccia (1759 – after 1831) in Naples, Italy; however, the date on the label is a little ambiguous.[39][40][41] The Vinaccia family of luthiers is known for developing the mandolin. This guitar has been examined and does not show tell-tale signs of modifications from a double-course guitar.[42] The authenticity of guitars allegedly produced before the 1790s is often in question. This also corresponds to when Moretti's 6-string method appeared, in 1792.

 
Spanish guitar by Antonio de Torres Jurado (1862)
 
Smallman played by John Williams in 2008

Modern classical guitar

 
Eminent classical guitarist and composer Agustín Barrios

The modern classical guitar (also known as the "Spanish guitar"), the immediate forerunner of today's guitars, was developed in the 19th century by Antonio de Torres Jurado, Ignacio Fleta, Hermann Hauser Sr., and Robert Bouchet.

Technique

The fingerstyle is used fervently on the modern classical guitar. The thumb traditionally plucks the bass – or root note – whereas the fingers ring the melody and its accompanying parts. Often classical guitar technique involves the use of the nails of the right hand to pluck the notes. Noted players were: Francisco Tárrega, Emilio Pujol, Andrés Segovia, Julian Bream, Agustín Barrios, and John Williams (guitarist).

Performance

Popular song (public domain): Spanish Romance.

The modern classical guitar is usually played in a seated position, with the instrument resting on the left lap – and the left foot placed on a footstool. Alternatively – if a footstool is not used – a guitar support can be placed between the guitar and the left lap (the support usually attaches to the instrument's side with suction cups). (There are of course exceptions, with some performers choosing to hold the instrument another way.)

Right-handed players use the fingers of the right hand to pluck the strings, with the thumb plucking from the top of a string downwards (downstroke) and the other fingers plucking from the bottom of the string upwards (upstroke). The little finger in classical technique as it evolved in the 20th century is used only to ride along with the ring finger without striking the strings and to thus physiologically facilitate the ring finger's motion.

In contrast, Flamenco technique, and classical compositions evoking Flamenco, employ the little finger semi-independently in the Flamenco four-finger rasgueado, that rapid strumming of the string by the fingers in reverse order employing the back of the fingernail—a familiar characteristic of Flamenco.

Flamenco technique, in the performance of the rasgueado also uses the upstroke of the four fingers and the downstroke of the thumb: the string is hit not only with the inner, fleshy side of the fingertip but also with the outer, fingernail side. This was also used in a technique of the vihuela called dedillo[43] which has recently begun to be introduced on the classical guitar.

Some modern guitarists, such as Štěpán Rak and Kazuhito Yamashita, use the little finger independently, compensating for the little finger's shortness by maintaining an extremely long fingernail. Rak and Yamashita have also generalized the use of the upstroke of the four fingers and the downstroke of the thumb (the same technique as in the rasgueado of the Flamenco: as explained above the string is hit not only with the inner, fleshy side of the fingertip but also with the outer, fingernail side) both as a free stroke and as a rest stroke.[44]

Direct contact with strings

As with other plucked instruments (such as the lute), the musician directly touches the strings (usually plucking) to produce the sound. This has important consequences: Different tone/timbre (of a single note) can be produced by plucking the string in different manners (apoyando or tirando) and in different positions (such as closer and further away from the guitar bridge). For example, plucking an open string will sound brighter than playing the same note(s) on a fretted position (which would have a warmer tone).

The instrument's versatility means it can create a variety of tones, but this finger-picking style also makes the instrument harder to learn than a standard acoustic guitar's strumming technique.[45]

Fingering notation

In guitar scores the five fingers of the right-hand (which pluck the strings) are designated by the first letter of their Spanish names namely p = thumb (pulgar), i = index finger (índice), m = middle finger (mayor), a = ring finger (anular), c = little finger or pinky (meñique/chiquito)[46]

The four fingers of the left hand (which fret the strings) are designated 1 = index, 2 = major, 3 = ring finger, 4 = little finger. 0 designates an open string—a string not stopped by a finger and whose full length thus vibrates when plucked. It is rare to use the left hand thumb in performance, the neck of a classical guitar being too wide for comfort, and normal technique keeps the thumb behind the neck. However Johann Kaspar Mertz, for example, is notable for specifying the thumb to fret bass notes on the sixth string, notated with an up arrowhead (⌃).[47]

Scores (contrary to tablatures) do not systematically indicate the string to pluck (though the choice is usually obvious). When indicating the string is useful, the score uses the numbers 1 to 6 inside circles (highest-pitch sting to lowest).

Scores don't systematically indicate fretboard positions (where to put the first finger of the fretting hand), but when helpful (mostly with barrés chords) the score indicates positions with Roman numerals from the first position I (index finger on the 1st fret: F-B flat-E flat-A flat-C-F) to the twelfth position XII (index finger on the 12th fret: E-A-D-G-B-E. The 12th fret is where the body begins) or even higher up to position XIX (the classical guitar most often having 19 frets, with the 19th fret being most often split and not being usable to fret the 3rd and 4th strings).

Alternation

To achieve tremolo effects and rapid, fluent scale passages, the player must practice alternation, that is, never plucking a string with the same finger twice in a row. Using p to indicate the thumb, i the index finger, m the middle finger and a the ring finger, common alternation patterns include:

  • i-m-i-m : Basic melody line on the treble strings. Has the appearance of "walking along the strings". This is often used for playing Scale (music) passages.
  • p-i-m-a-i-m-a : Arpeggio pattern example. However, there are many arpeggio patterns incorporated into the classical guitar repertoire.
  • p-a-m-i-p-a-m-i : Classical guitar tremolo pattern.
  • p-m-p-m : A way of playing a melody line on the lower strings.

Repertoire

Music written specifically for the classical guitar dates from the addition of the sixth string (the baroque guitar normally had five pairs of strings) in the late 18th century.

A guitar recital may include a variety of works, e.g., works written originally for the lute or vihuela by composers such as John Dowland (b. England 1563) and Luis de Narváez (b. Spain c. 1500), and also music written for the harpsichord by Domenico Scarlatti (b. Italy 1685), for the baroque lute by Sylvius Leopold Weiss (b. Germany 1687), for the baroque guitar by Robert de Visée (b. France c. 1650) or even Spanish-flavored music written for the piano by Isaac Albéniz (b. Spain 1860) and Enrique Granados (b. Spain 1867). The most important composer who did not write for the guitar but whose music is often played on it is Johann Sebastian Bach (b. Germany 1685), whose baroque lute works have proved highly adaptable to the instrument.

Of music written originally for guitar, the earliest important composers are from the classical period and include Fernando Sor (b. Spain 1778) and Mauro Giuliani (b. Italy 1781), both of whom wrote in a style strongly influenced by Viennese classicism. In the 19th-century guitar composers such as Johann Kaspar Mertz (b. Slovakia, Austria 1806) were strongly influenced by the dominance of the piano. Not until the end of the nineteenth century did the guitar begin to establish its own unique identity. Francisco Tárrega (b. Spain 1852) was central to this, sometimes incorporating stylized aspects of flamenco's Moorish influences into his romantic miniatures. This was part of late 19th century mainstream European musical nationalism. Albéniz and Granados were central to this movement; their evocation of the guitar was so successful that their compositions have been absorbed into the standard guitar repertoire.

The steel-string and electric guitars characteristic to the rise of rock and roll in the post-WWII era became more widely played in North America and the English-speaking world. Agustín Barrios Mangoré of Paraguay composed many works and brought into the mainstream the characteristics of Latin American music, as did the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos. Andrés Segovia commissioned works from Spanish composers such as Federico Moreno Torroba and Joaquín Rodrigo, Italians such as Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Latin American composers such as Manuel Ponce of Mexico. Other prominent Latin American composers are Leo Brouwer of Cuba, Antonio Lauro of Venezuela and Enrique Solares of Guatemala. Julian Bream of Britain managed to get nearly every British composer from William Walton and Benjamin Britten to Peter Maxwell Davies to write significant works for guitar. Bream's collaborations with tenor Peter Pears also resulted in song cycles by Britten, Lennox Berkeley and others. There are significant works by composers such as Hans Werner Henze of Germany, Gilbert Biberian of England and Roland Chadwick of Australia.

The classical guitar also became widely used in popular music and rock & roll in the 1960s after guitarist Mason Williams popularized the instrument in his instrumental hit Classical Gas. Guitarist Christopher Parkening is quoted in the book Classical Gas: The Music of Mason Williams as saying that it is the most requested guitar piece besides Malagueña and perhaps the best-known instrumental guitar piece today. In the field of New Flamenco, the works and performances of Spanish composer and player Paco de Lucía are known worldwide.

Not many classical guitar concertos were written through history. Nevertheless, some guitar concertos are nowadays widely known and popular, especially Joaquín Rodrigo's Concierto de Aranjuez (with the famous theme from 2nd movement) and Fantasía para un gentilhombre. Composers, who also wrote famous guitar concertos are: Antonio Vivaldi (originally for mandolin or lute), Mauro Giuliani, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Manuel Ponce, Leo Brouwer, Lennox Berkeley and Malcolm Arnold. Nowadays, more and more contemporary composers decide to write a guitar concerto, among them Bosco Sacro by Federico Biscione, for guitar and string orchestra, is one of the most inspired.

Physical characteristics

The classical guitar is distinguished by a number of characteristics:

  • It is an acoustic instrument. The sound of the plucked string is amplified by the soundboard and resonant cavity of the guitar.[48]
  • It has six strings, though some classical guitars have seven or more strings.
  • All six strings are made from nylon, or nylon wrapped with metal, as opposed to the metal strings found on other acoustic guitars. Nylon strings also have a much lower tension than steel strings, as do the predecessors to nylon strings, gut strings (made from ox or sheep gut). The lower three strings ('bass strings') are wound with metal, commonly silver-plated copper.
  • Because of the low string tension
    • The neck can be made entirely of wood without a steel truss rod
    • The interior bracing can be lighter
  • Typical modern six-string classical guitars are 48–54 mm wide at the nut, compared to around 42 mm for electric guitars.
  • Classical fingerboards are normally flat and without inlaid fret markers, or just have dot inlays on the side of the neck—steel string fingerboards usually have a slight radius and inlays.
  • Classical guitarists use their right hand to pluck the strings. Players shape their fingernails for ideal tone and feel against the strings.
  • Strumming is a less common technique in classical guitar, and is often referred to by the Spanish term "rasgueo", or for strumming patterns "rasgueado", and uses the backs of the fingernails. Rasgueado is integral to Flamenco guitar.
  • Machine heads at the headstock of a classical guitar point backwards—in contrast to most steel-string guitars, which have machine heads that point outward.
  • The overall design of a Classical Guitar is very similar to the slightly lighter and smaller Flamenco guitar.

Parts

 
Diagram showing exterior parts of the classical guitar

Parts of typical classical guitars include:[49]

Fretboard

The fretboard (also called the fingerboard) is a piece of wood embedded with metal frets that constitutes the top of the neck. It is flat or slightly curved. The curvature of the fretboard is measured by the fretboard radius, which is the radius of a hypothetical circle of which the fretboard's surface constitutes a segment. The smaller the fretboard radius, the more noticeably curved the fretboard is. Fretboards are most commonly made of ebony, but may also be made of rosewood, some other hardwood, or of phenolic composite ("micarta").

Frets

Frets are the metal strips (usually nickel alloy or stainless steel) embedded along the fingerboard and placed at points that divide the length of string mathematically. The strings' vibrating length is determined when the strings are pressed down behind the frets. Each fret produces a different pitch and each pitch spaced a half-step apart on the 12 tone scale. The ratio of the widths of two consecutive frets is the twelfth root of two ( ), whose numeric value is about 1.059463. The twelfth fret divides the string into two exact halves and the 24th fret (if present) divides the string in half yet again. Every twelve frets represents one octave. This arrangement of frets results in equal tempered tuning.

Neck

A classical guitar's frets, fretboard, tuners, headstock, all attached to a long wooden extension, collectively constitute its neck. The wood for the fretboard usually differs from the wood in the rest of the neck. The bending stress on the neck is considerable, particularly when heavier gauge strings are used. The most common scale length for classical guitar is 650mm (calculated by measuring the distance between the end of the nut and the center of the 12th fret, then doubling that measurement). However, scale lengths may vary from 635-664mm or more.[50]

Neck joint or 'heel'

This is the point where the neck meets the body. In the traditional Spanish neck joint, the neck and block are one piece with the sides inserted into slots cut in the block. Other necks are built separately and joined to the body either with a dovetail joint, mortise or flush joint. These joints are usually glued and can be reinforced with mechanical fasteners. Recently many manufacturers use bolt-on fasteners. Bolt-on neck joints were once associated only with less expensive instruments but now some top manufacturers and hand builders are using variations of this method. Some people believed that the Spanish-style one piece neck/block and glued dovetail necks have better sustain, but testing has failed to confirm this. While most traditional Spanish style builders use the one-piece neck/heel block, Fleta, a prominent Spanish builder, used a dovetail joint due to the influence of his early training in violin making. One reason for the introduction of mechanical joints was to make it easier to repair necks. This is more of a problem with steel string guitars than with nylon strings, which have about half the string tension. This is why nylon string guitars often don't include a truss rod either.

Body

 
A photo of a contemporary "double-top" construction guitar made by Gernot Wagner in 2013 and owned by Jason Vieaux.

The body of the instrument is a major determinant of the overall sound variety for acoustic guitars. The guitar top, or soundboard, is a finely crafted and engineered element often made of spruce or red cedar. Considered the most prominent factor in determining the sound quality of a guitar, this thin (often 2 or 3 mm thick) piece of wood has a uniform thickness and is strengthened by different types of internal bracing. The back is made in rosewood and Brazilian rosewood is especially coveted, but mahogany or other decorative woods are sometimes used.[51]

The majority of the sound is caused by the vibration of the guitar top as the energy of the vibrating strings is transferred to it. Different patterns of wood bracing have been used through the years by luthiers (Torres, Hauser, Ramírez, Fleta, and C.F. Martin being among the most influential designers of their times); to not only strengthen the top against collapsing under the tremendous stress exerted by the tensioned strings, but also to affect the resonance of the top. Some contemporary guitar makers have introduced new construction concepts such as "double-top" consisting of two extra-thin wooden plates separated by Nomex, or carbon-fiber reinforced lattice – pattern bracing. The back and sides are made out of a variety of woods such as mahogany, maple, cypress Indian rosewood and highly regarded Brazilian rosewood (Dalbergia nigra). Each one is chosen for its aesthetic effect and structural strength, and such choice can also play a role in determining the instrument's timbre. These are also strengthened with internal bracing, and decorated with inlays and purfling. Antonio de Torres Jurado proved that it was the top, and not the back and sides of the guitar that gave the instrument its sound, in 1862 he built a guitar with back and sides of papier-mâché. (This guitar resides in the Museu de la Musica in Barcelona, and before the year 2000 it was restored to playable condition by the brothers Yagüe, Barcelona). The body of a classical guitar is a resonating chamber that projects the vibrations of the body through a sound hole, allowing the acoustic guitar to be heard without amplification. The sound hole is normally a single round hole in the top of the guitar (under the strings), though some have different placement, shapes, or numbers of holes. How much air an instrument can move determines its maximum volume.

Binding, purfling and kerfing

The top, back and sides of a classical guitar body are very thin, so a flexible piece of wood called kerfing (because it is often scored, or kerfed so it bends with the shape of the rim) is glued into the corners where the rim meets the top and back. This interior reinforcement provides 5 to 20 mm of solid gluing area for these corner joints.

During final construction, a small section of the outside corners is carved or routed out and filled with binding material on the outside corners and decorative strips of material next to the binding, which are called purfling. This binding serves to seal off the endgrain of the top and back. Binding and purfling materials are generally made of either wood or high-quality plastic materials.

Bridge

The main purpose of the bridge on a classical guitar is to transfer the vibration from the strings to the soundboard, which vibrates the air inside of the guitar, thereby amplifying the sound produced by the strings. The bridge holds the strings in place on the body. Also, the position of the saddle, usually a strip of bone or plastic that supports the strings off the bridge, determines the distance to the nut (at the top of the fingerboard).

Sizes

The modern full-size classical guitar has a scale length[52] of around 650 mm (25.6 in), with an overall instrument length of 965–1,016 mm (38.0–40.0 in). The scale length has remained quite consistent since it was chosen by the originator of the instrument, Antonio de Torres. This length may have been chosen because it's twice the length of a violin string. As the guitar is tuned to one octave below that of the violin, the same size gut could be used for the first strings of both instruments.

Smaller-scale instruments are produced to assist children in learning the instrument as the smaller scale leads to the frets being closer together, making it easier for smaller hands. The scale-size for the smaller guitars is usually in the range 484–578 mm (19.1–22.8 in), with an instrument length of 785–915 mm (30.9–36.0 in). Full-size instruments are sometimes referred to as 4/4, while the smaller sizes are 3/4, 1/2 or 1/4.

Tuning

A variety of different tunings are used. The most common by far, which one could call the "standard tuning" is:

  • eI – b – g – d – A – E

The above order is the tuning from the 1st string (highest-pitched string e'—spatially the bottom string in playing position) to the 6th string – lowest-pitched string E—spatially the upper string in playing position, and hence comfortable to pluck with the thumb.

The explanation for this "asymmetrical" tuning (in the sense that the maj 3rd is not between the two middle strings, as in the tuning of the viola da gamba) is probably that the guitar originated as a 4-string instrument (actually an instrument with 4 double courses of strings, see above) with a maj 3rd between the 2nd and 3rd strings, and it only became a 6-string instrument by gradual addition of a 5th string and then a 6th string tuned a 4th apart:

"The development of the modern tuning can be traced in stages. One of the tunings from the 16th century is C-F-A-D. This is equivalent to the top four strings of the modern guitar tuned a tone lower. However, the absolute pitch for these notes is not equivalent to modern "concert pitch". The tuning of the four-course guitar was moved up by a tone and toward the end of the 16th century, five-course instruments were in use with an added lower string tuned to A. This produced A-D-G-B-E, one of a wide number of variant tunings of the period. The low E string was added during the 18th century."[53]

String Sci. pitch Helmholtz pitch Interval from middle C Semitones from A440 Freq., if using an Equal temperament tuning (using  )
1st (highest pitch) E4 e' major third above −5   329.63 Hz
2nd B3 b minor second below −10   246.94 Hz
3rd G3 g perfect fourth below −14   196.00 Hz
4th D3 d minor seventh below −19   146.83 Hz
5th A2 A minor tenth below −24   110 Hz
6th (lowest pitch) E2 E minor thirteenth below −29   82.41 Hz

This tuning is such that neighboring strings are at most 5 semitones apart. There are also a variety of commonly used alternate tunings. The most common is known as Drop D tuning which has the 6th string tuned down from an E to a D.

Bibliography

  • The Guitar and its Music (From the Renaissance to the Classical Era) (2007) by James Tyler, Paul Sparks. ISBN 0-19-921477-8
  • Cambridge Studies in Performance Practice (No. 6): Performance on Lute, Guitar, and Vihuela (2005) edited by Victor Anand Coelho. ISBN 0-521-45528-6
  • The Guitar: From the Renaissance to the Present Day by Harvey Turnbull; published by Bold Strummer, 1991. ISBN 0-933224-57-5
  • The Guitar; by Sinier de Ridder; published by Edizioni Il Salabue; ISBN 88-87618-09-7
  • La Chitarra, Quattro secoli di Capolavori (The Guitar: Four centuries of Masterpieces) by Giovanni Accornero, Ivan Epicoco, Eraldo Guerci; published by Edizioni Il Salabue
  • Rosa sonora – Esposizione di chitarre XVII – XX secolo by Giovanni Accornero; published by Edizioni Il Salabue
  • Lyre-guitar. Étoile charmante, between the 18th and 19th century by Eleonora Vulpiani
  • Summerfield, Maurice, The Classical Guitar: Its Evolution, Players and Personalities since 1800 – 5th Edition, Blaydon : Ashley Mark Publishing Company, 2002.
  • Various, Classical Guitar Magazine, Blaydon : Ashley Mark Publishing Company, monthly publication first published in 1982.
  • Wade, Graham, Traditions of the Classical Guitar, London : Calder, 1980.
  • Antoni Pizà: Francesc Guerau i el seu temps (Palma de Mallorca: Govern de les Illes Balears, Conselleria d'Educació i Cultura, Direcció General de Cultura, Institut d'Estudis Baleàrics, 2000) ISBN 84-89868-50-6

See also

References

  1. ^ Classical vs. Flamenco Guitar Construction (Fernandez Music)
  2. ^ . Zavaleta's La Casa de Guitarras. Archived from the original on 2009-01-25. Retrieved 2008-12-25.
  3. ^ Cité de la Musique: Les guitares classiques du Musée de la musique (almost 200 classical guitars) 2010-03-13 at the Wayback Machine;   Catalog: Instruments et oeuvres d'art July 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine – use search-phrase: Mot-clé(s) : guitare
  4. ^ "SEGOVIA, Andres: 1950s American Recordings, Vol. 4". Graham Wade.
  5. ^ a b Early Classical Guitar and Early Romantic Guitar Time Period by earlyromanticguitar.com
  6. ^ Early Romantic Guitar Period Technique by earlyromanticguitar.com
  7. ^ Function, Construction and Quality of the Guitar; 1983
  8. ^ . mfa.org. Archived from the original on 24 February 2007. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  9. ^ "ref Guitar | Matteo Sellas|All|Musical Instruments".
  10. ^ "The Hector Berlioz Website – La Côte Saint-André Berlioz's birthplace". www.hberlioz.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  11. ^ "The myth of Schubert and the Guitar, An article seeking to clarify what relationship Schubert may – or may not – have had with the guitar". www.jacaranda-music.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  12. ^ A. Segovia, The Romance of the Guitar, ETUDE May 1930, volume XLVIII number 5, page 317–318, 367, reproduced here as of June 2011 (dubious and highly unlikely: whoever studied Beethoven musicologically knows that he generally had disdain for most musicians and publishers, see letters addressed to Artaria, who published Giuliani's music. Beethoven also said that he deeply disliked pianists who played the piano like an harp, see the book "Beethoven: impressions by his contemporaries" published by Dover. 2011-08-14 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "PAGANINI: Guitar Music". www.naxos.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  14. ^ The Guitar (From The Renaissance To The Present Day) by Harvey Turnbull (Third Impression 1978) – Publisher: Batsford (ISBN 0-7134-3251-9) – p. 112 (Chapter 3 – The Twentieth Century) – "In Spain Falla's lead was followed by Joaquin Turina (1882–1949) and Federico Moreno Torroba (b. 1891), who began to produce works in collaboration with Segovia."
  15. ^ The Guitar (From The Renaissance To The Present Day) by Harvey Turnbull (Third Impression 1978) – Publisher: Batsford (ISBN 0-7134-3251-9) – p, 113 (Chapter 3 – The Twentieth Century) – "Segovia's visits to South America also inspired new music. The Mexican composer Manuel Ponce (1882–1948) responded by producing a greater number of extended works than Turina and Torroba had achieved."
  16. ^ Secrets From The Masters (Edited by Don Menn) (Published by GPI Books) (ISBN 0-87930-260-7), p. 236 "... he performed a more important task by commissioning material by some of the 20th century's greatest composers, including Heitor Villa-Lobos, Manuel Ponce, Federico Moreno Torroba, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, and Alexander Tansman."
  17. ^ Changes by Elliott Carter – Boosey & Hawkes
  18. ^ Codex I by Cristóbal Halffter – Universal Edition (score sample)
  19. ^ Sequenza XI by Luciano Berio – Universal Edition
  20. ^ Sette Studi by Maurizio Pisati – Ricordi (score sample 2011-08-13 at the Wayback Machine)
  21. ^ Si Le Jour Paraît by Maurice Ohana – Billaudot
  22. ^ "Ricordi". ricordi.it. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  23. ^ Suite für Guitarre, Op. 164 by Ernst Krenek – Doblinger Musikverlag (score sample)
  24. ^ Algo: Due pezzi per chitarra by Franco Donatoni 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine – Edizioni Suvini Zerboni (Analysis)
  25. ^ "Variazioni notturne - Paolo Coggiola - 2016 - Partiture Cartacee - vari - PreludioMusic - Shop on-line". www.preludiomusic.com. Retrieved 2019-02-14.
  26. ^ Kurze Schatten II by Brian Ferneyhough – Edition Peters (score sample 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine)
  27. ^ away from by Sven-David Sandström – Gehrmans Musikförlag
  28. ^ Sheer Pluck – Database of Contemporary Guitar Music
  29. ^ . soundandmusic.org. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  30. ^ "Australian Music Center".
  31. ^ "Interview with Bernard Hebb".
  32. ^ Powers, Authors: Jayson Kerr Dobney, Wendy. "The Guitar | Essay | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art". The Met's Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
  33. ^ Jovanovic, Marko. "The Guitar's History". Guitar Sumo. Retrieved 2019-07-28.
  34. ^ "The first incontrovertible evidence of five-course instruments can be found in Miguel Fuenllana's Orphenica Lyre of 1554, which contains music for a vihuela de cinco ordenes. In the following year Juan Bermudo wrote in his Declaracion de Instrumentos Musicales: "We have seen a guitar in Spain with five courses of strings." Bermudo later mentions in the same book that "Guitars usually have four strings," which implies that the five-course guitar was of comparatively recent origin, and still something of an oddity". Tom and Mary Anne Evans Guitars: From the Renaissance to Rock. Paddington Press Ltd 1977 p.24
  35. ^ The guitars built by Antonio de Torres still had friction pegs (see for example Richard Chapman "The New Complete Guitarist", p. 13 top)
  36. ^ Luis Milan (1536). Libro de música de vihuela de mano intitulado El maestro.
  37. ^ Alexander Batov (20 April 2006). "The Royal College Dias – guitar or vihuela?". (The talk given at the Lute Society meeting in London on 16 April 2005). A rather small sized vaulted-back guitar in the engraving by Etienne Picart (c. 1680) after the painting by Leonello Spada Concert (c.1615), Musée du Louvre, Paris
  38. ^ Encyclopaedic Dictionary of World Musical Instruments. Global Vision Pub House. 2004. ISBN 9788187746843.[page needed]
  39. ^ The Classical Mandolin by Paul Sparks (1995), page 225, quote: "Vinaccia, Gaetano (1759 – after 1831)"
  40. ^ "Gallery of Dated Instruments". Early Romantic Guitar. Retrieved 15 April 2018. Page showing guitars, the oldest captioned "1779 Italy Vinaccia TH Looks right for 1779"; at the bottom of the page TH refers to a linked article "Dr. Heck - Stalking the Earliest 6-String" in which the author Thomas F. Heck concludes "the guitar with six single strings is probably of French or Italian origin, definitely not of Spanish origin...I do not consider the matter closed..."
  41. ^ "Gaetano Vinaccia Biography". guitarhistoryfacts.com. Retrieved 26 April 2019. ...According to the current historical records, Gaetano Vinaccia and his brother Gennaro were responsible for the creation of the first six string guitar sometimes around 1776 in Naples...Authenticity of his surviving guitar was often placed in question by modern historians...
  42. ^ "Stalking". www3.uakron.edu. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  43. ^ . ralphmaier.com. Archived from the original on 30 September 2014. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  44. ^ A 1992 interview of Štěpán Rak by Graham Wade 2013-05-30 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ "Classical Guitar Lessons". nationalguitaracademy.com. 30 May 2016. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  46. ^ The little finger whose use is not completely standardized in classical guitar technique can also be found designated by e or x. There are several words in Spanish for the little finger: dedo meñique, dedo auricular, dedo pequeño, but their initials conflict with the initials of the other fingers. C is said to be the initial of the dedo chiquito which is not the most common name for the little finger. E and X are not initials, but letters that were picked, each with its own rationale, by people who didn't know what else to pick
  47. ^ Mertz, Johann Kaspar (1847–1850). "Mertz — Bardenklänge books 1-13" (PDF). imslp. Vienna: Haslinger. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-10. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  48. ^ . www.phys.unsw.edu.au. Archived from the original on 22 July 2008. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  49. ^ . frets.com. Archived from the original on 21 April 2018. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  50. ^ "Parts of the Classical Guitar (Names, Descriptions, & Images)". Learn Guitar Today. 2022-01-10. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  51. ^ Bucur, Voichita (2016). Handbook of Materials for String Musical Instruments. Springer. p. 45. ISBN 978-3319320809. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  52. ^ Guitar scale length Hampshire guitar orchestra
  53. ^ Richard Chapman, "The New Complete Guitarist", p. 10 left

External links

  • Thematic essay: The guitar Jayson Kerr Dobney, Wendy Powers (The Metropolitan Museum of Art)
  • Classical & Fingerstyle Guitar
  • Classical Guitar Library A vibrant library of guitar sheet music, which can serve in accomplishing diverse teaching and research needs.

classical, guitar, classical, guitar, also, known, nylon, string, guitar, spanish, guitar, member, guitar, family, used, classical, music, other, styles, acoustic, wooden, string, instrument, with, strings, made, nylon, precursor, modern, acoustic, electric, g. The classical guitar also known as the nylon string guitar or Spanish guitar is a member of the guitar family used in classical music and other styles An acoustic wooden string instrument with strings made of gut or nylon it is a precursor of the modern acoustic and electric guitars both of which use metal strings Classical guitars derive from the Spanish vihuela and gittern of the fifteenth and sixteenth century Those instruments evolved into the seventeenth and eighteenth century baroque guitar and by the mid nineteenth century early forms of the modern classical guitar Classical guitarFront and lateral view of a typical modern classical guitarString instrumentClassificationString instrument plucked Hornbostel Sachs classification321 322 5 Composite chordophone sounded by the bare fingers or fingernails Developedmodern classical guitar was developed in the late 19th century in Spain Playing rangeRelated instrumentsGuitar family Steel string acoustic guitar Electric guitar Flamenco guitar Bass guitar Lute distantly related Baroque guitar Looks similar to Flamenco guitarMusiciansCategory Classical guitaristsFor a right handed player the traditional classical guitar has twelve frets clear of the body and is properly held up by the left leg so that the hand that plucks or strums the strings does so near the back of the sound hole this is called the classical position However the right hand may move closer to the fretboard to achieve different tonal qualities The player typically holds the left leg higher by the use of a foot rest The modern steel string guitar on the other hand usually has fourteen frets clear of the body see Dreadnought and is commonly held with a strap around the neck and shoulder The phrase classical guitar may refer to either of two concepts other than the instrument itself The instrumental finger technique common to classical guitar individual strings plucked with the fingernails or less frequently fingertips The instrument s classical music repertoireThe term modern classical guitar sometimes distinguishes the classical guitar from older forms of guitar which are in their broadest sense also called classical or more specifically early guitars Examples of early guitars include the six string early romantic guitar c 1790 1880 and the earlier baroque guitars with five courses The materials and the methods of classical guitar construction may vary but the typical shape is either modern classical guitar or that historic classical guitar similar to the early romantic guitars of France and Italy Classical guitar strings once made of gut are now made of materials such as nylon or fluoropolymers typically with silver plated copper fine wire wound about the acoustically lower d A E in standard tuning strings A guitar family tree may be identified The flamenco guitar derives from the modern classical but has differences in material construction and sound 1 2 Today s modern classical guitar was established by the late designs of the 19th century Spanish luthier Antonio Torres Jurado Contents 1 Contexts 2 Historical perspective 2 1 Early guitars 2 1 1 Characteristics 3 Style periods 3 1 Renaissance 3 2 Baroque 3 3 Classical and romantic 3 4 Francisco Tarrega 3 5 Modern period 3 5 1 New music avant garde 4 Background 5 History 5 1 Overview of the classical guitar s history 5 2 Renaissance guitar 5 3 Vihuela 5 4 Baroque guitar 5 5 Early romantic guitar or Guitar during the Classical music era 5 6 Modern classical guitar 5 7 Technique 6 Performance 6 1 Direct contact with strings 6 2 Fingering notation 6 3 Alternation 7 Repertoire 8 Physical characteristics 8 1 Parts 8 1 1 Fretboard 8 1 2 Frets 8 1 3 Neck 8 1 4 Neck joint or heel 8 1 5 Body 8 1 6 Binding purfling and kerfing 8 1 7 Bridge 8 2 Sizes 9 Tuning 10 Bibliography 11 See also 11 1 Related instruments 11 2 Lists 12 References 13 External linksContexts EditThe classical guitar has a long history and one is able to distinguish various instruments repertoire composers and their compositions arrangements improvisations Both instrument and repertoire can be viewed from a combination of various perspectives Historical chronological period of time Baroque guitar 1600 to 1750 Early romantic guitars 1750 to 1850 for music from the Classical and Romantic periods Modern classical guitarsGeographical Spanish guitars Torres and French guitars Rene Lacote etc Cultural Baroque court music nineteenth century opera and its influences nineteenth century folk songs Latin American musicHistorical perspective EditMain article History of the classical guitar Early guitars Edit Guitars from the Museum Cite de la Musique in Paris which houses almost 200 classical guitars 3 While classical guitar is today mainly associated with the modern classical guitar design there is an increasing interest in early guitars and understanding the link between historical repertoire and the particular period guitar that was originally used to perform this repertoire The musicologist and author Graham Wade writes Nowadays it is customary to play this repertoire on reproductions of instruments authentically modelled on concepts of musicological research with appropriate adjustments to techniques and overall interpretation Thus over recent decades we have become accustomed to specialist artists with expertise in the art of vihuela a 16th century type of guitar popular in Spain lute Baroque guitar 19th century guitar etc 4 Different types of guitars have different sound aesthetics e g different colour spectrum characteristics the way the sound energy is spread in the fundamental frequency and the overtones different response etc These differences are due to differences in construction for example modern classical guitars usually use a different bracing fan bracing from that used in earlier guitars they had ladder bracing and a different voicing was used by the luthier There is a historical parallel between musical styles baroque classical romantic flamenco jazz and the style of sound aesthetic of the musical instruments used for example Robert de Visee played a baroque guitar with a very different sound aesthetic from the guitars used by Mauro Giuliani and Luigi Legnani they used 19th century guitars These guitars in turn sound different from the Torres models used by Segovia that are suited for interpretations of romantic modern works such as Moreno Torroba When considering the guitar from a historical perspective the musical instrument used is as important as the musical language and style of the particular period As an example It is impossible to play a historically informed de Visee or Corbetta baroque guitarist composers on a modern classical guitar The reason is that the baroque guitar used courses which are two strings close together in unison that are plucked together This gives baroque guitars an unmistakable sound characteristic and tonal texture that is an integral part of an interpretation Additionally the sound aesthetic of the baroque guitar with its strong overtone presence is very different from modern classical type guitars as is shown below Today s use of Torres and post Torres type guitars for repertoire of all periods is sometimes critically viewed Torres and post Torres style modern guitars with their fan bracing and design have a thick and strong tone very suitable for modern era repertoire However they are considered to emphasize the fundamental too heavily at the expense of overtone partials for earlier repertoire Classical Romantic Carulli Sor Giuliani Mertz Baroque de Visee etc Andres Segovia presented the Spanish guitar as a versatile model for all playing styles 5 to the extent that still today many guitarists have tunnel vision of the world of the guitar coming from the modern Segovia tradition 6 19th century guitar made by Manuel de Soto y Solares held by Spanish guitarist Rafael Serrallet While fan braced modern classical Torres and post Torres style instruments coexisted with traditional ladder braced guitars at the beginning of the 20th century the older forms eventually fell away Some attribute this to the popularity of Segovia considering him the catalyst for change toward the Spanish design and the so called modern school in the 1920s and beyond 5 The styles of music performed on ladder braced guitars were becoming unfashionable and e g in Germany more musicians were turning towards folk music Schrammel music and the Contraguitar This was localized in Germany and Austria and became unfashionable again On the other hand Segovia was playing concerts around the world popularizing modern classical guitar and in the 1920s Spanish romantic modern style with guitar works by Moreno Torroba de Falla etc The 19th century classical guitarist Francisco Tarrega first popularized the Torres design as a classical solo instrument However some maintain that Segovia s influence led to its domination over other designs Factories around the world began producing them in large numbers Characteristics Edit Vihuela renaissance guitars and baroque guitars have a bright sound rich in overtones and their courses double strings give the sound a very particular texture Early guitars of the classical and romantic period early romantic guitars have single strings but their design and voicing are still such that they have their tonal energy more in the overtones but without starved fundamental giving a bright intimate tone Later in Spain a style of music emerged that favoured a stronger fundamental With the change of music a stronger fundamental was demanded and the fan bracing system was approached the guitar tone has been changed from a transparent tone rich in higher partials to a more broad tone with a strong fundamental 7 Thus modern guitars with fan bracing fan strutting have a design and voicing that gives them a thick heavy sound with far more tonal energy found in the fundamental Style periods EditRenaissance Edit Composers of the Renaissance period who wrote for four course guitar include Alonso Mudarra Miguel de Fuenllana Adrian Le Roy Gregoire Brayssing fr Guillaume de Morlaye and Simon Gorlier fr InstrumentFour course guitar Baroque Edit Some well known composers of the Baroque guitar were Gaspar Sanz Robert de Visee Francesco Corbetta and Santiago de Murcia Examples of instrumentsBaroque guitar by Nicolas Alexandre Voboam II This French instrument has the typical design of the period with five courses of double strings and a flat back 8 Baroque guitar attributed to Matteo Sellas This Italian instrument has five courses and a rounded back 9 Classical and romantic Edit From approximately 1780 to 1850 the guitar had numerous composers and performers including Filippo Gragnani 1767 1820 Antoine de Lhoyer 1768 1852 Ferdinando Carulli 1770 1841 Wenzel Thomas Matiegka 1773 1830 Francesco Molino 1774 1847 Fernando Sor 1778 1839 Luigi Moretti it 1 c 1780 1850 Mauro Giuliani 1781 1829 Niccolo Paganini 1782 1840 Dionisio Aguado 1784 1849 Luigi Legnani 1790 1877 Matteo Carcassi 1792 1853 Napoleon Coste 1805 1883 Johann Kaspar Mertz 1806 1856 Giulio Regondi 1822 1872 Hector Berlioz studied the guitar as a teenager 10 Franz Schubert owned at least two and wrote for the instrument 11 and Ludwig van Beethoven after hearing Giuliani play commented the instrument was a miniature orchestra in itself 12 Niccolo Paganini was also a guitar virtuoso and composer He once wrote I love the guitar for its harmony it is my constant companion in all my travels He also said on another occasion I do not like this instrument but regard it simply as a way of helping me to think 13 Francisco Tarrega Edit The guitarist and composer Francisco Tarrega November 21 1852 December 15 1909 was one of the great guitar virtuosos and teachers and is considered the father of modern classical guitar playing As a professor of guitar at the conservatories of Madrid and Barcelona he defined many elements of the modern classical technique and elevated the importance of the guitar in the classical music tradition Modern period Edit At the beginning of the 1920s Andres Segovia popularized the guitar with tours and early phonograph recordings Segovia collaborated with the composers Federico Moreno Torroba and Joaquin Turina with the aim of extending the guitar repertoire with new music 14 Segovia s tour of South America revitalized public interest in the guitar and helped the guitar music of Manuel Ponce and Heitor Villa Lobos reach a wider audience 15 The composers Alexandre Tansman and Mario Castelnuovo Tedesco were commissioned by Segovia to write new pieces for the guitar 16 Luiz Bonfa popularized Brazilian musical styles such as the newly created Bossa Nova which was well received by audiences in the USA New music avant garde Edit The classical guitar repertoire also includes modern contemporary works sometimes termed New Music such as Elliott Carter s Changes 17 Cristobal Halffter s Codex I 18 Luciano Berio s Sequenza XI 19 Maurizio Pisati s Sette Studi 20 Maurice Ohana s Si Le Jour Parait 21 Sylvano Bussotti s Rara eco sierologico 22 Ernst Krenek s Suite fur Guitarre allein Op 164 23 Franco Donatoni s Algo Due pezzi per chitarra 24 Paolo Coggiola s Variazioni Notturne 25 etc Performers who are known for including modern repertoire include Jurgen Ruck Elena Casoli Leo Brouwer when he was still performing John Schneider Reinbert Evers Maria Kammerling Siegfried Behrend David Starobin Mats Scheidegger Magnus Andersson etc This type of repertoire is usually performed by guitarists who have particularly chosen to focus on the avant garde in their performances Within the contemporary music scene itself there are also works which are generally regarded as extreme These include works such as Brian Ferneyhough s Kurze Schatten II 26 Sven David Sandstrom s away from 27 and Rolf Riehm s Toccata Orpheus etc which are notorious for their extreme difficulty There are also a variety of databases documenting modern guitar works such as Sheer Pluck 28 and others 29 30 Background EditThe evolution of the classical guitar and its repertoire spans more than four centuries It has a history that was shaped by contributions from earlier instruments such as the lute the vihuela and the baroque guitar The last guitarist to follow in Segovia s footsteps was Julian Bream and Julian Bream will be 73 years old on July 15th 2006 Miguel Llobet Andres Segovia and Julian Bream are the three performer personalities of the 20th century Do not understand me wrong we have many guitarists today that are very excellent performers but none with such a distinct personality in their tone and style as Llobet Segovia and Bream In all instrumental areas not just the guitar there is a lack of individualism with a strong tendency to conformity This I find very unfortunate since art music theatre or the pictorial arts is a very individual and personal matter 31 Bernard Hebb InterviewHistory Edit Guitarra Latina left and Guitarra Morisca right History of guitars exhibited at Deutsches Museum Main article History of the classical guitar Overview of the classical guitar s history Edit The origins of the modern guitar are not known with certainty Some believe it is indigenous to Europe while others think it is an imported instrument 32 Guitar like instruments appear in ancient carvings and statues recovered from Egyptian Sumerian and Babylonian civilizations 33 This means that contemporary Iranian instruments such as the tanbur and setar are distantly related to the European guitar as they all derive ultimately from the same ancient origins but by very different historical routes and influences During the late Middle Ages gitterns called guitars were in use but their construction and tuning were different from modern guitars The guitarra latina in Spain had curved sides and a single hole The guitarra morisca which appears to have had Moorish influences had an oval soundbox and many sound holes on its soundboard By the 15th century a four course double string instrument called the vihuela de mano which was tuned like the later modern guitar except on one string and similar construction first appeared in Spain and spread to France and Italy In the 16th century a fifth double string was added During this time composers wrote mostly in tablature notation In the middle of the 16th century influences from the vihuela and the Renaissance guitar were combined and the baroque five string guitar appeared in Spain 34 The baroque guitar quickly superseded the vihuela in popularity in Spain France and Italy and Italian players and composers became prominent In the late 18th century the six string guitar quickly became popular at the expense of the five string guitars During the 19th century the Spanish luthier and player Antonio de Torres gave the modern classical guitar its definitive form with a broadened body increased waist curve thinned belly and improved internal bracing 35 The modern classical guitar replaced an older form for the accompaniment of song and dance called flamenco and a modified version known as the flamenco guitar was created Gittern 1450 Vihuela vihuela book by Luis Milan 1536 36 Baroque guitar 37 with rounded back engraving by Etienne Picart 1680 Renaissance guitar Edit See also Renaissance music Alonso de Mudarra s book Tres Libros de Musica published in Spain in 1546 contains the earliest known written pieces for a four course guitarra This four course guitar was popular in France Spain and Italy In France this instrument gained popularity among aristocrats A considerable volume of music was published in Paris from the 1550s to the 1570s Simon Gorlier s Le Troysieme Livre mis en tablature de Guiterne was published in 1551 In 1551 Adrian Le Roy also published his Premier Livre de Tablature de Guiterne and in the same year he also published Briefve et facile instruction pour apprendre la tablature a bien accorder conduire et disposer la main sur la Guiterne Robert Ballard Gregoire Brayssing from Augsburg and Guillaume Morlaye c 1510 c 1558 significantly contributed to its repertoire Morlaye s Le Premier Livre de Chansons Gaillardes Pavannes Bransles Almandes Fantasies which has a four course instrument illustrated on its title page was published in partnership with Michel Fedenzat and among other music they published six books of tablature by lutenist Albert de Rippe who was very likely Guillaume s teacher Vihuela Edit Main article Vihuela The written history of the classical guitar can be traced back to the early 16th century with the development of the vihuela in Spain While the lute was then becoming popular in other parts of Europe the Spaniards did not take to it well because of its association with the Moors 38 Instead the lute like vihuela appeared with two more strings that gave it more range and complexity In its most developed form the vihuela was a guitar like instrument with six double strings made of gut tuned like a modern classical guitar with the exception of the third string which was tuned half a step lower It has a high sound and is rather large to hold Few have survived and most of what is known today come from diagrams and paintings Baroque guitar on The Guitar Player c 1672 by Johannes Vermeer Early romantic guitar by Jean Nicolas Grobert 1830 Baroque guitar Edit Main article Baroque guitar See also Baroque music Early romantic guitar or Guitar during the Classical music era Edit Main article Early romantic guitar See also Classical music era The earliest extant six string guitar is believed to have been built in 1779 by Gaetano Vinaccia 1759 after 1831 in Naples Italy however the date on the label is a little ambiguous 39 40 41 The Vinaccia family of luthiers is known for developing the mandolin This guitar has been examined and does not show tell tale signs of modifications from a double course guitar 42 The authenticity of guitars allegedly produced before the 1790s is often in question This also corresponds to when Moretti s 6 string method appeared in 1792 Spanish guitar by Antonio de Torres Jurado 1862 Smallman played by John Williams in 2008 Modern classical guitar Edit See also Antonio de Torres Jurado and Hermann Hauser Sr Eminent classical guitarist and composer Agustin Barrios The modern classical guitar also known as the Spanish guitar the immediate forerunner of today s guitars was developed in the 19th century by Antonio de Torres Jurado Ignacio Fleta Hermann Hauser Sr and Robert Bouchet Technique Edit The fingerstyle is used fervently on the modern classical guitar The thumb traditionally plucks the bass or root note whereas the fingers ring the melody and its accompanying parts Often classical guitar technique involves the use of the nails of the right hand to pluck the notes Noted players were Francisco Tarrega Emilio Pujol Andres Segovia Julian Bream Agustin Barrios and John Williams guitarist Performance Edit source source source source source source source source source source Popular song public domain Spanish Romance Main article Classical guitar technique The modern classical guitar is usually played in a seated position with the instrument resting on the left lap and the left foot placed on a footstool Alternatively if a footstool is not used a guitar support can be placed between the guitar and the left lap the support usually attaches to the instrument s side with suction cups There are of course exceptions with some performers choosing to hold the instrument another way Right handed players use the fingers of the right hand to pluck the strings with the thumb plucking from the top of a string downwards downstroke and the other fingers plucking from the bottom of the string upwards upstroke The little finger in classical technique as it evolved in the 20th century is used only to ride along with the ring finger without striking the strings and to thus physiologically facilitate the ring finger s motion In contrast Flamenco technique and classical compositions evoking Flamenco employ the little finger semi independently in the Flamenco four finger rasgueado that rapid strumming of the string by the fingers in reverse order employing the back of the fingernail a familiar characteristic of Flamenco Flamenco technique in the performance of the rasgueado also uses the upstroke of the four fingers and the downstroke of the thumb the string is hit not only with the inner fleshy side of the fingertip but also with the outer fingernail side This was also used in a technique of the vihuela called dedillo 43 which has recently begun to be introduced on the classical guitar Some modern guitarists such as Stepan Rak and Kazuhito Yamashita use the little finger independently compensating for the little finger s shortness by maintaining an extremely long fingernail Rak and Yamashita have also generalized the use of the upstroke of the four fingers and the downstroke of the thumb the same technique as in the rasgueado of the Flamenco as explained above the string is hit not only with the inner fleshy side of the fingertip but also with the outer fingernail side both as a free stroke and as a rest stroke 44 Direct contact with strings Edit As with other plucked instruments such as the lute the musician directly touches the strings usually plucking to produce the sound This has important consequences Different tone timbre of a single note can be produced by plucking the string in different manners apoyando or tirando and in different positions such as closer and further away from the guitar bridge For example plucking an open string will sound brighter than playing the same note s on a fretted position which would have a warmer tone The instrument s versatility means it can create a variety of tones but this finger picking style also makes the instrument harder to learn than a standard acoustic guitar s strumming technique 45 Fingering notation Edit In guitar scores the five fingers of the right hand which pluck the strings are designated by the first letter of their Spanish names namely p thumb pulgar i index finger indice m middle finger mayor a ring finger anular c little finger or pinky menique chiquito 46 The four fingers of the left hand which fret the strings are designated 1 index 2 major 3 ring finger 4 little finger 0 designates an open string a string not stopped by a finger and whose full length thus vibrates when plucked It is rare to use the left hand thumb in performance the neck of a classical guitar being too wide for comfort and normal technique keeps the thumb behind the neck However Johann Kaspar Mertz for example is notable for specifying the thumb to fret bass notes on the sixth string notated with an up arrowhead 47 Scores contrary to tablatures do not systematically indicate the string to pluck though the choice is usually obvious When indicating the string is useful the score uses the numbers 1 to 6 inside circles highest pitch sting to lowest Scores don t systematically indicate fretboard positions where to put the first finger of the fretting hand but when helpful mostly with barres chords the score indicates positions with Roman numerals from the first position I index finger on the 1st fret F B flat E flat A flat C F to the twelfth position XII index finger on the 12th fret E A D G B E The 12th fret is where the body begins or even higher up to position XIX the classical guitar most often having 19 frets with the 19th fret being most often split and not being usable to fret the 3rd and 4th strings Alternation Edit To achieve tremolo effects and rapid fluent scale passages the player must practice alternation that is never plucking a string with the same finger twice in a row Using p to indicate the thumb i the index finger m the middle finger and a the ring finger common alternation patterns include i m i m Basic melody line on the treble strings Has the appearance of walking along the strings This is often used for playing Scale music passages p i m a i m a Arpeggio pattern example However there are many arpeggio patterns incorporated into the classical guitar repertoire p a m i p a m i Classical guitar tremolo pattern p m p m A way of playing a melody line on the lower strings Repertoire EditMain article Classical guitar repertoire Music written specifically for the classical guitar dates from the addition of the sixth string the baroque guitar normally had five pairs of strings in the late 18th century A guitar recital may include a variety of works e g works written originally for the lute or vihuela by composers such as John Dowland b England 1563 and Luis de Narvaez b Spain c 1500 and also music written for the harpsichord by Domenico Scarlatti b Italy 1685 for the baroque lute by Sylvius Leopold Weiss b Germany 1687 for the baroque guitar by Robert de Visee b France c 1650 or even Spanish flavored music written for the piano by Isaac Albeniz b Spain 1860 and Enrique Granados b Spain 1867 The most important composer who did not write for the guitar but whose music is often played on it is Johann Sebastian Bach b Germany 1685 whose baroque lute works have proved highly adaptable to the instrument Of music written originally for guitar the earliest important composers are from the classical period and include Fernando Sor b Spain 1778 and Mauro Giuliani b Italy 1781 both of whom wrote in a style strongly influenced by Viennese classicism In the 19th century guitar composers such as Johann Kaspar Mertz b Slovakia Austria 1806 were strongly influenced by the dominance of the piano Not until the end of the nineteenth century did the guitar begin to establish its own unique identity Francisco Tarrega b Spain 1852 was central to this sometimes incorporating stylized aspects of flamenco s Moorish influences into his romantic miniatures This was part of late 19th century mainstream European musical nationalism Albeniz and Granados were central to this movement their evocation of the guitar was so successful that their compositions have been absorbed into the standard guitar repertoire The steel string and electric guitars characteristic to the rise of rock and roll in the post WWII era became more widely played in North America and the English speaking world Agustin Barrios Mangore of Paraguay composed many works and brought into the mainstream the characteristics of Latin American music as did the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa Lobos Andres Segovia commissioned works from Spanish composers such as Federico Moreno Torroba and Joaquin Rodrigo Italians such as Mario Castelnuovo Tedesco and Latin American composers such as Manuel Ponce of Mexico Other prominent Latin American composers are Leo Brouwer of Cuba Antonio Lauro of Venezuela and Enrique Solares of Guatemala Julian Bream of Britain managed to get nearly every British composer from William Walton and Benjamin Britten to Peter Maxwell Davies to write significant works for guitar Bream s collaborations with tenor Peter Pears also resulted in song cycles by Britten Lennox Berkeley and others There are significant works by composers such as Hans Werner Henze of Germany Gilbert Biberian of England and Roland Chadwick of Australia The classical guitar also became widely used in popular music and rock amp roll in the 1960s after guitarist Mason Williams popularized the instrument in his instrumental hit Classical Gas Guitarist Christopher Parkening is quoted in the book Classical Gas The Music of Mason Williams as saying that it is the most requested guitar piece besides Malaguena and perhaps the best known instrumental guitar piece today In the field of New Flamenco the works and performances of Spanish composer and player Paco de Lucia are known worldwide Not many classical guitar concertos were written through history Nevertheless some guitar concertos are nowadays widely known and popular especially Joaquin Rodrigo s Concierto de Aranjuez with the famous theme from 2nd movement and Fantasia para un gentilhombre Composers who also wrote famous guitar concertos are Antonio Vivaldi originally for mandolin or lute Mauro Giuliani Heitor Villa Lobos Mario Castelnuovo Tedesco Manuel Ponce Leo Brouwer Lennox Berkeley and Malcolm Arnold Nowadays more and more contemporary composers decide to write a guitar concerto among them Bosco Sacro by Federico Biscione for guitar and string orchestra is one of the most inspired Physical characteristics EditThe classical guitar is distinguished by a number of characteristics It is an acoustic instrument The sound of the plucked string is amplified by the soundboard and resonant cavity of the guitar 48 It has six strings though some classical guitars have seven or more strings All six strings are made from nylon or nylon wrapped with metal as opposed to the metal strings found on other acoustic guitars Nylon strings also have a much lower tension than steel strings as do the predecessors to nylon strings gut strings made from ox or sheep gut The lower three strings bass strings are wound with metal commonly silver plated copper Because of the low string tension The neck can be made entirely of wood without a steel truss rod The interior bracing can be lighter Typical modern six string classical guitars are 48 54 mm wide at the nut compared to around 42 mm for electric guitars Classical fingerboards are normally flat and without inlaid fret markers or just have dot inlays on the side of the neck steel string fingerboards usually have a slight radius and inlays Classical guitarists use their right hand to pluck the strings Players shape their fingernails for ideal tone and feel against the strings Strumming is a less common technique in classical guitar and is often referred to by the Spanish term rasgueo or for strumming patterns rasgueado and uses the backs of the fingernails Rasgueado is integral to Flamenco guitar Machine heads at the headstock of a classical guitar point backwards in contrast to most steel string guitars which have machine heads that point outward The overall design of a Classical Guitar is very similar to the slightly lighter and smaller Flamenco guitar Parts Edit Diagram showing exterior parts of the classical guitar Parts of typical classical guitars include 49 Headstock Nut Machine heads or pegheads tuning keys tuning machines tuners Frets Neck Heel Body Bridge Bottom deck Soundboard Body sides Sound hole with rosette inlay Strings Saddle Bridge nut FretboardFretboard Edit The fretboard also called the fingerboard is a piece of wood embedded with metal frets that constitutes the top of the neck It is flat or slightly curved The curvature of the fretboard is measured by the fretboard radius which is the radius of a hypothetical circle of which the fretboard s surface constitutes a segment The smaller the fretboard radius the more noticeably curved the fretboard is Fretboards are most commonly made of ebony but may also be made of rosewood some other hardwood or of phenolic composite micarta Frets Edit Main article Fret Frets are the metal strips usually nickel alloy or stainless steel embedded along the fingerboard and placed at points that divide the length of string mathematically The strings vibrating length is determined when the strings are pressed down behind the frets Each fret produces a different pitch and each pitch spaced a half step apart on the 12 tone scale The ratio of the widths of two consecutive frets is the twelfth root of two 2 12 displaystyle sqrt 12 2 whose numeric value is about 1 059463 The twelfth fret divides the string into two exact halves and the 24th fret if present divides the string in half yet again Every twelve frets represents one octave This arrangement of frets results in equal tempered tuning Neck Edit Main article Guitar neck See also Guitar strings A classical guitar s frets fretboard tuners headstock all attached to a long wooden extension collectively constitute its neck The wood for the fretboard usually differs from the wood in the rest of the neck The bending stress on the neck is considerable particularly when heavier gauge strings are used The most common scale length for classical guitar is 650mm calculated by measuring the distance between the end of the nut and the center of the 12th fret then doubling that measurement However scale lengths may vary from 635 664mm or more 50 Neck joint or heel Edit This is the point where the neck meets the body In the traditional Spanish neck joint the neck and block are one piece with the sides inserted into slots cut in the block Other necks are built separately and joined to the body either with a dovetail joint mortise or flush joint These joints are usually glued and can be reinforced with mechanical fasteners Recently many manufacturers use bolt on fasteners Bolt on neck joints were once associated only with less expensive instruments but now some top manufacturers and hand builders are using variations of this method Some people believed that the Spanish style one piece neck block and glued dovetail necks have better sustain but testing has failed to confirm this While most traditional Spanish style builders use the one piece neck heel block Fleta a prominent Spanish builder used a dovetail joint due to the influence of his early training in violin making One reason for the introduction of mechanical joints was to make it easier to repair necks This is more of a problem with steel string guitars than with nylon strings which have about half the string tension This is why nylon string guitars often don t include a truss rod either Body Edit A photo of a contemporary double top construction guitar made by Gernot Wagner in 2013 and owned by Jason Vieaux The body of the instrument is a major determinant of the overall sound variety for acoustic guitars The guitar top or soundboard is a finely crafted and engineered element often made of spruce or red cedar Considered the most prominent factor in determining the sound quality of a guitar this thin often 2 or 3 mm thick piece of wood has a uniform thickness and is strengthened by different types of internal bracing The back is made in rosewood and Brazilian rosewood is especially coveted but mahogany or other decorative woods are sometimes used 51 The majority of the sound is caused by the vibration of the guitar top as the energy of the vibrating strings is transferred to it Different patterns of wood bracing have been used through the years by luthiers Torres Hauser Ramirez Fleta and C F Martin being among the most influential designers of their times to not only strengthen the top against collapsing under the tremendous stress exerted by the tensioned strings but also to affect the resonance of the top Some contemporary guitar makers have introduced new construction concepts such as double top consisting of two extra thin wooden plates separated by Nomex or carbon fiber reinforced lattice pattern bracing The back and sides are made out of a variety of woods such as mahogany maple cypress Indian rosewood and highly regarded Brazilian rosewood Dalbergia nigra Each one is chosen for its aesthetic effect and structural strength and such choice can also play a role in determining the instrument s timbre These are also strengthened with internal bracing and decorated with inlays and purfling Antonio de Torres Jurado proved that it was the top and not the back and sides of the guitar that gave the instrument its sound in 1862 he built a guitar with back and sides of papier mache This guitar resides in the Museu de la Musica in Barcelona and before the year 2000 it was restored to playable condition by the brothers Yague Barcelona The body of a classical guitar is a resonating chamber that projects the vibrations of the body through a sound hole allowing the acoustic guitar to be heard without amplification The sound hole is normally a single round hole in the top of the guitar under the strings though some have different placement shapes or numbers of holes How much air an instrument can move determines its maximum volume Binding purfling and kerfing Edit The top back and sides of a classical guitar body are very thin so a flexible piece of wood called kerfing because it is often scored or kerfed so it bends with the shape of the rim is glued into the corners where the rim meets the top and back This interior reinforcement provides 5 to 20 mm of solid gluing area for these corner joints During final construction a small section of the outside corners is carved or routed out and filled with binding material on the outside corners and decorative strips of material next to the binding which are called purfling This binding serves to seal off the endgrain of the top and back Binding and purfling materials are generally made of either wood or high quality plastic materials Bridge Edit The main purpose of the bridge on a classical guitar is to transfer the vibration from the strings to the soundboard which vibrates the air inside of the guitar thereby amplifying the sound produced by the strings The bridge holds the strings in place on the body Also the position of the saddle usually a strip of bone or plastic that supports the strings off the bridge determines the distance to the nut at the top of the fingerboard Sizes Edit The modern full size classical guitar has a scale length 52 of around 650 mm 25 6 in with an overall instrument length of 965 1 016 mm 38 0 40 0 in The scale length has remained quite consistent since it was chosen by the originator of the instrument Antonio de Torres This length may have been chosen because it s twice the length of a violin string As the guitar is tuned to one octave below that of the violin the same size gut could be used for the first strings of both instruments Smaller scale instruments are produced to assist children in learning the instrument as the smaller scale leads to the frets being closer together making it easier for smaller hands The scale size for the smaller guitars is usually in the range 484 578 mm 19 1 22 8 in with an instrument length of 785 915 mm 30 9 36 0 in Full size instruments are sometimes referred to as 4 4 while the smaller sizes are 3 4 1 2 or 1 4 Tuning EditMain article Guitar tuning A variety of different tunings are used The most common by far which one could call the standard tuning is eI b g d A EThe above order is the tuning from the 1st string highest pitched string e spatially the bottom string in playing position to the 6th string lowest pitched string E spatially the upper string in playing position and hence comfortable to pluck with the thumb The explanation for this asymmetrical tuning in the sense that the maj 3rd is not between the two middle strings as in the tuning of the viola da gamba is probably that the guitar originated as a 4 string instrument actually an instrument with 4 double courses of strings see above with a maj 3rd between the 2nd and 3rd strings and it only became a 6 string instrument by gradual addition of a 5th string and then a 6th string tuned a 4th apart The development of the modern tuning can be traced in stages One of the tunings from the 16th century is C F A D This is equivalent to the top four strings of the modern guitar tuned a tone lower However the absolute pitch for these notes is not equivalent to modern concert pitch The tuning of the four course guitar was moved up by a tone and toward the end of the 16th century five course instruments were in use with an added lower string tuned to A This produced A D G B E one of a wide number of variant tunings of the period The low E string was added during the 18th century 53 String Sci pitch Helmholtz pitch Interval from middle C Semitones from A440 Freq if using an Equal temperament tuning using 2 12 2 1 12 displaystyle sqrt 12 2 2 frac 1 12 1st highest pitch E4 e major third above 5 440 H z 2 12 5 displaystyle 440 rm Hz cdot sqrt 12 2 5 approx 329 63 Hz2nd B3 b minor second below 10 440 H z 2 12 10 displaystyle 440 rm Hz cdot sqrt 12 2 10 approx 246 94 Hz3rd G3 g perfect fourth below 14 440 H z 2 12 14 displaystyle 440 rm Hz cdot sqrt 12 2 14 approx 196 00 Hz4th D3 d minor seventh below 19 440 H z 2 12 19 displaystyle 440 rm Hz cdot sqrt 12 2 19 approx 146 83 Hz5th A2 A minor tenth below 24 440 H z 2 12 24 displaystyle 440 rm Hz cdot sqrt 12 2 24 110 Hz6th lowest pitch E2 E minor thirteenth below 29 440 H z 2 12 29 displaystyle 440 rm Hz cdot sqrt 12 2 29 approx 82 41 HzThis tuning is such that neighboring strings are at most 5 semitones apart There are also a variety of commonly used alternate tunings The most common is known as Drop D tuning which has the 6th string tuned down from an E to a D Bibliography EditThe Guitar and its Music From the Renaissance to the Classical Era 2007 by James Tyler Paul Sparks ISBN 0 19 921477 8 Cambridge Studies in Performance Practice No 6 Performance on Lute Guitar and Vihuela 2005 edited by Victor Anand Coelho ISBN 0 521 45528 6 The Guitar From the Renaissance to the Present Day by Harvey Turnbull published by Bold Strummer 1991 ISBN 0 933224 57 5 The Guitar by Sinier de Ridder published by Edizioni Il Salabue ISBN 88 87618 09 7 La Chitarra Quattro secoli di Capolavori The Guitar Four centuries of Masterpieces by Giovanni Accornero Ivan Epicoco Eraldo Guerci published by Edizioni Il Salabue Rosa sonora Esposizione di chitarre XVII XX secolo by Giovanni Accornero published by Edizioni Il Salabue Lyre guitar Etoile charmante between the 18th and 19th century by Eleonora Vulpiani Summerfield Maurice The Classical Guitar Its Evolution Players and Personalities since 1800 5th Edition Blaydon Ashley Mark Publishing Company 2002 Various Classical Guitar Magazine Blaydon Ashley Mark Publishing Company monthly publication first published in 1982 Wade Graham Traditions of the Classical Guitar London Calder 1980 Antoni Piza Francesc Guerau i el seu temps Palma de Mallorca Govern de les Illes Balears Conselleria d Educacio i Cultura Direccio General de Cultura Institut d Estudis Balearics 2000 ISBN 84 89868 50 6See also Edit Music portalClassical guitar strings Classical guitar pedagogy Early classical guitar recordings International classical guitar competitions Guitar Foundation of America Guitar Chordophones Typaldos D children s choir a Greek children s choir with classical guitars Related instruments Edit Brahms guitar Extended range classical guitar Harp guitar Lyre guitar Six string alto guitar Lists Edit Bibliography of classical guitar List of classical guitarists List of composers for the classical guitar List of composers for the classical guitar nationality References Edit Classical vs Flamenco Guitar Construction Fernandez Music FAQ about Classical Guitars and Flamenco Guitars Zavaleta s La Casa de Guitarras Archived from the original on 2009 01 25 Retrieved 2008 12 25 Cite de la Musique Les guitares classiques du Musee de la musique almost 200 classical guitars Archived 2010 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Catalog Instruments et oeuvres d art Archived July 25 2009 at the Wayback Machine use search phrase Mot cle s guitare SEGOVIA Andres 1950s American Recordings Vol 4 Graham Wade a b Early Classical Guitar and Early Romantic Guitar Time Period by earlyromanticguitar com Early Romantic Guitar Period Technique by earlyromanticguitar com Function Construction and Quality of the Guitar 1983 Museum of Fine Arts Boston Collection Search Results mfa org Archived from the original on 24 February 2007 Retrieved 15 April 2018 ref Guitar Matteo Sellas All Musical Instruments The Hector Berlioz Website La Cote Saint Andre Berlioz s birthplace www hberlioz com Retrieved 15 April 2018 The myth of Schubert and the Guitar An article seeking to clarify what relationship Schubert may or may not have had with the guitar www jacaranda music com Retrieved 15 April 2018 A Segovia The Romance of the Guitar ETUDE May 1930 volume XLVIII number 5 page 317 318 367 reproduced here as of June 2011 dubious and highly unlikely whoever studied Beethoven musicologically knows that he generally had disdain for most musicians and publishers see letters addressed to Artaria who published Giuliani s music Beethoven also said that he deeply disliked pianists who played the piano like an harp see the book Beethoven impressions by his contemporaries published by Dover Archived 2011 08 14 at the Wayback Machine PAGANINI Guitar Music www naxos com Retrieved 15 April 2018 The Guitar From The Renaissance To The Present Day by Harvey Turnbull Third Impression 1978 Publisher Batsford ISBN 0 7134 3251 9 p 112 Chapter 3 The Twentieth Century In Spain Falla s lead was followed by Joaquin Turina 1882 1949 and Federico Moreno Torroba b 1891 who began to produce works in collaboration with Segovia The Guitar From The Renaissance To The Present Day by Harvey Turnbull Third Impression 1978 Publisher Batsford ISBN 0 7134 3251 9 p 113 Chapter 3 The Twentieth Century Segovia s visits to South America also inspired new music The Mexican composer Manuel Ponce 1882 1948 responded by producing a greater number of extended works than Turina and Torroba had achieved Secrets From The Masters Edited by Don Menn Published by GPI Books ISBN 0 87930 260 7 p 236 he performed a more important task by commissioning material by some of the 20th century s greatest composers including Heitor Villa Lobos Manuel Ponce Federico Moreno Torroba Mario Castelnuovo Tedesco and Alexander Tansman Changes by Elliott Carter Boosey amp Hawkes Codex I by Cristobal Halffter Universal Edition score sample Sequenza XI by Luciano Berio Universal Edition Sette Studi by Maurizio Pisati Ricordi score sample Archived 2011 08 13 at the Wayback Machine Si Le Jour Parait by Maurice Ohana Billaudot Ricordi ricordi it Retrieved 15 April 2018 Suite fur Guitarre Op 164 by Ernst Krenek Doblinger Musikverlag score sample Algo Due pezzi per chitarra by Franco Donatoni Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Edizioni Suvini Zerboni Analysis Variazioni notturne Paolo Coggiola 2016 Partiture Cartacee vari PreludioMusic Shop on line www preludiomusic com Retrieved 2019 02 14 Kurze Schatten II by Brian Ferneyhough Edition Peters score sample Archived 2011 07 27 at the Wayback Machine away from by Sven David Sandstrom Gehrmans Musikforlag Sheer Pluck Database of Contemporary Guitar Music Sound and Music soundandmusic org Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Australian Music Center Interview with Bernard Hebb Powers Authors Jayson Kerr Dobney Wendy The Guitar Essay Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art The Met s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Retrieved 2017 04 08 Jovanovic Marko The Guitar s History Guitar Sumo Retrieved 2019 07 28 The first incontrovertible evidence of five course instruments can be found in Miguel Fuenllana s Orphenica Lyre of 1554 which contains music for a vihuela de cinco ordenes In the following year Juan Bermudo wrote in his Declaracion de Instrumentos Musicales We have seen a guitar in Spain with five courses of strings Bermudo later mentions in the same book that Guitars usually have four strings which implies that the five course guitar was of comparatively recent origin and still something of an oddity Tom and Mary Anne Evans Guitars From the Renaissance to Rock Paddington Press Ltd 1977 p 24 The guitars built by Antonio de Torres still had friction pegs see for example Richard Chapman The New Complete Guitarist p 13 top Luis Milan 1536 Libro de musica de vihuela de mano intitulado El maestro Alexander Batov 20 April 2006 The Royal College Dias guitar or vihuela The talk given at the Lute Society meeting in London on 16 April 2005 A rather small sized vaulted back guitar in the engraving by Etienne Picart c 1680 after the painting by Leonello Spada Concert c 1615 Musee du Louvre Paris Encyclopaedic Dictionary of World Musical Instruments Global Vision Pub House 2004 ISBN 9788187746843 page needed The Classical Mandolin by Paul Sparks 1995 page 225 quote Vinaccia Gaetano 1759 after 1831 Gallery of Dated Instruments Early Romantic Guitar Retrieved 15 April 2018 Page showing guitars the oldest captioned 1779 Italy Vinaccia TH Looks right for 1779 at the bottom of the page TH refers to a linked article Dr Heck Stalking the Earliest 6 String in which the author Thomas F Heck concludes the guitar with six single strings is probably of French or Italian origin definitely not of Spanish origin I do not consider the matter closed Gaetano Vinaccia Biography guitarhistoryfacts com Retrieved 26 April 2019 According to the current historical records Gaetano Vinaccia and his brother Gennaro were responsible for the creation of the first six string guitar sometimes around 1776 in Naples Authenticity of his surviving guitar was often placed in question by modern historians Stalking www3 uakron edu Retrieved 15 April 2018 Mastering the Dedillo ralphmaier com Archived from the original on 30 September 2014 Retrieved 15 April 2018 A 1992 interview of Stepan Rak by Graham Wade Archived 2013 05 30 at the Wayback Machine Classical Guitar Lessons nationalguitaracademy com 30 May 2016 Retrieved 15 April 2018 The little finger whose use is not completely standardized in classical guitar technique can also be found designated by e or x There are several words in Spanish for the little finger dedo menique dedo auricular dedo pequeno but their initials conflict with the initials of the other fingers C is said to be the initial of the dedo chiquito which is not the most common name for the little finger E and X are not initials but letters that were picked each with its own rationale by people who didn t know what else to pick Mertz Johann Kaspar 1847 1850 Mertz Bardenklange books 1 13 PDF imslp Vienna Haslinger Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 10 Retrieved February 2 2022 Guitar acoustics www phys unsw edu au Archived from the original on 22 July 2008 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Fretted instrument terminology An Illustrated Glossary frets com Archived from the original on 21 April 2018 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Parts of the Classical Guitar Names Descriptions amp Images Learn Guitar Today 2022 01 10 Retrieved 2022 01 14 Bucur Voichita 2016 Handbook of Materials for String Musical Instruments Springer p 45 ISBN 978 3319320809 Retrieved 3 August 2019 Guitar scale length Hampshire guitar orchestra Richard Chapman The New Complete Guitarist p 10 leftExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Classical guitars Thematic essay The guitar Jayson Kerr Dobney Wendy Powers The Metropolitan Museum of Art Classical amp Fingerstyle Guitar Classical Guitar Library A vibrant library of guitar sheet music which can serve in accomplishing diverse teaching and research needs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Classical guitar amp oldid 1129640774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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