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Theorbo

The theorbo is a plucked string instrument of the lute family, with an extended neck and a second pegbox. Like a lute, a theorbo has a curved-back sound box (a hollow box) with a wooden top, typically with a sound hole, and a neck extending out from the soundbox. As with the lute, the player plucks or strums the strings with one hand while "fretting" (pressing down) the strings with the other hand; pressing the strings in different places on the neck produces different pitches (notes), thus enabling the performer to play chords, basslines and melodies.

Theorbo
Other nameschitarrone, theorbo lute;
fr: téorbe, théorbe, tuorbe;
de: Theorbe; it: tiorba, tuorba[1]
Classification
Related instruments
External video
“Introducing the Baroque Theorbo”, Elizabeth Kenny, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, January 11, 2019

It is related to the liuto attiorbato, the French théorbe des pièces, the archlute, the German baroque lute, and the angélique or angelica. A theorbo differs from a regular lute in that the theorbo has a much longer neck which extends beyond the regular fingerboard/neck and a second pegbox at the end of the extended neck. (The pegboxes enable the lute to be tuned by turning the pegs to make the strings sound at higher or lower pitches.) Low-register bass strings are added on the extended neck. This gives a theorbo a much wider range of pitches (notes) than a regular lute. The theorbo was used during the Baroque music era (1600–1750) to play basso continuo accompaniment parts (as part of the basso continuo group, which often included harpsichord, pipe organ and bass instruments), and also as a solo instrument.

Origin and development

 
The girl is playing a type of theorbo that combined two ranges of strings with separate peg boxes; the bass strings (longer) went to the straight pegbox that peeks from behind the girl's head.[2] The other lute strings went to the bent pegbox.[2] A similar theorbo is in the Wagner Museum, Lucerne, Switzerland.[2]

Theorbos were developed during the late sixteenth century in Italy, inspired by the demand for extended bass range instruments for use in the then-newly developed musical style of opera developed by the Florentine Camerata and new musical works utilising basso continuo, such as Giulio Caccini's two collections, Le nuove musiche (1602 and 1614). For his 1607 opera L'Orfeo, Claudio Monteverdi lists duoi (two) chitaroni among the instruments required for performing the work. Musicians originally used large bass lutes (c. 80+ cm string length) and a higher re-entrant tuning; but soon created neck extensions with secondary pegboxes to accommodate extra open (i.e. unfretted) longer bass strings, called diapasons or bourdons, for improvements in tonal clarity and an increased range of available notes.

Although the words chitarrone and tiorba were both used to describe the instrument, they have different organological and etymological origins; chitarrone being in Italian an augmentation of (and literally meaning large) chitarra – Italian for guitar. The round-backed chitarra was still in use, often referred to as chitarra Italiana to distinguish it from chitarra alla spagnola in its new flat-backed Spanish incarnation. The etymology of tiorba is still obscure; it is hypothesized the origin may be in Slavic or Turkish torba, meaning 'bag' or 'turban'.

According to Athanasius Kircher, tiorba was a nickname in Neapolitan language for a grinding board used by perfumers for grinding essences and herbs.[3] It is possible the appearance of this new large instrument (particularly in a crowded ensemble) resulted in jokes and a humour induced reference with popular local knowledge becoming lost over time and place. Robert Spencer has noted the confusion the two names were already leading to in 1600: Chitarone, ò Tiorba che si dica (chitarrone, or theorbo as it is called). By the mid-17th century, it would appear that tiorba had taken preference – reflected in modern practice, helping to distinguish the theorbo now from very different instruments like the chitarrone moderno or guitarrón. Similar adaptations to smaller lutes (c. 55+ cm string length) also produced the arciliuto (archlute), liuto attiorbato, and tiorbino, which were differently tuned instruments to accommodate a new repertoire of small ensemble or solo works. In the performance of basso continuo, theorboes were often paired with a small pipe organ.

The most prominent early composers and players in Italy were Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger and Alessandro Piccinini. Giuliano Paratico was another early Italian chitarrone player. Little solo music survives from England, but William Lawes and others used theorbos in chamber ensembles and opera orchestras. In France, theorbos were appreciated and used in orchestral or chamber music until the second half of the 18th century (Nicolas Hotman, Robert de Visée). Court orchestras at Vienna, Bayreuth and Berlin still employed theorbo players after 1750 (Ernst Gottlieb Baron, Francesco Conti). Solo music for the theorbo is notated in tablature, a form of music notation in which the frets and strings which a player must press down are printed on a series of parallel lines which represent the strings on the fretboard.

Tuning and strings

The tuning of large theorboes is characterized by the octave displacement, or "re-entrant tuning", of the two uppermost strings. Piccinini and Michael Praetorius mention the occasional use of metal strings (brass and steel, as opposed to gut strings). The Laute mit Abzügen: oder Testudo Theorbata that appears in Syntagma Musicum by Praetorius, has doubled strings (courses) passing over the bridge and attached to the base of the instrument – different to his Paduanische Theorba (opposite in the same illustration which seems to have single strings). The Lang Romanische Theorba: Chitarron also appears to have single strings attached to the bridge. The string "courses", unlike those of a Renaissance lute or archlute, were often single, although double stringing was also used. Typically, theorboes have 14 courses, though some used 15 or even 19 courses (Kapsberger).

 

This is theorbo tuning in A. Modern theorbo players usually play 14-course (string) instruments (lowest course is G). Some players have used a theorbo tuned a whole step lower in G. Most of the solo repertoire is in the A tuning. The "re-entrant tuning" created new possibilities for voice leading and inspired a new right-hand technique with just thumb, index and middle fingers to arpeggiate chords, which Piccinini likened to the sound of a harp. The bass tessitura (range) and re-entrant stringing mean that in order to keep the figured bass "realisation" (the improvised playing of chords) above the bass instruments when accompanying basso continuo, the bassline must sometimes be played an octave lower (Kapsberger). In the French treatises, chords in which a lower note sounds after the bass were also used when the bass goes high. The English theorbo had just the first string at the lower octave (Thomas Mace).

Regional differences

Italy

The theorbo was developed in Italy, and so has a rich legacy in Italian music as both a solo and continuo instrument. Caccini comments in Le nuove musiche (1602) that the theorbo is perfectly suited for accompanying the voice as it can give a very full support without being obscured by the vocalist, indicating the beginning of an Italian tradition of monodic songs accompanied by theorbo. Italians called the theorbo's diapasons its “special excellence”.[4] Italians viewed the theorbo as an easier alternative to the lute since the general attractiveness of its sound quality can cover over indifferent playing and lazy voice leading.[4]

England

 
A 1670 painting of an English theorbo player.

The Italian theorbo first came to England at the beginning of the seventeenth century, but an alternate design based on the English two-headed lute, designed by Jaques Gaultier, soon became more popular.[4] English theorbos were generally tuned in G and double strung throughout, with only the first course in reentrant tuning. Theorbos tuned in G were much better suited to flat keys, and so many English songs or consort pieces that involved theorbo were written in flat keys that would be very difficult to play on a theorbo in A.[4] By the eighteenth century, the theorbo had fallen out of fashion in England due to its large size and low pitch. It was replaced by the archlute.[4]

France

The first mention of a theorbo in France was in 1637, and by the 1660s it had replaced the 10-course lute as the most popular accompanying instrument.[4] The theorbo was a very important continuo instrument in the French court and multiple French theorbo continuo tutors (method books) were published by Delair (1690), Campion (1716 and 1730), Bartolotti (1669), Fleury (1660), and Grenerin (1670).[4] French theorbos had up to eight stopped strings and were often somewhat smaller and quieter than Italian theorbos. They were a standard scale length of 76 cm, which made them smaller than Italian instruments, which ranged from 85–95 cm.[4]

Germany

German theorbos would also today be called swan-necked Baroque lutes; seventeenth-century German theorbists played single-strung instruments in the Italian tuning transposed down a whole step, but eighteenth-century players switched to double-strung instruments in the “d-minor” tuning used in French and German Baroque lute music so as to not have to rethink their chord shapes when playing theorbo. These instruments came to be referred to as theorbo-lutes.[5] Baron remarks that “the lute, because of its delicacy, serves well in trios or other chamber music with few participants. The theorbo, because of its power, serves best in groups of thirty to forty musicians, as in churches and operas.”[5] Theorbo-lutes would likely have been used alongside Italian theorbos and archlutes in continuo settings due to the presence of Italian musicians in German courts and also for the purpose of using instruments that were appropriate for whatever key the music was in.[4]

Ukraine, Poland and Russia

The theorbo came to Ukraine ca. 1700 and it was upgraded with treble strings (known as prystrunky). This instrument was called a torban.[6] The Torban was manufactured and used mainly in Ukraine, but also occasionally encountered in neighbouring Poland and Russia.[7]

Technique

The theorbo is played much like the lute, with the left hand pressing down on the fingerboard to vary the resonating length of the strings (thus playing different notes and making chords, basslines and melodies playable) while the right fingertips pluck the strings. The most significant differences between theorbo and lute technique are that theorbo is played with the right thumb outside the hand, as opposed to Renaissance lute which is played with the thumb under the hand. Additionally, the right hand thumb is entirely responsible for playing the bass diapasons and rarely comes up onto the top courses. Most theorbists play with the flesh of their fingers on the right hand, although there is some historical precedent from Piccinini, Mace, and Weiss to use nails. Fingernails can be more effective on a theorbo than on a lute due to its single-strung courses, and the use of nails is most often suggested in the context of ensemble playing where tone quality becomes subservient to volume.[8]

Solo repertoire

The theorbo's solo Baroque repertoire came almost exclusively from Italy and France, with the exception of some English music written for the English theorbo, until the 21st century. The most effective and idiomatic music for the theorbo takes advantage of its two unique qualities: the diapasons and the reentrant tuning. Campanella passages that allow scale passages to ring across multiple strings in a harp-like fashion are particularly common and are a highly effective tool for the skilled theorbist/composer.[citation needed]

Italy: Kapsberger, Piccinini, Castaldi

  • Toccatas - free, rhapsodic, harmonically adventurous. Piccinini's are more harmonically tight while Kapsberger often breaks voice-leading rules in order to achieve the desired effect
  • Dances - Correntes, Gagliardas, continuing in the tradition of Italian lute dances dating back to Dalza
  • Variations - highly sophisticated and challenging variations on often very simple themes

France: de Visee, Bartolotti, Hurel, le Moyne

  • Dance suites - the vast majority of French theorbo music consists of dance suites in the order of unmeasured prelude, allemande, courante, saraband, gigue (with variations)
  • Transcriptions - French theorbists often transcribed pieces from opera composers such as Lully or keyboard composers such as Couperin to perform as solo pieces

A few modern composers have begun to write new music for the theorbo; significant works have been composed by Roman Turovsky, David Loeb, Bruno Helstroffer, Thomas Bocklenberg, and Stephen Goss, who has written the only concerto for theorbo.[citation needed]

Continuo

The theorbo's primary use was as a continuo instrument. However, due to its layout as a plucked instrument and its reentrant tuning, following strict voice leading parameters could sometimes be difficult or even impossible.[citation needed] Thus, a style of continuo unique to the theorbo was developed that incorporated these factors:[citation needed]

  • Breaking voice leading rules to capitalize on voicings that better express the instrument's natural sonority. The integrity of the true bass line is maintained through the use of creative arpeggiation that masks improper inversions.
  • Frequent transposition of the bass line down an octave in order to play on the diapasons.
  • Use of thinner textures; due to the theorbo's strong projection and rich resonance, a three or even two voice accompaniment will often be just as effective as a standard four-voice accompaniment on a harpsichord. Additionally, playing more than a two-voice realization can become impossible with quick-moving bass lines.
  • Frequent restriking of chords to make up for the instrument's quick decay.

Thus, the preservation of the bass line and the sound of the instrument are of the highest priority when used as a continuo instrument. Breaking voice leading rules becomes necessary in order to preserve the bass line and bring out the unique tones of the theorbo.[citation needed]

The theorbo is labelled by Praetorius as both a fundamental and an ornamental continuo instrument, meaning it is capable of supporting an ensemble as a primary bass instrument while also fleshing out the harmony and adding color to the ensemble by means of chord realizations.[9]

Composers

 
Il suonatore di tiorba (The Theorbo Player), a painting by Antiveduto Grammatica.

Contemporary players

References

  1. ^ Harwood, Ian; et al. (2001). "Theorbo". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  2. ^ a b c Midgley, Ruth, ed. (1997). Musical Instruments of the World. New York: Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. p. 186. ISBN 0-8069-9847-4. Theorbo-lute...hybrid instrument with the bent peg box of the lute and the long base strings of the theorbo.
  3. ^ Athanasius Kircher, Musurgia Universalis, Rome 1650, p. 476
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i North, Nigel (1987). Continuo playing on the lute, archlute, and theorbo. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253314151. OCLC 14377608.
  5. ^ a b Baron, Ernst Gottlieb (1976). Study of the lute. Instrumenta Antiqua Publications. OCLC 2076633.
  6. ^ N.Prokopenko "Kobza & Bandura" Kiev, 1977
  7. ^ Piotr Kowalcze, "Sympozjum: Teorban w polskich zbiorah muzealnych" Warsaw 2008
  8. ^ North, Nigel (1987). Continuo Playing on the Lute, Archlute, and Theorbo. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253314154.
  9. ^ Praetorius, Michael (1957). A translation of Syntagma Musicum III by Michael Praetorius. OCLC 68427186.

Sources

  • Bacilly, Bénigne de. Remarques Curieuses sur l’Arte de Bien Chanter. Paris, 1688. Translated by Austin B. Caswell as A Commentary upon The Art of Proper Singing. New York: Institute of Medæval Music, 1968.
  • Baron, Ernst Gottlieb. Historisch-Theorisch und Practische Untersuchung des Instruments der Lauten. Nurnberg, 1727. Translated by Douglas Alton Smith as Study of the Lute. San Francisco: Instrumenta Antiqua, 1976.
  • Burris, Timothy. “Lute and Theorbo in Vocal Music in 18th Century Dresden - A Performance Practice Study.” PhD dissertation, Duke University, 1997.
  • Caccini, Giulio. Le nuove musiche. Florence, 1601. Translated by H. Wiley Hitchcock as The New Music. Middleton, Wisconsin: A-R Editions, 2009.
  • Cantalupi, Diego. "La tiorba ed il suo uso in Italia come strumento per il basso continuo", pre-press version of the dissertation discussed in 1996 at the Faculty of Musicology, University of Pavia.
  • Delair, Denis. Traité d’accompagnement pour le théorbe, et le clavecin. Paris, 1690. Translated by Charlotte Mattax as Accompaniment on Theorbo and Harpsichord. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991.
  • Jones, E.H. “The Theorbo and Continuo Practice in the Early English Baroque.” The Galpin Society Journal 25 (July 1972): 67–72.
  • Keller, J. Gottfried. A compleat method for attaining to play a thorough bass upon either organ, harpsicord, or theorbo-lute . . . with variety of proper lessons and fuges, explaining the several rules throughout the whole work. London: J. Cullen and J. Young, 1707
  • Kitsos, Theodoros. “Continuo Practice for the Theorbo as indicated in Seventeenth-century Italian Printed and Manuscript Sources.” PhD dissertation, University of York, 2005.
  • Mason, Kevin Bruce. The Chitarrone and its Repertoire in Early Seventeenth-Century Italy. Aberystwyth, Wales: Boethius Press, 1989.
  • Mattax, Charlotte. Translator's Commentary to Accompaniment on Theorbo and Harpsichord, 1-36. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991.
  • North, Nigel. Continuo Playing on the Lute, Archlute, and Theorbo. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986.
  • Praetorius, Michael. Syntagma Musicum III. Wolfenbüttel, 1619. Translated by Hans Lampl. PhD dissertation, University of Southern California, 1957.
  • Rebuffa, Davide. Il liuto, L'Epos, Pelermo 2012
  • Schulze-Kurz, Ekkehard. Die Laute und ihre Stimmungen in der ersten Hälfte des 17. Jahrhunderts, 1990, ISBN 3-927445-04-5
  • Spencer, Robert. “Chitarrone, Theorbo, and Archlute.” Early Music vol. 4 no. 4 (October 1976): 408-422)

External links

  • The virtual home-page of the theorbo
  • Chitarrone, theorbo and archlute by Robert Spencer; from Early Music, vol. 4, October 1976
  • Theorbo timeline from 1589 to 1818
  • Grove Music Online article
  • Theorbo article from the Early Music Studio
  • Discussion of use of fingernails on the theorbo
  • Kenny, Elizabeth. "Introducing the Baroque Theorbo" (Video) – via YouTube.

theorbo, chitarrone, redirects, here, latin, american, family, musical, instruments, guitarrón, theorbo, plucked, string, instrument, lute, family, with, extended, neck, second, pegbox, like, lute, theorbo, curved, back, sound, hollow, with, wooden, typically,. Chitarrone redirects here For the Latin American family of musical instruments see Guitarron The theorbo is a plucked string instrument of the lute family with an extended neck and a second pegbox Like a lute a theorbo has a curved back sound box a hollow box with a wooden top typically with a sound hole and a neck extending out from the soundbox As with the lute the player plucks or strums the strings with one hand while fretting pressing down the strings with the other hand pressing the strings in different places on the neck produces different pitches notes thus enabling the performer to play chords basslines and melodies TheorboOther nameschitarrone theorbo lute fr teorbe theorbe tuorbe de Theorbe it tiorba tuorba 1 ClassificationNecked bowl lutes String instrumentsRelated instrumentsAngelique Archlute Chitarra Italiana Bouzouki Lute Oud Pandura Theorbo Tambouras Tiorbino TorbanExternal video Introducing the Baroque Theorbo Elizabeth Kenny Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment January 11 2019It is related to the liuto attiorbato the French theorbe des pieces the archlute the German baroque lute and the angelique or angelica A theorbo differs from a regular lute in that the theorbo has a much longer neck which extends beyond the regular fingerboard neck and a second pegbox at the end of the extended neck The pegboxes enable the lute to be tuned by turning the pegs to make the strings sound at higher or lower pitches Low register bass strings are added on the extended neck This gives a theorbo a much wider range of pitches notes than a regular lute The theorbo was used during the Baroque music era 1600 1750 to play basso continuo accompaniment parts as part of the basso continuo group which often included harpsichord pipe organ and bass instruments and also as a solo instrument Contents 1 Origin and development 2 Tuning and strings 3 Regional differences 3 1 Italy 3 2 England 3 3 France 3 4 Germany 3 5 Ukraine Poland and Russia 4 Technique 5 Solo repertoire 6 Continuo 7 Composers 8 Contemporary players 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksOrigin and development Edit The girl is playing a type of theorbo that combined two ranges of strings with separate peg boxes the bass strings longer went to the straight pegbox that peeks from behind the girl s head 2 The other lute strings went to the bent pegbox 2 A similar theorbo is in the Wagner Museum Lucerne Switzerland 2 Theorbos were developed during the late sixteenth century in Italy inspired by the demand for extended bass range instruments for use in the then newly developed musical style of opera developed by the Florentine Camerata and new musical works utilising basso continuo such as Giulio Caccini s two collections Le nuove musiche 1602 and 1614 For his 1607 opera L Orfeo Claudio Monteverdi lists duoi two chitaroni among the instruments required for performing the work Musicians originally used large bass lutes c 80 cm string length and a higher re entrant tuning but soon created neck extensions with secondary pegboxes to accommodate extra open i e unfretted longer bass strings called diapasons or bourdons for improvements in tonal clarity and an increased range of available notes Although the words chitarrone and tiorba were both used to describe the instrument they have different organological and etymological origins chitarrone being in Italian an augmentation of and literally meaning large chitarra Italian for guitar The round backed chitarra was still in use often referred to as chitarra Italiana to distinguish it from chitarra alla spagnola in its new flat backed Spanish incarnation The etymology of tiorba is still obscure it is hypothesized the origin may be in Slavic or Turkish torba meaning bag or turban According to Athanasius Kircher tiorba was a nickname in Neapolitan language for a grinding board used by perfumers for grinding essences and herbs 3 It is possible the appearance of this new large instrument particularly in a crowded ensemble resulted in jokes and a humour induced reference with popular local knowledge becoming lost over time and place Robert Spencer has noted the confusion the two names were already leading to in 1600 Chitarone o Tiorba che si dica chitarrone or theorbo as it is called By the mid 17th century it would appear that tiorba had taken preference reflected in modern practice helping to distinguish the theorbo now from very different instruments like the chitarrone moderno or guitarron Similar adaptations to smaller lutes c 55 cm string length also produced the arciliuto archlute liuto attiorbato and tiorbino which were differently tuned instruments to accommodate a new repertoire of small ensemble or solo works In the performance of basso continuo theorboes were often paired with a small pipe organ The most prominent early composers and players in Italy were Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger and Alessandro Piccinini Giuliano Paratico was another early Italian chitarrone player Little solo music survives from England but William Lawes and others used theorbos in chamber ensembles and opera orchestras In France theorbos were appreciated and used in orchestral or chamber music until the second half of the 18th century Nicolas Hotman Robert de Visee Court orchestras at Vienna Bayreuth and Berlin still employed theorbo players after 1750 Ernst Gottlieb Baron Francesco Conti Solo music for the theorbo is notated in tablature a form of music notation in which the frets and strings which a player must press down are printed on a series of parallel lines which represent the strings on the fretboard Tuning and strings EditThe tuning of large theorboes is characterized by the octave displacement or re entrant tuning of the two uppermost strings Piccinini and Michael Praetorius mention the occasional use of metal strings brass and steel as opposed to gut strings The Laute mit Abzugen oder Testudo Theorbata that appears in Syntagma Musicum by Praetorius has doubled strings courses passing over the bridge and attached to the base of the instrument different to his Paduanische Theorba opposite in the same illustration which seems to have single strings The Lang Romanische Theorba Chitarron also appears to have single strings attached to the bridge The string courses unlike those of a Renaissance lute or archlute were often single although double stringing was also used Typically theorboes have 14 courses though some used 15 or even 19 courses Kapsberger This is theorbo tuning in A Modern theorbo players usually play 14 course string instruments lowest course is G Some players have used a theorbo tuned a whole step lower in G Most of the solo repertoire is in the A tuning The re entrant tuning created new possibilities for voice leading and inspired a new right hand technique with just thumb index and middle fingers to arpeggiate chords which Piccinini likened to the sound of a harp The bass tessitura range and re entrant stringing mean that in order to keep the figured bass realisation the improvised playing of chords above the bass instruments when accompanying basso continuo the bassline must sometimes be played an octave lower Kapsberger In the French treatises chords in which a lower note sounds after the bass were also used when the bass goes high The English theorbo had just the first string at the lower octave Thomas Mace Regional differences EditItaly Edit The theorbo was developed in Italy and so has a rich legacy in Italian music as both a solo and continuo instrument Caccini comments in Le nuove musiche 1602 that the theorbo is perfectly suited for accompanying the voice as it can give a very full support without being obscured by the vocalist indicating the beginning of an Italian tradition of monodic songs accompanied by theorbo Italians called the theorbo s diapasons its special excellence 4 Italians viewed the theorbo as an easier alternative to the lute since the general attractiveness of its sound quality can cover over indifferent playing and lazy voice leading 4 England Edit A 1670 painting of an English theorbo player The Italian theorbo first came to England at the beginning of the seventeenth century but an alternate design based on the English two headed lute designed by Jaques Gaultier soon became more popular 4 English theorbos were generally tuned in G and double strung throughout with only the first course in reentrant tuning Theorbos tuned in G were much better suited to flat keys and so many English songs or consort pieces that involved theorbo were written in flat keys that would be very difficult to play on a theorbo in A 4 By the eighteenth century the theorbo had fallen out of fashion in England due to its large size and low pitch It was replaced by the archlute 4 France Edit The first mention of a theorbo in France was in 1637 and by the 1660s it had replaced the 10 course lute as the most popular accompanying instrument 4 The theorbo was a very important continuo instrument in the French court and multiple French theorbo continuo tutors method books were published by Delair 1690 Campion 1716 and 1730 Bartolotti 1669 Fleury 1660 and Grenerin 1670 4 French theorbos had up to eight stopped strings and were often somewhat smaller and quieter than Italian theorbos They were a standard scale length of 76 cm which made them smaller than Italian instruments which ranged from 85 95 cm 4 Germany Edit German theorbos would also today be called swan necked Baroque lutes seventeenth century German theorbists played single strung instruments in the Italian tuning transposed down a whole step but eighteenth century players switched to double strung instruments in the d minor tuning used in French and German Baroque lute music so as to not have to rethink their chord shapes when playing theorbo These instruments came to be referred to as theorbo lutes 5 Baron remarks that the lute because of its delicacy serves well in trios or other chamber music with few participants The theorbo because of its power serves best in groups of thirty to forty musicians as in churches and operas 5 Theorbo lutes would likely have been used alongside Italian theorbos and archlutes in continuo settings due to the presence of Italian musicians in German courts and also for the purpose of using instruments that were appropriate for whatever key the music was in 4 Ukraine Poland and Russia Edit The theorbo came to Ukraine ca 1700 and it was upgraded with treble strings known as prystrunky This instrument was called a torban 6 The Torban was manufactured and used mainly in Ukraine but also occasionally encountered in neighbouring Poland and Russia 7 Technique EditThe theorbo is played much like the lute with the left hand pressing down on the fingerboard to vary the resonating length of the strings thus playing different notes and making chords basslines and melodies playable while the right fingertips pluck the strings The most significant differences between theorbo and lute technique are that theorbo is played with the right thumb outside the hand as opposed to Renaissance lute which is played with the thumb under the hand Additionally the right hand thumb is entirely responsible for playing the bass diapasons and rarely comes up onto the top courses Most theorbists play with the flesh of their fingers on the right hand although there is some historical precedent from Piccinini Mace and Weiss to use nails Fingernails can be more effective on a theorbo than on a lute due to its single strung courses and the use of nails is most often suggested in the context of ensemble playing where tone quality becomes subservient to volume 8 Solo repertoire EditThe theorbo s solo Baroque repertoire came almost exclusively from Italy and France with the exception of some English music written for the English theorbo until the 21st century The most effective and idiomatic music for the theorbo takes advantage of its two unique qualities the diapasons and the reentrant tuning Campanella passages that allow scale passages to ring across multiple strings in a harp like fashion are particularly common and are a highly effective tool for the skilled theorbist composer citation needed Italy Kapsberger Piccinini Castaldi Toccatas free rhapsodic harmonically adventurous Piccinini s are more harmonically tight while Kapsberger often breaks voice leading rules in order to achieve the desired effect Dances Correntes Gagliardas continuing in the tradition of Italian lute dances dating back to Dalza Variations highly sophisticated and challenging variations on often very simple themesFrance de Visee Bartolotti Hurel le Moyne Dance suites the vast majority of French theorbo music consists of dance suites in the order of unmeasured prelude allemande courante saraband gigue with variations Transcriptions French theorbists often transcribed pieces from opera composers such as Lully or keyboard composers such as Couperin to perform as solo piecesA few modern composers have begun to write new music for the theorbo significant works have been composed by Roman Turovsky David Loeb Bruno Helstroffer Thomas Bocklenberg and Stephen Goss who has written the only concerto for theorbo citation needed Continuo EditThe theorbo s primary use was as a continuo instrument However due to its layout as a plucked instrument and its reentrant tuning following strict voice leading parameters could sometimes be difficult or even impossible citation needed Thus a style of continuo unique to the theorbo was developed that incorporated these factors citation needed Breaking voice leading rules to capitalize on voicings that better express the instrument s natural sonority The integrity of the true bass line is maintained through the use of creative arpeggiation that masks improper inversions Frequent transposition of the bass line down an octave in order to play on the diapasons Use of thinner textures due to the theorbo s strong projection and rich resonance a three or even two voice accompaniment will often be just as effective as a standard four voice accompaniment on a harpsichord Additionally playing more than a two voice realization can become impossible with quick moving bass lines Frequent restriking of chords to make up for the instrument s quick decay Thus the preservation of the bass line and the sound of the instrument are of the highest priority when used as a continuo instrument Breaking voice leading rules becomes necessary in order to preserve the bass line and bring out the unique tones of the theorbo citation needed The theorbo is labelled by Praetorius as both a fundamental and an ornamental continuo instrument meaning it is capable of supporting an ensemble as a primary bass instrument while also fleshing out the harmony and adding color to the ensemble by means of chord realizations 9 Composers Edit Il suonatore di tiorba The Theorbo Player a painting by Antiveduto Grammatica Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger c 1580 17 January 1651 Alessandro Piccinini 30 December 1566 c 1638 Angelo Michele Bartolotti died before 1682 Bellerofonte Castaldi 1580 27 September 1649 Robert de Visee c 1655 1732 1733 Charles Hurel died 1692 Scott Fields born 1955 Stephen Goss born 2 February 1964 Roman Turovsky born 1961 Contemporary players EditXavier Diaz Latorre born 1968 Eduardo Eguez born 1959 Yasunori Imamura born 19 October 1953 Jakob Lindberg born 16 October 1952 Rolf Lislevand born 30 December 1961 Robert MacKillop born 1959 Massimo Marchese born 31 August 1965 Andreas Martin born 1963 Nigel North born 5 June 1954 Paul O Dette born 2 February 1954 Christina Pluhar born 1965 Lynda Sayce Richard Stone born 1960 Stephen Stubbs born 1951 Matthew Wadsworth born 1974 Brandon AckerReferences Edit Harwood Ian et al 2001 Theorbo In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 a b c Midgley Ruth ed 1997 Musical Instruments of the World New York Sterling Publishing Company Inc p 186 ISBN 0 8069 9847 4 Theorbo lute hybrid instrument with the bent peg box of the lute and the long base strings of the theorbo Athanasius Kircher Musurgia Universalis Rome 1650 p 476 a b c d e f g h i North Nigel 1987 Continuo playing on the lute archlute and theorbo Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0253314151 OCLC 14377608 a b Baron Ernst Gottlieb 1976 Study of the lute Instrumenta Antiqua Publications OCLC 2076633 N Prokopenko Kobza amp Bandura Kiev 1977 Piotr Kowalcze Sympozjum Teorban w polskich zbiorah muzealnych Warsaw 2008 North Nigel 1987 Continuo Playing on the Lute Archlute and Theorbo Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253314154 Praetorius Michael 1957 A translation of Syntagma Musicum III by Michael Praetorius OCLC 68427186 Sources EditBacilly Benigne de Remarques Curieuses sur l Arte de Bien Chanter Paris 1688 Translated by Austin B Caswell as A Commentary upon The Art of Proper Singing New York Institute of Medaeval Music 1968 Baron Ernst Gottlieb Historisch Theorisch und Practische Untersuchung des Instruments der Lauten Nurnberg 1727 Translated by Douglas Alton Smith as Study of the Lute San Francisco Instrumenta Antiqua 1976 Burris Timothy Lute and Theorbo in Vocal Music in 18th Century Dresden A Performance Practice Study PhD dissertation Duke University 1997 Caccini Giulio Le nuove musiche Florence 1601 Translated by H Wiley Hitchcock as The New Music Middleton Wisconsin A R Editions 2009 Cantalupi Diego La tiorba ed il suo uso in Italia come strumento per il basso continuo pre press version of the dissertation discussed in 1996 at the Faculty of Musicology University of Pavia Delair Denis Traite d accompagnement pour le theorbe et le clavecin Paris 1690 Translated by Charlotte Mattax as Accompaniment on Theorbo and Harpsichord Bloomington Indiana University Press 1991 Jones E H The Theorbo and Continuo Practice in the Early English Baroque The Galpin Society Journal 25 July 1972 67 72 Keller J Gottfried A compleat method for attaining to play a thorough bass upon either organ harpsicord or theorbo lute with variety of proper lessons and fuges explaining the several rules throughout the whole work London J Cullen and J Young 1707 Kitsos Theodoros Continuo Practice for the Theorbo as indicated in Seventeenth century Italian Printed and Manuscript Sources PhD dissertation University of York 2005 Mason Kevin Bruce The Chitarrone and its Repertoire in Early Seventeenth Century Italy Aberystwyth Wales Boethius Press 1989 Mattax Charlotte Translator s Commentary to Accompaniment on Theorbo and Harpsichord 1 36 Bloomington Indiana University Press 1991 North Nigel Continuo Playing on the Lute Archlute and Theorbo Bloomington Indiana University Press 1986 Praetorius Michael Syntagma Musicum III Wolfenbuttel 1619 Translated by Hans Lampl PhD dissertation University of Southern California 1957 Rebuffa Davide Il liuto L Epos Pelermo 2012 Schulze Kurz Ekkehard Die Laute und ihre Stimmungen in der ersten Halfte des 17 Jahrhunderts 1990 ISBN 3 927445 04 5 Spencer Robert Chitarrone Theorbo and Archlute Early Music vol 4 no 4 October 1976 408 422 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Theorbos The virtual home page of the theorbo Chitarrone theorbo and archlute by Robert Spencer from Early Music vol 4 October 1976 Theorbo timeline from 1589 to 1818 Grove Music Online article Theorbo article from the Early Music Studio Discussion of use of fingernails on the theorbo Kenny Elizabeth Introducing the Baroque Theorbo Video via YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theorbo amp oldid 1166592947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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