Fomrhi-026 Restoring Keyboard Instruments Barnes
Fomrhi-026 Restoring Keyboard Instruments Barnes
Fomrhi-026 Restoring Keyboard Instruments Barnes
FOMRHI Quarterly
BULLETIN 26 2
LIST O F MEMBERS SUPPLEMENT 31
INDEX 1981 29
BOOK NEWS 33
BOUWBREEF CONTENTS XXIII 9
COMMUNICATIONS
388 Yet More on Organological Terminology. J. Montagu 10
389 Should Museum I n s t r u m e n t s be Used? J. Montagu 11
390 Construction of Ivory Cornetti and Tuning
Cornetti at the Sharp End. P. Gretton 13
391 Brass. C. Karp 19
392 A Method of Casting H a r p s i c h o r d R o s e s . J.Paul 21
393 Keyboard R e s t o r a t i o n . J. B a r n e s 24
394 About R e s t o r a t i o n R e p o r t s for F o r t e p i a n o s . J. H e r m o n s 26
395 Construction of Viol Bellies by Bending all Staves.
E. Segerman and J. Duncalf 28
396 Production of P l e c t r u m from Bird F e a t h e r s .
A. Lajaruzny 34
397 Sound Hole Evolution . . . A. Lajaruzny 36 1
398 ASurveyof Lute G r a c e s in the R e n a i s s a n c e and
E a r l y B a r o q u e . E. Segerman 41
REVIEWS 61
399-402 Laying and Decorating H a r p s i c h o r d P a p e r s by P&A
Mactaggart. Modern H a r p s i c h o r d M a k e r s by J. Paul.
A Check-liat of the Double-Reed Musical I n s t r u m e n t s in
t h e Edinburgh University Collection . . . by L. LangwiH.
A Dictionary of E a r l y Music by J. &. E. Roche. All by J. M.
Whatever you care to call them there are two basically different
layouts - and this comnt does not point them Out. Layout A
has the Bass strings at the back, and the bass keys are therefore
usually longer than €he treble ones. Layout B has the Bass strings
at the front and here the treble keys are longer than the bass
ones.. Most people I think call 'A' a Spinet and layout *B'
a Virginal but certainly this point is open to discussion.
The two layouts however are quite distinct and there can be
no intermediate or vague versions of them.
Bull.373: Paul Hailperin writes: "The painting which Buckland mentions,
'The Cat's Dancing Lesson' is certainly the same as the one I mention
under the Dutch title 'De Dansles' in my Comm.32. As I pointed out
in that Comm, there does exist in the Vienna Collection (Kunsthisto-
risches Museum) an instrument of very remarkably similar appearance.
I 'copied' that instrument for the express purpose of performing
Monteverdi works. Experience confirmed its suitability. The Vienna
instrument also is not dated, but its environment suggests that it E
pre-oboe. In his Comm.272 Buckland goes into pirouettes and lip-
control. In this respect one should consider also the pirouette in
Vienna, KHM (see my measurement in 'Some Technical Remarks on the
Shawm and Baroque Oboe', Schola Cantorum Basiliensis, 1970) (the
Nuremberg pirouettes mentioned in above turn out to be non-original
or not in original state). On the difference between shawm and oboe,
it would be interesting to compare the ratios side-hole diameter/
bore diameter at the same point. Yes I know...I'm one of the people
who, with a little time, could do this."
JM adds: I hope that Paul will find the time, and that others, per-
haps, will do so as well. The division between these instruments
is a very grey area, and not only in Europe.
GRANTS AVAILABLE: The f o l l o w i n g comes from t h e C r a f t s C o u n c i l :
The Crafts Council's Conservation Section w i l l be extending the terms of
reference of i t s grant schemes in 1982 to include help for those e s t a b l i s h i n g
or developing independent conservation workshop'*. Pending the p o s s i b l e
introduction of a loan scheme, a new grant scheme has been introduced.
Applications are, therefore, now i n v i t e d from private workshops needing
financial a s s i s t a n c e , for i n s t a n c e , to help with the purchase of s p e c i a l i s e d
equipment which would s p e c i f i c a l l y contribute to the range of work undertaken.
Tne funds a v a i l a b l e in the current f i n a n c i a l year are limited and i t i s
u n l i k e l y that individual grants in excess of El,500 can be awarded.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE CONSERVATION SECTION, CRAFTS COUNCIL
12 WATERLOO PLACE, LONDON SW1Y 4AU; Tel. 01-930 4811.
MATERIALS AVAILABLE:
Do you need artificial Ivory ? I have finaly found a Manufacturer who will make a batch of
"BEST GRAINED ARTIFICIAL IVORY" in a size that all instrument makers could use. The plastic
is the same as used on quality piano keys and has until now only been availible in sheet
form. If at all interested please contact me as soon .Daniel H Bangham Woodwind Instrument
Repairs. !• Felton street. Cambridge, tel.64702.
JM adds that Daniel said in his covering letter that the maker will
only produce if there's a minimum order of soemwhere around 100kg,
so it's only practicable if enough members are interested and if they
all react speedily. If responses trickle in slowly, it may not work
out.
bull.26. p. 5
A Couple of offers of WOOD: James Crabtree of 11591 Bridgeport Rd,
Richmond, BC, Canada V6X 1T5 writes: "I am supplying very fine Sitka
Spruce and Red Cedar in the demensions (Sic) required for most popu-
lar instruments including guitar tops, lute, violin wedges, viola,
degambas (sic), basses and harpshichord (sic) and ahrps of all sizes.
All the wood is air dried to 7% humidity and has been quarter sawn.
The production of the instrument blanks is in my control from the log
and its handling to the final pieces to be shipped."
David Owen writes: "Supplies of exotic hardwoods (especially in
smaller quantities) e.g. Boxwood, Ebony, Rosewood, Blackwood, Amar-
anth (Purple heart), Lignum vitae, Satinwood, Indian Laurel, Pan Rosa,
Pan Bruna, Padauk (Indian and Andaman), Bubinga, Cocobolo, Tulipwood.
Also good stock of English hardwoods. Also large range of woodturn-
ing tools and equipment. Available from: Alan Holtham, Woodturner,
The Old Stores Turnery. 51 Wistaston Road, Willaston, Nantwich,
Cheshire; phone Crewe (0270) 67010.
MUSIC AVAIIJIBLE: The 1982 list has arrived from Archivum Musicum,
Studio per Edizione Scelte, 50125 Firenze, Lungarno Guicciardini 9 r,
Italy. It includes a large number of facsimiles of vocal and instr-
umental music, with a special list of flute music and guitar music,
ranging roughly from 1600 to 1750 and costing from about 12,000 lire
upwards.
BOUWERSKONTAKT: As I said 1 was going to, I went over to Holland in
November as a FoMRHI representative at the Bouwerskontaktdag in
Utrecht. I hope that it was useful to Bouwerskontakt; it certainly
was to FoMRHI, as you'll see from the list of new members herewith.
It was a very interesting occasion, with nearly 50 makers exhibiting
and over 4,000 visitors in just the one day, I have written it up
in detail for Early Music because there is one aspect which I think
is very important and which is neglected in this country. Unlike
the recent Early Musical Instrument Exhibition at the Horticultural
Hall, where makers were exhibiting finished instruments to potential
customers, the majority of makers in Utrecht were exhibiting instru-
ments in process of construction, as well as finished ones, and were
showing visitors how they made them; some were actually making on
their stands. There was no sense of rivalry between exhibitors
and visitors; the whole atmosphere was one of experienced colleagues
helping new and aspiring colleagues, and there was a very friendly
feeling throughout the school,where the day took place, and all day
long.
Obviously we need the Exhibitions for makers and customers, but I
think that we also need the contact days for makers and colleagues.
The problem is, who can organise it, here and in other countries?
It is the sort of thing that FoMRHI is for, but who would organise
it? I've not got the time, at least not for a year anyway while
I get lectures and the Bate Collection sorted out, and if it's to
be in London, like most things in this country, it wouldn't be so
easy from Oxford. I'vewondered whether the new National Early Music
Association (see next heading) might be interested, and we'll have
to see whether they would. But who could organise such an event in
USA, Canada, Australia, and so on? I would welcome thoughts on this
from members, and indeed indications from members that they would
take part or would, like John Storrs for keyboards, organise such
events locally, even if like John's sessions, they are for only one
type of instrument. If we want successors, and I assume that most
of us do, this is one of the best ways to encourage them. It's also
one of the best ways of discouraging the fly boys, by showing them
how to do it properly.
aws
K»n.26. P.6
i
u
FoMRHI Comm. 390 _. (See Eull.25, pp. 4 and 5) Paul Gretton
Construction of Ivory Cornetti and Tuning Cornetti at the Sharp End
Irregularities visible on
X-rays when instrument viewed Much more regular
like this.
<T when viewed from side,
a) SflUECftaj
i) The obvious source, as always, is Praetoriu^. He states
directly (Syntagma Husicum. II* P.35) that one tunes the cornetto
"dergestaldt, dass man oben das Mundstuck welter herausser oder
tieffer hinnein stecke" ("by pulling the mouthpiece further out or
by pushing it further in.") That's to say, players didn't just use
their lips! This statement comes at the end of his chapter on the
recorder, in which he laments the difficulty of tuning to certain
organs "weil ... auch die Orgeln in etzlichen Kirchen, 3o die Kitze
und Kalte leicht treffen kan, im Winter niedriger, im Sofier aber
hoher am Thon befunden werden." ("also because the organs in some
churches, which are susceptible to changes in temperature, are found
to be lower in pitch in winter and higher in summer." p.34) This
difficulty, he says, could even necessitate having two sets of
instruments a semitone apart. He goes on to claim for himself the
invention of two-part tuneable recorders to alleviate the problem
and mentions also that Bassanelli can be tuned in this way. There
then follows the above-quoted passage about the cornetto.
ii) Just as clear and direct is Bartolomeo Bismantova. cornettist
of the Accademia dello Spirito Santo in Ferrara and author of a
Compendlo Musicale (1677), who describes in detail the tuning of a
cornetto to various organ-pitches by means of tuning-bits similar to
those used on early trumpets and trombones, which lengthen the
instrument at both top and bottom. There is even a delightful
illustration showing how such gadgets are to be attached. If the
cornetto has a silver mount, this can be used to extend the sounding
length in the same way. "procurando ancora di sentire prima il tuono
chorista del Organo; 6 altro$ et in caso, che fosse piu alto il
Cornetto del Organo; bisognerft mettervi una 6 piu Giunte; et se fosse
per il contrario piu basso di voce; all'hora bisognera levarne"
(fol.54 recto. "Try first to listen to the tuning note of the organ
or other instrument. If the cornetto is higher in pitch than the
organ it will be necessary to insert one or more tuning bits; if,
on the other hand, it is lower, it will be necessary to remove them,")
Bismantova then describes how a bit for the bottom end^of the instru-
ment should be made and goes on: "e si fa questo; accio slongando il
Cornetto di sopra, e di sotto, le voci tutte; e in spetie 1'acute,*
[my underlining and asterisk] venghino giuste; come l'istesso, si fa
del Flauto; e 1*aviso serva, con iuditio; overo se nel fondo di
detto Cornetto vi saxa per adornamento, la Legatura d'Argento, alta,
e movibile; si potra questa slongarla; che fara l'effetto, che fa
la Giunta.w (fol.55 recto. "This lengthening of the cornetto at the
15
top and bottom ends is in order to get all the notes in tune,
especially the high ones [see below, PGjin the same way as the
recorder is lengthened, QBismantova has previously described a
three-part recorder in g and ho»o to tune it J One should use
common sense in applying this advice. If, however, the cornetto
has a long, movable silver mount at the bottom, one can use this to
lengthen the instrument in the same way as with a tuning-bit.")
Bismantova then goes on to give the most detailed advice we possess
on how to actually play the instrument, but he returns to tuning
problems^at the end of the chapter. "Se per sorte si trovasse
Crgani, 6 Cembali, che fosseroassai bassi del Corista; e che il
Cornetto non si potesse accordare, ne accomodarsi con le voci a
quel Tuono; in ocasione di suonare, Sinfonie, o altro; in questo
caso bisognera accordare il Cornetto una voce piu alta; e poi
suonare, una voce piu bassa; e bisogna saper suonare per tutte le
Chiave; per poter suonare Spostato ne bisogni." (fol.57 verso.
"One may cone across organs or harpsichords which are lower than
choir pitch and it may be impossible to tune or adjust the cornetto
to the mode of the Sinfonie or other pieces one wants to play. In
that case it will be necessary to tune the cornetto a tone higher
and then play a tone lower. One therefore needs to be able to
play in all clefs in order to transpose if necessary.")
Previous to his chapter on the cornetto, Bismantova has already
mentioned two other interesting facts about tuning wind instruments.
Firstly, he suggests the use of wax on the labium as a means of
flattening one-piece recorders, which implies that all Renaissance
recorders, whether one-piece or jointed, were at least potentially
tuneable, contrary to what Peter says, "e se il Flauto fosse / piu
alto del chorista meza voce, 6 meno, 6 piu; e che non si potesse
slongare di. canna; in tal caso, si potrS. mettere un poco di^cera
da una parte della linguetta ben atteso;che cosi s'agiustera."
(fol.50 rec./50ver. "If the recorder is higher than the tuning
pitch when one blows more or less normally and it is not possible
to lengthen it, then you can very carefully put a bit of wax on
one side of the labium, which will solve the problem.") (Such
constriction of the labium is well-known to folk players — it is
the standard method of flattening the old Clarke tin-whistles,
although sellotape has now taken over from wax.) Secondly, Bismantova
is, like Praetorius, aware of the effect the weather has on pitch,
although he describes diametrically opposite changes. "Tempo humido,
f^crescere il Stromento; e il Tempo asciutto, e caldo, lo fa calare
di voce" (fol.52 verso. "Humid weather makes the instrument go
sharp?and hot, dry weather flattens it,") His solution is to pour
a glass of water through the cornetto when playing in the summer!
I have quoted Bismantova at such length because Peter seema to
be unaware of this important source, although it is well-known to
serious players, a facsimile and a translation of the cornetto
and recorder sections having been available since 1978. Bismantova
is the only early source — 1 haven't forgotten Dalla Casa, Mersenne
etc •«•? to give us detailed instructions on aspects of playing
technique other than tonguing, and he stands at the end of the long,
unbroken tradition of cornetto playing in Northern Italy. I see no
reason to think he is describing innovations — it's logical to
assume that his forerunners, not only in Italy, used similar tricks
of the trade, and we can doubtless apply his advice to the Venetian
schooland even earlier periods, as well as to the music of the
Stadtpfeifer later on,
I
•
17
c) Playing Technique.
Of course every comettoplayer knows what Peter tells us in
such a revelatory manner: the pitch of a given note is flexible
and one can "pull" or "lip" notes up and down. However, if one
goes beyond his "bit of practice" and does a great deal of
practice, various other phenomena make themselves felt. It
becomes apparent that each tone has a "centre" or point of
optimum/maximum resonance at which it sounds and projects best.
(This is even true of the serpent, by the way.) The process of
learning to sound the instrument is one of learning to find these
tonal "centres" by instinct. There is some leeway, but if one
frequently plays at non-central pitches one will never get the
best sound. The difference between a good and a bad instrument,
other factors being equal, is that on the former a greater number
of these centred notes is in tune with one's chosen pitch and
temperament. It is this set of centred notes which one has to
tune to the organ or whatever, and one does it by adjusting the
length of the sounding air-column. I'm not trying to be sarcastic,
but all this is surely obvious and applies, sometimes more and
sometimes less, to all wind instruments. Of course, there is
never a perfect instrument — one always has to lip at least some
notes into tune. Playing in tune is not just a matter of producing
a note of the required pitch anyoldhow but of doing so with the
best possible sound. If one tries to do everything with the lips,
the sound, instead of being "open" and "free", will be "tight" and
"strained" when playing higher than the instrument's intrinsic pitch
and "fuzzy" and "not projected" when playing lower — all very
subjective adjectives, but valid.
In fact the flexibility Peter describes is dependent on other
factors besides lip-tension. For example, it is very much less with
a small ("authentic"??) acorn-cup mouthpiece than with an adapted
trumpet mouthpiece. Indeed, tuning at the sharp end must have been
a necessary provision for the use of various mouthpieces and
various players. If you bought a set of cornetti in Venice for use
in Munich, you had to be sure that Hans, Fritz and Seppl, with
their own personal lips, lungs and mouthpieces, would be in tune.
They must have"bothered to move" their mouthpieces. Just as
significantly, pitch-flexibility varies very much from register to
register of the instrument. Thus it may well be possible to lip
the lowest notes through as much as an octave, but the high notes —
according to Bismantova a characteristic of the cornetto -- are
much more stable and less susceptible to alteration with the lips
alone. Try playing Pezel, or the "Deposuit" from the Monteverdi
Vespers, or a scale from g below the stave to the g three octaves
higher — all on a 440Hz cornetto with say, a 450Hz organ. After
about top a one will be much too flat, and some notes will skip to
the next harmonic. There is, quite simply, a limit to what one can
do with the lips alone. This lack of pitch-flexibility on the higk
notes~Is specifically recognized by Bismantova in the passage I
have marked • — he implies what practical experience shows: one
should tune to a less-flexible high note, blowing quite strongly.
Tuning to a note in the lower octave may be deceptive. The instrument
needs to be capable of sharpening as well as flattening.** Leaps over
large intervals will also show up an instrument whose intrinsic
scale is out of tune with the accompaniment — one tends to hit
these "real" notes even if one is trying to play "de-centred."
For the above reasons one has to be extremely careful when
assigning pitches to museum instruments. Some research is way
off centre, including a recently published book.
Perhaps I should anticipate the objection that the cornetto
muto was of fixed length and couldn't be tuned? I won't dispute
the probability that players had numerous instruments available —
inventories show it. On the other hand, the muto seems to have
been used mostly in chamber ensembles of quieter instruments, which
would have tuned to it in the same way as a modern ensemble tunes
to whichever fixed-pitch instrument is being used. With strings,
reeds, trombones, and even harpsichords this will have presented
ho problem.
In conclusion — tuning the cornetto to the organ was and is a
natural, necessary, and obvious thing to do. (I personally don't
know any serious player who doesn't do it.) "Then" as now, there
was a need to accommodate the instrument to such unforseeable factors
as : varation in supposedly identical instruments, the state of
one's embouchure, fatigue, the weather (which doesn't affect all
instruments in the same way), heating etc, etc, etc. Neither
player ncr instrument is at 440 all the time.
p.s**I know that there are sharp as well as flat organs. Indeed,
my own experience (statistically invalid, of course) is that they
are usually sharp. Furthermore, I have had to play with orchestras
that tuned to about 444-Hz as a matter of course and were surprised
at protests. So one up to P.B.i
p.p.s. Recorders and flutes were not the only other Renaissance
wind instruments. The cornetto is better comparable with those
which obviously could be tuned — reeds and trombones, for example,
p.p.p.s. I didn't suggest "enlarging tuning holes on some reed
instruments." My only mention of reed instruments was to point out
that there has to be a good fit between reed and instrument, in the
same way as between mouthpiece and cornetto. However,I wonder if
Peter has ever actually taken a look at the reed-sockets of original
oboes, bagpipes, crumhorns, etc ? They aren't cylindrical, but
they are aaaarrggghhh! 11
Bibliography
AjLtenburg. Johann Ernst: Versuch einer Anleitung zur heroisch-
miisikalischen Trompeter^ und Pauker-Kunst, Halle 1795.
Bismantova, Bartolomeo: Compendio Musicale, 1677. Facsimile, Archivum
Musicum, Collana di Testi Rari, Florence 1978.
(Bismantova), "The Discussion of Wind ^Instruments in Bartolomeo
Bismantova's Compendio Musicale (1677)": translation and commentary
by Bruce Dickey, Petra Leonards and Edward H.Tarr, in Easier
Jahrbuch fOr Historische Musikpraxjs. II, 1978, pp.143-187.
Drago.Giuliano Q.. detto Dalla Roccia Alta Coronata di Neve: Delle
jjBperfettione del'automobile nuoyo (sic), Venezia, 1 6 — ?,
Facsimile, Forni, forthcoming, ed.J.Leguy.
Drake. Julian: "The Christ Church Cornetts, and the Ivory Cornett in
the Royal College of Music, London" in GSJ XXXIV, 1981, pp.44-50.
Mersenne, Marin, Harmonie Universelle. Paris 1636, Facsim.ed.F.Lesure,
Paris, T963.
Praetorius. Mick:Syntagma Musicum, Wolffenbtittel, 1619. facsimile,
Barenreiter, Kassel, 1958.
PythoniS,Montis Acuti paene Hierosolymitani Jeremiae atque Segerhominis
Ephraimi Novi quondam Eburacensii: Pythonis Montii Liber Haximus
Ultimusque Semel Musicae Antiouae Instrumentorum Omnium, Oppido
I'Ovo Abbatis
Trichet, impressus
P.: Traite desI'iCHLXXAlV
instruments(sicJ, ed.Jacques
de Husique. and Sylyette
ca.1640, ed iKleSufe*'
19
Anyon e who has brass instruments which do not show any signs of
these prob lems could probably reduce the likelihood of their later
maoif estin g th emselves by low temperature annealing. Ignoring the
probl ems o f de soldering and resoldering the instrument before and
after trea tmen t it must br realized that brass instrument makers
go to a gr eat deal of trouble to cold work their material to extreme
hardn ess f or w hat are regarded as important musical reasons (see
bull. 25,p. 9 under Medieval Technology). Annealing to lower the risk
of so me ty pes of localised corrosion would quite likely ruin the
music al va lue of any brass instrument. Basset horn bells, aside from
the d estru ctio n of any lacquer with which their insides might be
coate d, ar e pr obably less critical in this regard.
20 CK 2
There are other preventive measures which can reduce the risk of
localised corrosion without jeopardising the material or musical
integrity of an instrument. These consist of cleaning the metal to
remove corrosive and electrolytic material, its stabilization to
reduce the likelihood of renewed destructive activity, and providing
some protective barrier between the metal and deleterious environ-
mental elements. The specific techniques are quite straightforward
BUT the choice of procedure must be based upon accurate knowledge
of both the exact type of alloy being treated (a generic term such
as "brass" is far too nonspecific) and the type(s) of corrosion
against which protection is desired. Otherwise the treatment can
cause new problems easily as serious as those it was intended to
avoid. Access to the necessary analytical facilities (very few
museums have them) implies access to the expertice necessary to
deal with the further details of the matter. Otherwise as long as
brasses are not polished problems can often be avoided. Most com-
mercial polishes contain ammonia which will etch out the grain
boundaries in brass and thus weaken it as well as leaving more
space between the grains to trap electrolytic and corrosive material.
Exposure to ammonia in itself is enough to trigger stress corrosion
cracking. Commercial polishes can also contain electrolytes which $k
can "charge" incipient galvanic cells in the uncleaned brass and
initiate intergranular corrosion. The weakened brass will more
easily stress corrosion crack. Safe polishes can easily be formu-
lated, but all polishing removes metal from the instrument so if
polishing is regarded as necessary the instrument will require
subsequent protection from conditions which will cause a need for
renewed polishing. (The practice of repeated cleaning with unsuitable
polishes is, in my experience, the most common cause of the basic
problem in the first place.)
and then put in the lathe and the back turned flat until
it is of the required finished thickness. The way to
fix it in the lathe is to chuck a piece of wood, turn the
face of this flat and then turn a depression into which
the roee will exactly fit. The rose is then screwed to
this plsoe of wood. Do not uss wood turning techniques
on plastio but turn as for brass.
Mow comes the mounting of the master pattern. Take two
pieces of half inch or threequartor ply, each about k inches
by 5*f for a 2? inch rose and face them with a polished
plastic surface - Formica is suitable. On one, the
plastic master pattern le glued with epoxy glue, •} inch up
from the bottom. On the other, the pattern for the filler
cup must be formed. This must bo ohapsd like a very
rounded triangle. 2 inches wide at the top and about f
inch thick, tapering down to nothing. It is fixed with
the wide end flush with the top of the block, and must be
long enough to come down to a t inch lower than the top
of the rose pattern when the two blocks are faced up. In
the mould, this forms ths feed for the molten metal. It
le important that it should be large, especially at the
top, as it acts as a runnel. Ths weight of molten metal
in the feed cup also provides pressure to push the metal
into the datail of the casting. Make ths male shape in
wood and copy it in plastic through either a plastic or
plastsr intermediate mould. Plx with epoxy to the second
block. Just as with thy roee pattern. When all this is
done, there will be two matching master patterns, one for
the roee, one for the filler cup, which will last
indefinitely. Proa theos the two casting shell moulds
are made.
Cut up a number of pieces of 3mm or 4mm ply and screw
thess to the sidss of the pattern plates, in such s way
that each becomes a shallow, open box, 1 inch deep. Into
thess ths aould material is poured. The mould material is
a sand/cement mixture, one part Portland cement to one part
fine silica eandj. This sand is available from pottery 4f£^,
suppliere but the stuff sold in pot shops as fins silver*""
sand appears to be tho same thing. It is important to
ensure that no air bubbles are entrapped to mar the surface,
by repeated tapping. It is a good idea to reinforce the
grout with asbestos string or the special concrete quality
glass fibre. Allow to set for seven to ten daye before
removing the aould from the pattern, and then leave to
cure for ssvsral weeks. In the meantime, more roee moulds
can be aade and perhaps a spars feed aould.
When the time comes to cast, bake the moulds in a
domestic oven for an hour to dry thoroughly and then give
then a further heating with a gas torch. Wear protective
clothing, gloves and goggles. Fit the two halves of the
mould together with 0 - cramps; they must fit smoothly
face to face so that no molten metal escapes. This needs
to bs checked earlier and the faces rubbed down if
necessary. Melt up to half a pound of zinc in a plumber's
ladle, using a gas torch or a large gas burner, and when it
is molten, skim off any dross with a piece of wood and pour
ths molten metal into the closed mould. It is best to have
the mould at an angle to the vertical and to pour with a
23
25
-"The modern back-touch strip IOS removed ac- It wos harder toon tl
orloLnol two Loners of woollen cloth,
be Interested In sne^ thlnos no a detailed description of the quo-
Lltles of oil sorts of cloth, ;~elt etc... and where to qet these.
Levelllno the kens (and other common action reoulotlno jobs) doesn't
noor1 on" exoLonatlon 'couoe toet should be a familiar procedure.
5 co tue leod ken welohts I refer to a previous article about the
subject. Llohtln hanmerlno them Is the best method If theu aren't
too heavLli! corroded.
-"Most of toe banners were too tloht to foLL under their own welqht."
I hoven't exoerlenced such a feature up tlLL now, but very often
the ooooslte. In oractlcolln 60-' of the pianos I restored the bushlnq
the hammers had torn out exceslvelu. In that case the actions
renew the bushings,
fc"1 .&£
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A^aln the Information would be nore useful Lf the reader were toLd
how the domoer reolster was stralohtened.
-The sooe remark apoLLes also for the followlno paraaraphs: how wos
the domoer cloth put Ln the required shaoe aqoln? V/hat kind of
Leather isos oLued to the notched port of some dampers? Exactly how
was the piece of mlsslno veneer replaced, the set-off of the hammers
ad iusted etc .. . ?
As a final conclusion (In the Lloht of the Introduction) we must see
to It that we olve verii concrete and tonglble Information. Perhaps
In future oil restoratlo n peopLe (whether me are talking about
kenboards or other Lnstr uments) should start a discussion on methods
snsthenotlcolln: I.e. mo ke o list of oil thlnqs that can be wronq Ln
Instruments ond the best won to cope with Lt.
FoMRHI Comm. 395
P l e c t r u m production c o n s i s t s of two s t a g e s :
a) cut the stem of the feather into pieces (cylinders) of the r e q u i r e d
length (8 - 12 mm) with a new r a z o r blade
b) take every cylinder length with the pincer and cut everything protruding
from the pincer legs with the blade.
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36
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XVI
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41
Preamble « 5
As for the makers, many are very interested in the topic. The
makers of any sort of equipment usually keep well aware of the uses their
customers put that equipment to. This is very pertinent to design and
quality control, as well as to the instruction that new customers some-
times need. Musical instrument makers are not exceptions.
Introduction
Capirola
There are two types of graces notated and discussed. The first
is notated by a number made of red dots following the tablature number
(in black) that it is associated with. The appearance of dotted red
numbers "means nothing else than that they should be played with a
tremolo . . .". Execution is illustrated by an example where "you make
a beat on the second fret of the highest string; hold fast to this beat and
tremolize with another finger on the 3rd fret". To "make a beat" clearly
means to stop a fret. It is not clear as to whether this term implies a
pluck when the fret is first stopped or perhaps later when the tremolizing
s t a r t s . Since the implication of the notation in dots is "like a tremolizing
thing that cannot be held fast by the finger", rapid a p p e a r a n c e and
d i s a p p e a r a n c e of the ^auxilliary note is c h a r a c t e r i s t i c of a t r e m o l o . The
number of t i m e s t h i s happens i s not c l e a r from this d e s c r i p t i o n .
Sancta M a r i a
vihuela together with those of the lute. Sancta Maria's book was
obviously primarily written for keyboard, but the apparent claim that
much of it is relevant to vihuelas as well needs to be respected. To
summarize Sancta Maria's graces, he described the redoble, repeated
trill, special minim trill and two simple trills. The redoble can be made
only on semibreves and it involves both a lower and upper auxilliary, one
of which must be only a semitone from the main note. The initial descrip-
tion could be expressed as an initial lower mordent followed by a shake.
The shake stopped well before the end of the note being graced, allowing
the final main note to sound over a considerable and probably majority
fraction of the time available. This is true for all of Sancta Maria's
graces. The later comment by Sancta Maria mentioned above (concerning
the new way to start the shake) also applies to the redoble, so the new way
to start a redoble is with a turn from above.
Sancta Maria makes it quite clear that the initial upper auxilliary
note of the three new~graces (new redoble, new repeated trill and special
minim trill) does not sound on the main beat but just before the beat in
the first two and just after in the third. This approach reflects a rather
unique theoretical purity, insisting on main beat consonance. Since
there is no evidence that the first note of a grace was dwelled upon in
this period (as was often the case in later gracing), it is quite possible
for the ear not to care whether that note appeared on or slightly before or
slightly after the beat. This would allow musicians to play it on the beat
if they wished while theoreticians could maintain their consonant purity.
on the beat than the turn because, not having both upper and lower
Uiaries, it pulled tonal focus away from the main note more.
auxilliaries
Capirola could easily not have had such scruples. It the length
of his final main note of the grace could be shorter, a proper short old
snake could fit into the crotchet time with the fast notes no faster than
those of Sancta Maria. This is not much faster than the written plucked
semiquavers that appear in Capirola's music.
Henestrosa
Waissel
If the sequence "up and down" has significance, a start with "up"
is consistent with "a little later" if the sequence refers to finger position
rather than direction of motion. The final "down" would then favour the
second possibility for the nature of the grace. If Waissel was writing
more generally, giving no significance to the sequence "up and down",
then each of the possibilities or both are equally probable. No other grace
is consistent with his description.
Robinson
That graces starting on the lower auxilliary were in the air then
is demonstrated by Robinson's book (9) which was published about a
decade after Waissel's. In it Robinson explicitly describes the execution
of but one grace, the appoggiatura from below, which he calls a "fall"
(p. Cij r). The context is the lute m a s t e r ' s response to the student's
52
question of "when and how to use a fall with a r e l i s h . " T h e r e is no hint
h e r e of d i s c u s s i n g g r a c e s comprehensively. It could very easily be a
r e q u e s t for explanation of the latest gimmick being d i s c u s s e d in the a l e -
house.
In this paper I shall use the term "fall" to denote both a class of
graces (especially with respect to notation) and a specific grace
(appoggiatura from below). I expect that this attempt at imitating early
usage does not lead to more confusion than my attempts to express the
ideas here in modern language.
Dowland
•*
The Dowland translation of 1610 (10) of the instructions by
Besardus (originally published in 1603) mentions graces once, in a
statement explaining why they are not described. The terminology used
is "sweet relishes and shakes". On first sight this terminology seems
inconsistent with that of Robinson since Robinson's shake was a type of
relish. But it is quite possible that the distinction was between "sweet
relishes" and "shakes". Robinson wrote (p. Cv) ". . . either a strong
relysh for loudness, or a milde relysh for passionate attencion. "
Different types of relishes could have had different emotional connotations
(as was mentioned by Simpson much later), and a shake (perhaps Mace's
hard shake) may have been the main "strong relysh" and other graces
could have served as "sweet relishes" (Dowland) or "milde relysh£esj"
(Robinson).
either because the context made their use obvious or their use with the
same basic interpretation varied from performance to performance.
Examples of the obvious could be L a phrase musically related to one
with already-notated graces 2. mordents on scalewise passages, 3. a
long shake to sustain a long note or 4. a "little touch or t e r k e " applied
almost unconsciously when the fingers happen already to be appropriately
positioned. We must also bear in mind that the other types of ornament-
ation such as time variation (e. g. dotted rhythms), division (especially at
cadences) and right hand devices (e.g. strums or arpeggiation) could
have been used to decorate passages in conjunction with or instead of
graces, and these could be equally annotated.
The seventh and eighth graces are unnamed and are combinations
of the others. The seventh is stated to be a combination of the second
and sixth, i.e. joining the accent (plaintif) to the battement. This amounts
to a fall and appoggiatura from above (= a turn from below) + battement
proper. The instructions for execution stop just before the battement
proper should start, but it is expected that the continuation would be
understood. The eighth and last grace is stated to be a combination of
the second (accent plaintif or fall)and the fifth (verre casse or violent
vibrato). The instructions for execution describe an ascending slide
rather than the appoggiatura from below given in the definition of the
accent plaintif.
Conclusion
Shake Close C
Shake main A
Mordent lower B
Mordent upper >B C
Appoggiatura above A
Shake above >A
Turn above >B C
Appoggiatura below > B
Slide ascending >B
Turn below > c
Slide descending > C
Vibrato violent 7>B c
REFERENCES