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Research Results For 'Viol'

JACOB STAINER

Jacob Stainer (also known as Jakob Stainer) was an Austrian violin maker. He was born in 1621 at Absam and died in 1683. He became a protégé of the archduke Ferdinand Charles from 1648 onwards. He was a highly successful maker of the violin, viol, viola da gamba, and other instruments and was the founder of the Tyrolese school of violin-making. Through pecuniary disputes he died penniless and allegedly insane.
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BASSETTO

A bassetto is a tenor or small bass viol.
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BASS VIOL

The bass viol is a stringed musical instrument of the viol family, used for playing bass.
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CONTRABASSO

The contrabasso is the largest kind of bass viol.
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DOUBLE-BASS

Picture of Double-Bass

The double-bass or violone is the largest instrument of the bass-viol kind, having three or four strings tuned an octave below those of the violoncello, and traditionally played with a bow. The double-bass was probably invented by Gaspar di Salo in 1580, and was a particular feature of certain 1950s Rock and Roll bands, who plucked it rather than played it with a bow.
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ORCHESTRA

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Originally, an orchestra was a semi-circular space in front of a stage where in Ancient Greek theatre the chorus sang and danced. Today the term applies to a body of instrumental performers and also to the part of the theatre where they are positioned. The orchestra is faced by a conductor in the middle, who stands with his back to the audience, and the performers have set locations in front of him. The first violins are positioned at the front-left of the orchestra, the violas in the centre with the cellos to their left and the harp to the front-right, and other instruments simularly arranged with the percussion at the back and left and the trombones at the centre back and the tuba at the back-right corner.

The modern use of orchestral accompaniment to dramatic music was begun in Italy and France about the beginning of the 17th century, Monteverde of Mantua probably having most to do with its development. In his opera Orfeo, produced in1608, he employed an orchestra of thirty-six instruments, consisting of harpsichords, violins, viols, lutes, guitars, organs of wood, trumpets, flutes, and other instruments. Orchestral music gradually developed into a separate branch of music. Comparatively early, the violin became the leading instrument a position which it has maintained and subsequently all instruments of the viol class were discarded in favour of the violin,
viola, violoncello, and double bass. This family of instruments constitutes what is termed the
full-stringed band.

The different kinds of instruments used in the modern orchestra and their numerical proportion to one another are determined partly by the size of the combination and partly by the nature of the works to be performed. An example of a typical orchestra contains fourteen first violins, twelve second violins, ten violas, eight violoncellos, eight double-basses, one harp, three flutes, one piccolo, three oboes, one cor anglais, three clarinets, one bass clarinet, three bassoons, one contra fagotto, four horns, four trumpets and cornets, three trombones, one bass tuba, three kettledrums (also known as tympani), one side drum, one bass drum, one triangle, and one pair of cymbals. The manner in which the tones of the different instruments are blended or contrasted in an orchestral composition is termed orchestration or instrumentation. Orchestral music, apart from its use in connection with works of a dramatic nature, received little attention until the beginning of the 18th century. Amongst those most intimately associated with its development are Johann Sebastian Bach, Christoph Willibald Von Gluck, Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Robert Schumann, Felix Mendelssohn, Hector Berlioz, Wilhelm Wagner, Johannes Brahms, Peter Tchaikovsky, Antonin Dvorak, and Richard Strauss.
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REBEC

Picture of Rebec

The Rebec is an obsolete form of stringed musical instrument of Middle Eastern origin which was popular during the Middle Ages. It was the precursor of the viol, was shaped somewhat like a mandolin, had three gut strings and was played with a bow. Henry VIII included the instrument in his state band, but later it was rarely used except by street musicians.
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VIOL

The viol was a stringed musical instrument of the same form as the violin, but larger, and having six strings, to be struck with a bow, and the neck furnished with frets for stopping the strings.
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