A curious instrument in Hungary
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olaness
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A curious instrument in Hungary
I know this isn't stricktly a tuba question, but there are many here who knows a lot about other instruments too.
I just saw an episode of Michael Palin's new series 'New Europe' where he travels all over the new states that have sprung up in Europe after the fall of the USSR. In this, he was invited to the home of a musical family, who put on a little performance for him. They all played guitars and various relatives of that instrument, but there was one I have not heard of nor seen before. This was a very brief little clip and I was not prepared for it so my description might be a bit inaccurate, but the instrument looked from afar like a double bass, and was played pizzicato. One closeup revealed though that the strings were strung in a straight line, not arched like a double bass, and that it had frets!
I just wonder if anyone here knows what that might have been, and if they care to tell.
Purely curiosity value, by the way....
I just saw an episode of Michael Palin's new series 'New Europe' where he travels all over the new states that have sprung up in Europe after the fall of the USSR. In this, he was invited to the home of a musical family, who put on a little performance for him. They all played guitars and various relatives of that instrument, but there was one I have not heard of nor seen before. This was a very brief little clip and I was not prepared for it so my description might be a bit inaccurate, but the instrument looked from afar like a double bass, and was played pizzicato. One closeup revealed though that the strings were strung in a straight line, not arched like a double bass, and that it had frets!
I just wonder if anyone here knows what that might have been, and if they care to tell.
Purely curiosity value, by the way....
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Re: A curious instrument in Hungary
Mandobass? (i.e., bass mandolin)


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DCottrell
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No vowels! *gasp*UncleBeer wrote:Maybe a crwth? (An exquisite word for word games!)![]()
Very exquisite indeed!
EDIT: Just found this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wo ... el_letters
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Geotuba
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Well that wikipedia entry completely missed the fact that "crwth" (and "cwm") are not English words at all, but Welsh. And "w" is a vowel in Welsh.jbaylies wrote:No vowels! *gasp*UncleBeer wrote:Maybe a crwth? (An exquisite word for word games!)![]()
Very exquisite indeed!
EDIT: Just found this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wo ... el_letters
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pierso20
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DCottrell wrote:It is a bass. There are basses in use in Eastern European bands that are fretted. Some only have three strings and are tuned a little differently, like a tambura. Some have four and are tuned in fourths like a bass viol.
After recently getting out of Music History last year, I am surprised I remembered this, but it was probably a Viola Da Gamba, which was like a bass viola [or viol(violin with frets)] during the early stringed instrument period through the rennassiance. In other words...it is a double bass (though size actually varied) with frets...and sometimes frets didn't cover the whole finger board.
Notice how I said it was PROBABLY....
EDIT: Viol da gamba came in 3 sizes: bass, tenor, treble
If the instrument you saw was as tall as a person, then it is not what thought.
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Actually, (not to sound like a smartasspierso20 wrote: EDIT: Viol da gamba came in 3 sizes: bass, tenor, treble
If the instrument you saw was as tall as a person, then it is not what thought.
bardus est ut bardus probo,
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
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pierso20
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Actually, (not to sound like a smartassOldsRecording wrote:pierso20 wrote: EDIT: Viol da gamba came in 3 sizes: bass, tenor, treble
If the instrument you saw was as tall as a person, then it is not what thought.
you don't sound like a smart ***
When I edited my post, it was after I consulted my Music History book, and it only listed three...but knowing how instruments tend to have many different sizes, it sounds like you may be correct.
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UDELBR
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"Crwth" is good enough for the Oxford English Dictionary, so that's plenty close for me.Geotuba wrote:Well that wikipedia entry completely missed the fact that "crwth" (and "cwm") are not English words at all, but Welsh. And "w" is a vowel in Welsh.jbaylies wrote:No vowels! *gasp*UncleBeer wrote:Maybe a crwth? (An exquisite word for word games!)![]()
Very exquisite indeed!
EDIT: Just found this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wo ... el_letters
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olaness
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Thanks for all the replies, quite enlightening actually.
In response to the last question, 'w' is a vowel in welsh, replacing the sound that is 'oo' in english. Some words show this very well, such as 'pwl' = 'pool'. As far as I'm aware there were no word for pool in welsh so when they needed one they nicked the english word but altered the spelling to suit their language.
In response to the last question, 'w' is a vowel in welsh, replacing the sound that is 'oo' in english. Some words show this very well, such as 'pwl' = 'pool'. As far as I'm aware there were no word for pool in welsh so when they needed one they nicked the english word but altered the spelling to suit their language.
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Thanks for the vote of confidencepierso20 wrote:OldsRecording wrote:Actually, (not to sound like a smartasspierso20 wrote: EDIT: Viol da gamba came in 3 sizes: bass, tenor, treble
If the instrument you saw was as tall as a person, then it is not what thought.), there is a viola da gamba larger than the bass, called the violone. Some are large enough to stand up and play like a modern double bass. In fact, as late as the 1800's, a lot of German bass players used a fretted bass (essentially a large viola da gamba- that could be why most German basses are gamba-shaped rather than violin-shaped), so what you saw could have been what passes for a double bass in darkest Hungary.[/quote
you don't sound like a smart ***![]()
When I edited my post, it was after I consulted my Music History book, and it only listed three...but knowing how instruments tend to have many different sizes, it sounds like you may be correct.
This might be enlightening:
http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/1187/Mu ... shist.html
bardus est ut bardus probo,
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
