Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Violin-making in Rome, 1700−1830: new archival investigations
View through CrossRef
Abstract
In the 16th and 17th centuries, Roman production in the lutherie sector focused almost exclusively on plucked-string instruments: in the numerous workshop inventories that have come down to us, the various members of the viola family are very rare indeed, while violins are almost entirely absent. Again in Rome, the profession of violin-maker (‘violinaro’) starts to appear only in the second quarter of the 18th century; unlike the situation with the luthiers of the two previous centuries, only one workshop inventory has previously been described from this type of maker: that of the ‘violinaro’ Crescenzio Ugar (1791), which unfortunately provides very little information about the maker’s effective production.
This article aims to help to fill the gap, which is all the more serious since it concerns a class of instruments that (unlike those of the plucked-string type) was the most valued from the 18th century onwards—not only from a musical point of view, but also from a purely economic perspective. I refer in particular to three previously unpublished inventories of the stock of well-known violinari operating in Rome: Francesco Emiliani (1736), Giulio Cesare Gigli (1794) and Giovanni Maria Valenzano (1826). To these we may add Magno Longo (1704), one of just two guitar-makers (‘chitarrari’) of German origin, from whose workshop we also find documentation concerning the production of violins. I also present a review of the instruments played by several Roman violinists during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Title: Violin-making in Rome, 1700−1830: new archival investigations
Description:
Abstract
In the 16th and 17th centuries, Roman production in the lutherie sector focused almost exclusively on plucked-string instruments: in the numerous workshop inventories that have come down to us, the various members of the viola family are very rare indeed, while violins are almost entirely absent.
Again in Rome, the profession of violin-maker (‘violinaro’) starts to appear only in the second quarter of the 18th century; unlike the situation with the luthiers of the two previous centuries, only one workshop inventory has previously been described from this type of maker: that of the ‘violinaro’ Crescenzio Ugar (1791), which unfortunately provides very little information about the maker’s effective production.
This article aims to help to fill the gap, which is all the more serious since it concerns a class of instruments that (unlike those of the plucked-string type) was the most valued from the 18th century onwards—not only from a musical point of view, but also from a purely economic perspective.
I refer in particular to three previously unpublished inventories of the stock of well-known violinari operating in Rome: Francesco Emiliani (1736), Giulio Cesare Gigli (1794) and Giovanni Maria Valenzano (1826).
To these we may add Magno Longo (1704), one of just two guitar-makers (‘chitarrari’) of German origin, from whose workshop we also find documentation concerning the production of violins.
I also present a review of the instruments played by several Roman violinists during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Related Results
Niccolo Paganini: Life, illnes and virtuosity
Niccolo Paganini: Life, illnes and virtuosity
Niccolo Pagani was born in Genoa, October 27, 1782, and died May 27, 1840.
He was an Italian composer considered one of the archetypes of violin virtuosity and one of the greatest ...
ANALISIS TEKNIK PERMAINAN BIOLA PADA LAGU INTRODUZIONE E VARIAZIONI SUL TEMA NEL COR PIU NON MI SENTO PER VIOLIN SOLO KARYA NICCOLO PAGANINI
ANALISIS TEKNIK PERMAINAN BIOLA PADA LAGU INTRODUZIONE E VARIAZIONI SUL TEMA NEL COR PIU NON MI SENTO PER VIOLIN SOLO KARYA NICCOLO PAGANINI
Abstrak Nel Cor Piu Non Mi Sento merupakan sebuah komposisi karya Giovani Paisiello, seorang komposer berpengaruh dan populer pada akhir 1700an di Italia. Lagu tersebut kemudian di...
Bartók and his Violin Concerto
Bartók and his Violin Concerto
It is not surprising that Hungary's greatest composer should write a violin concerto whose qualities are unique. A good concerto has, among other obligations, that of displaying th...
Contemporary Archival Appraisal Methods and Preservation Decision-Making
Contemporary Archival Appraisal Methods and Preservation Decision-Making
Archival administrators are beginning the search for administrative tools that rationalize difficult preservation priority decision-making processes. Some are suggesting that the n...
Giovanni d’Aragona (1456‒1485) szerepe Mátyás király mecénásságában
Giovanni d’Aragona (1456‒1485) szerepe Mátyás király mecénásságában
King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary (1458‒1490), son of the “Scourge of the Turks,” John Hunyadi, was a foremost patron of early Renaissance art. He was only fourteen years old in 14...
Vitalistic Discourses of Violin Pedagogy in the Early Twentieth Century
Vitalistic Discourses of Violin Pedagogy in the Early Twentieth Century
Abstract
The pedagogical treatise is generally understood to be a manual of singing or instrumental techniques that is largely practical in approach, yet a critique ...
From Tone to Tune—Carl Stumpf and the Violin
From Tone to Tune—Carl Stumpf and the Violin
This article investigates the work of philosopher and experimental psychologist Carl Stumpf with a focus on embedding his scientific perspective in a practice of musicianship. Stum...
TEKNIK PERMAINAN LEFT HAND PIZZICATO PADA KARYA NEL COR PIU NON MI SENTO ARANSEMEN NICCOLO PAGANINI UNTUK VIOLIN BAGIAN TEMA
TEKNIK PERMAINAN LEFT HAND PIZZICATO PADA KARYA NEL COR PIU NON MI SENTO ARANSEMEN NICCOLO PAGANINI UNTUK VIOLIN BAGIAN TEMA
Nel Cor Piu Non Mi Sento Aransemen Niccolo Paganini menjadi salah satu karya masterpiece dari Niccolo Paganini. Karya ini memiliki sepuluh bagian, salah satunya adalah Tema yang te...