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Bagpipe
The bagpipes have existed for at least 3,000 years and although it is regarded as the national instrument of Scotland, the bagpipe has found its way into almost every part of the world nowadays: the English Northumbrian pipe, the Spaniard gaita and the French bellows-blown musette that was very fashionable until the 18th century.


Balalaika
A popular Russian folk family of guitars in various sizes. Triangular body with a fretted fingerboard and usually with 3 strings. Can be played in large ensembles or to accompany singing and dancing.


Bandoneon
The chromatic German type of concertina which was invented by Heinrich Ban in the 1840s, and is still popular in traditional tango music. The Bandoneon has the same notes on the push and pull, but a different fingering system than the concertina. Instead of a keyboard it has 75 buttons producing single notes.


Bombarde
A large Shawm. Also called 'pommer'.




ChitarroneChitarrone - Allegory of Music (1649) Laurent de La Hire, Charles B. Curtis Fund
A 16-17th century popular theorbo-like instrument, mostly used to accompany solo singing. Metal or gut strings (six double courses over the fingerboard and eight single bass strings). A descendant of the lute.


Cimbalom
A Gipsy-Hungarian Dulcimer which sometimes is also seen in the concert-hall, as it has been used in works by Liszt, Kodály (in "Háry János") and Bartók.


Clavichord
Developed in 14th century from the monochord, the clavichord was a small rectangular keyboard instrument with a small dynamic range, therefore mostly used as a solo instrument. Sound is produced by tangents striking the strings and remain in contact with the strings while they are vibrating. Used throughout Western Europe until the 18th century.


Concertina
Accordion-like with buttons for the fingers, instead of a keyboard. Consisting of two hexagonal ends connected by bellows which are opened and closed by the hands. An enormously popular instrument since the early 19th century, until it was superseded by the accordion with the piano-like keyboard. Nowadays, mostly played by folk musicians.


Cornett
A Renaissance woodwind instrument with finger-holes and a cup-shaped mouthpiece (similar to a trumpet's mouthpiece). The name means 'little horn' and spelt with double 't' to avoid confusion with the cornet. Made of ivory or wood and bound in leather. See also the German curved cornett which is called Zink.

CrumhornListen to the tenor crumhorn
Double-reed family of wind instruments in a few sizes of different pitch. Probably developed in Italy in the late 15th century, the crumhorn became an important instrument in the European music of the 16th-17th centuries. The name means 'a curved horn'.



Curtal
Curtal
A Renaissance wind instrument, with double reeds and conical bore. It was developed in mid-16th century, and was the ancestor of the bassoon. In addition to the bass, there were also soprano, alto, tenor and the bass size curtal, which was known as double curtal.


DulcimerBonanni's Antique Musical Instruments and Their Players, Frank L. Harrison & Joan Rimmer (editors), Dover Publications, Inc., New-YorkListen to the Dulcimer
A string instrument of the box zither family to be struck with a pair of light wooden hammers, held in the player's hands. Probably derived from the psaltery in Europe during the late 15th century, it is still a popular folk instrument in Central Europe and many other cultures all over the world.


Fanfare, fanfare trumpetMusicians in Angvin - ancient Trumpet player amongst different players (1375)
Valveless instrument designed for ceremonial purpose. The Chotzotzerah which is the silver trumpet used in the temple service in biblical times ("...use them for calling the community together and for having the camps set out." - Numbers 10:2).


Glastonbury Pipe
This reed instrument is based on a stone figure found in Glastonbury, England, an ancient Iron Age lake village. Glastonbury Abbey was also a place of worship of Druids and an object of pilgrimages in the Middle Ages.


Harmonium - BinaSangeet made by the Indian firm - Bina
Harmonium, Reed organ
Mainly used to accompany hymns, as a substitute for the organ, this is a small portable instrument of the reed-organ family, in which pedals activate a bellows which drives air through the reeds.



Hautbois
The smaller member of the shawm family, which was taken in the 17th century into English as 'oboe'.



Hurdy-Gurdy / Viella a Roue / wheel fiddleThe Hurdy-Gurdy Player (1620-30) Georges De la Tour, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Nantes
A stringed instrument with a keyboard and a wheel cranked by a handle instead of the bowing action of the violin. It was found throughout Europe since the 12th century. Mostly used for dance music.


Kettledrums
A cauldron-shaped drum; the most familiar are the orchestral Timpani. Often paired, they can be found in Arabic music as naqqara, in England as Nakers, in France as nacaires and in the Indian Tabla. Kettledrums have been known since the 2000's BC in Mesopotamia and were brought to Europe during the Crusades in the 13th century.

Lira da braccioAppollo and the muse - detail (1511) Raphael
A Renaissance bowed string instrument, with a violin's body, a wide fingerboard and seven strings. Mostly used to provide a chordal accompaniment. Superseded by the violin in the early 17th century.




Lira da gamba
A renaissance bowed string instrument played on the leg ('da gamba').


LuteConcert (1485-95) Lorenzo Costa, National Gallery, LondonListen to the lute
Plucked string instrument, usually played by plucking with the fingers. It is a descendant of the Arab Oud (the word 'lute' is derived from the Arabic 'al-ud') and was brought to Spain through the Moorish conquest and spread to all Europe, where it has been a central instrument from the late Middle Ages to the 18th century.


LyreKing David is playing the Harp (12th century) from an English book
Ancient string instrument with the known examples from the 3rd millennium BC in Mesopotamia and later in the Mediterranean. The lyre was traditionally regarded as the instrument of King David in the Bible. The lyre's descendant is the Welsh plucked or bowed lyre, known as the Crwth.


Natural Horn
Horn without valves, which can produce only the notes of the harmonic series, together with some obtained by placing the hand in the bell of the instrument. Current in the 18th century.


Oboe d'amore
The alto of the oboe family. Commonly used in baroque music (as in J.S. Bach's St Matthew Passion). Pitched a minor 3rd below the normal oboe (in A).


OcarinaListen to the ocarinaGo to a great site about the ocarina
A wind instrument without keys and the shape of an egg or potato, with small holes for the fingers. It is made of earthenware clay or metal and can be found in all parts of the world. The ceramic Ocarina is probably more than 12000 years old and its origin is said to go back to a Mesopotamian primitive musical instrument cuckoo whisle. The name means 'Little goose egg' in Italian, referring to the shape that was developed there in the 19th century. In America, it became known as the "sweet potato" and it became so popular that during World War ll the U.S. government issued ocarinas to its soldiers as a morale booster.


Pan pipe / Syrinx / Pan fluteBonanni's Antique Musical Instruments and Their Players, Frank L. Harrison & Joan Rimmer (editors), Dover Publications, Inc., New-YorkListen to the Pan pipe
A medieval folk instrument of classical antiquity, made of a series of short vertical pipes fixed side by side and graduated in length in order to give a scale when blown. The name is for the ancient Greek god Pan. Mozart used it in 'The Magic flute' ('Die Zauberflöte') as the instrument of Papageno.


Portative organMusician Angels [detail] (1485) Hans Memling, Koninkijk Museum, Antwerp
Medieval small organ which was carried by the player, with flue-pipes. Made from 1100-1650.


Post horn
A small brass instrument used in the past for signalling by postilions, coachmen and guards. Without valves or keys, it produces only the notes of one harmonic series. It is sometimes circular but often in a straight unbent tube. Predecessor of the cornet.


PsalteryListen to the Psaltery
A popular medieval string instrument, played by plucking with a plectra or the fingers, although it can be also played with a bow. Its shape was influenced by its forerunner - the Middle Eastern qanun which entered Moorish Spain and from there to other parts of Europe, around the 12th century. The name might have derived from the Greek psallein meaning plucked with fingers


Rebec
A bowed stringed instrument used in European art music since the 8th century (from the Middle Eastern rebab or rabab) and during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. In the Renaissance there were several sizes of the rebec: bass, tenor and soprano. The number of the rebec's strings varied from 1 to 5 and even more.


SackbutProcession of the religious orders of Antwerp - detail (1616) Denis van Alsloot, Museo del Prado, Madrid
Early Trombone, used between 15th-18th centuries, with a narrower bore than the modern instrument. Derived from 'saqueboute' ('pull-push' in French).


Santoor
A Persian string instrument introduced to Indian classical music during the 15th century. Made of a wooden box, it has approximately 100 strings. A relative of the European hammered dulcimer, the Chinese yang chin; and the Hungarian cembalom.


SerpentBonanni's Antique Musical Instruments and Their Players, Frank L. Harrison & Joan Rimmer (editors), Dover Publications, Inc., New-York
Obsolete S-shaped wood horn with fingerholes, bass member of the cornett family. It is blown with a cup shaped mouthpiece which is very similar to that of brass instruments, such as the trombone or Euphonium. Historically made from wood, although other materials such as brass were also used. This very curved kind of cornett was invented in the 16th century to double male voices in plainsong, in Christian church music.


Shawm / chalumeau / SchalmeiBonanni's Antique Musical Instruments and Their Players, Frank L. Harrison & Joan Rimmer (editors), Dover Publications, Inc., New-York
A woodwind instrument, double-reeded forerunner of the oboe. It was much used from the late 13th to the 17th centuries. It is a family of instruments in which the bombarde is the largest. A relative to the sahnai from India and the Middle Eastern zurna.





Shofar
The ram's horn of the Bible which is still in use on the most solemn rituals in the Jewish synagogue, in Israel and throughout the world. Produces only two notes.


Side drumsDe Musica - Drummer amongst different players (1375) Boethius, Biblioteca Nazionale, Naples
British name for two of the Snare drums: a small drum which is slung slightly to one side when marching. Played with wooden sticks. The earliest known side drum was the tabor.


SpinetMusic (c. 1760) Gaspare TraversiBonanni's Antique Musical Instruments and Their Players, Frank L. Harrison & Joan Rimmer (editors), Dover Publications, Inc., New-York
A wing-shaped keyboard instrument. A small type of harpsichord whose strings run diagonally.


Tabor
A small rope-tensioned drum with snares, mostly used for rustic dance music, military music or as a background music for jugglers. The medieval tabor was the earliest known side drum. It was represented in early 13th and 14th century art. One performer can accompany himself with the tabor by beating the drum with one hand while the other hand plays a pipe.


Theorboe / theorboLa musicienne by Van der Helst, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Renaissance plucked instrument, first developed in Italy around the end of the 16th century. A descendant of the lute with the characteristic round back. Frequently used as an accompanying instrument and was much used as a continuo instrument in large ensembles. Apart from its extra (S-shaped) neck and shorter neck it is almost identical with the Chitarrone.


Transverse flute / traversoConcert of Women (1530-40) master of Female Half-length, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg
A name for the ordinary side-blown flute (held crosswise) from the end-blown recorder (which held downwards).


VihuelaMezzetin (c.1718-20) Jean-Antoine Watteau, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Spanish Renaissance Guitar-like plucked instrument, strung like the lute. Superseded by the guitar in the 17th century. The word also seemed to apply to many kinds of string instruments in the Renaissance but usually referred to the vihuela de mano which was played with the hand, instead of a bow or a plectrum.

Viola da Gamba / violchild plays the bass viol (1649) Laurent de La HireListen to the treble viol
Bowed stringed instrument of various sizes, superseded by the violins. Sometimes specifically applied to the bass viol. All family members are called viola 'da gamba' (for the leg) as they are rested between or on the legs. The viols' frets and shape is the most important difference from the violin family.



Viola da braccio
Arm violin. Renaissance bowed string instrument, played on the arm.




VirginalMan and Woman Sitting at the Virginal (1658-60) Gabriel Metsu, National Gallery, LondonA Lady Standing at the Virginal (1673) by Jan Vermeer van Delft, National Gallery, London
A small type of harpsichord whose strings run parallel to the keyboard. It has the shape of a clavichord but its metal strings produce the sound of a harpsichord. Also known is the double virginal, in which two keyboards are superimposed and played separately or coupled.


Zink
German name for the cornett. It is a Renaissance great virtuoso wind instrument used in serious and dance music. Combines a trumpet mouthpiece with a wooden or ivory tube. The sound of the zink is very close to the sound of a human voice and can be played very softly or as loud as a brass instrument.


Zither
A family of string instruments descendant of medieval psaltery, prevalent in Austria and Bavaria. Strings are plucked by the fingers of either hand. The Zithers are usually hammered (as in the dulcimer) or plucked (the psaltery), but the hurdy-gurdy, which is bowed with a wheel, and the blown aeolian harp. The German autoharp is an adaptation from the late 19th century.

"And the king made of the almog trees pillars for the house of the LORD, and for the king's house,
harps also and psalteries for singers" (1 Kings, chapter 10:12)

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