Post by Dick Glasgow on Jul 9, 2007 2:15:36 GMT 1
History Of the Hammered Dulcimer
by Paul Gifford
In Europe:
In America:
You can also check out the Mel Bay version of this, which includes a couple of photographs & a tune, plus a photo of Paul himself & an E-mail link.
The Hammered Dulcimer: A History @ Mel Bay
The Hammered Dulcimer (Hackbrett) A History by Musica Antiqua
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Hammer Dulcimer History and Playing
by Paul Gifford
In Europe:
The hammered dulcimer has a history in the United States going back three hundred years.
Almost extinct forty years ago, it has witnessed an amazing comeback. In its current revived form, however, there is little connection with the older tradition.
This little article attempts to explain that tradition.
The instrument seems to have appeared independently during the 15th century, probably as a result of technological advances in the process of drawing wire.
The availability of affordable tempered brass wire allowed experiments to be made which created the clavichord and caused changes to instruments already in existence.
In France, the Latin/Greek word dulce melos (or in French, doulcemèr) was applied to several instruments, but the one that stuck was the metal-strung psaltery usually struck with two sticks.
In Germany, someone applied four double courses of metal strings and a bridge to the "string drum," a long box with two heavy gut strings struck with one or two rods and used as a droning rhythm instrument, and created the Hackbrett ("chopping block").
In distant Persia, the santur, probably related to the already existing kanun (a plucked instrument, related to the European psaltery), appeared during this century.
By the early 16th century, the form of the European dulcimer as we know it----a trapezoidal box with courses of multiple wire strings resting over a bridge or bridge, one of which divides the length of the strings into the ratio of 2:3----had evolved.
In its early years, the instrument was chiefly played as a pastime by aristocratic ladies (France and England) and by more middle-class city dwellers (Switzerland and Germany), but minstrels soon adopted it and spread it further.
Under the Latin-Greek name cymbalum Hungarian clergy and students played it, and by 1600, minstrels were using it there and in Poland and Russia.
It seems to have entered England during the 15th century through aristocratic connections with French courts, but in the 16th century entered a slight decline.
At this time, the word was also applied to an end-blown flute or a double-reed instrument, and it was in this sense that translators of the Bible used the word "dulcimer" in the third chapter of Daniel.
A renewed interest in the metal-strung dulcimer seems to have developed after 1660 in England.
In this period it was very common in taverns in London, sometimes accompanying violins, and it also became a kind of cheap harpsichord as well, found in the homes of gentry and more prosperous city dwellers.
The Hammered Dulcimer: A History
Almost extinct forty years ago, it has witnessed an amazing comeback. In its current revived form, however, there is little connection with the older tradition.
This little article attempts to explain that tradition.
The instrument seems to have appeared independently during the 15th century, probably as a result of technological advances in the process of drawing wire.
The availability of affordable tempered brass wire allowed experiments to be made which created the clavichord and caused changes to instruments already in existence.
In France, the Latin/Greek word dulce melos (or in French, doulcemèr) was applied to several instruments, but the one that stuck was the metal-strung psaltery usually struck with two sticks.
In Germany, someone applied four double courses of metal strings and a bridge to the "string drum," a long box with two heavy gut strings struck with one or two rods and used as a droning rhythm instrument, and created the Hackbrett ("chopping block").
In distant Persia, the santur, probably related to the already existing kanun (a plucked instrument, related to the European psaltery), appeared during this century.
By the early 16th century, the form of the European dulcimer as we know it----a trapezoidal box with courses of multiple wire strings resting over a bridge or bridge, one of which divides the length of the strings into the ratio of 2:3----had evolved.
In its early years, the instrument was chiefly played as a pastime by aristocratic ladies (France and England) and by more middle-class city dwellers (Switzerland and Germany), but minstrels soon adopted it and spread it further.
Under the Latin-Greek name cymbalum Hungarian clergy and students played it, and by 1600, minstrels were using it there and in Poland and Russia.
It seems to have entered England during the 15th century through aristocratic connections with French courts, but in the 16th century entered a slight decline.
At this time, the word was also applied to an end-blown flute or a double-reed instrument, and it was in this sense that translators of the Bible used the word "dulcimer" in the third chapter of Daniel.
A renewed interest in the metal-strung dulcimer seems to have developed after 1660 in England.
In this period it was very common in taverns in London, sometimes accompanying violins, and it also became a kind of cheap harpsichord as well, found in the homes of gentry and more prosperous city dwellers.
The Hammered Dulcimer: A History
In America:
It was in this second social setting that the dulcimer spread from England to its Atlantic colonies by the early 18th century.
References to it suggest it found a place in wealthier homes in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York City, and Philadelphia, though a professional player made a tour in 1752 through most of the colonies.
It is also certain that Germans immigrating to Pennsylvania in this period brought the Hackbrett, which accompanied the violin at dances, as it had in Germany.
Immigrants from Ireland probably also brought it to America.
After independence, the instrument moved with the population to the newer settlements in the interior.
Surviving instruments and literary references suggest that it was an instrument used in the parlors of wealthier families, at least before 1830.
Unlike the more prestigious and desirable piano, it was cheaper and did not require a music master to learn it.
The makers of the dulcimer also tended to live in the interior, rather than on the seaboard cities, where manufacturers of pianos and other instruments tended to operate.
Among the earliest known dulcimer manufacturers were Richard Vernon, of Jefferson County, Indiana, who shipped flatboat loads of his products down to New Orleans in the 1830s, and Philander Cogswell, of Steuben County, New York, active at the same time.
By 1848, when the unknown C. Haight wrote and published a method, commercial production was fully underway.
In the latter 1850s, two factories, producing hundreds of dulcimers per year, were located around Sherman, New York.
Both located second factories on the Kentucky side of the Ohio River and had agents as far west as Missouri.
Between 1850 and 1880, traveling salesmen and makers themselves sold thousands of instruments all over the country.
The nature of manufacture and distribution was different from that of the piano, banjo, or guitar.
Dulcimer makers and manufacturers were located in rural areas, rather than urban areas, and sold them directly or through salesman, rather than through catalogs and music retailers.
Most of the purchasers were probably farmers who bought them for their children to play alone or to participate in family music making.
One common use of the instrument was as accompaniment to the fiddle.
This style was prevalent in an area stretching from western New York State and northern Pennsylvania westward through northern Ohio and Indiana, parts of Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and probably elsewhere, including Utah.
There were few players in this region who played more than a few tunes on it; most played "chords" in four keys (A, D, G, and C major) and three rhythms (2/4, 3/4, and 6/8).
This was adequate for most informal rural dance music, which was the instrument's main venue.
Elsewhere, the dulcimer was mostly played as a solo instrument, although sometimes with other instruments, but "chording" was unknown.
These areas included northern West Virginia, Tennessee, New England, and probably other areas.
As reed organs and then pianos became affordable, the interest in the dulcimer declined, and by 1920 it was rare.
Here and there, individuals continued to play it at square dances, family reunions, and neighborhood parties, and for their own amusement.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, a revival of the instrument began to take place, and it has continued unabated since.
The Hammered Dulcimer: A History
References to it suggest it found a place in wealthier homes in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York City, and Philadelphia, though a professional player made a tour in 1752 through most of the colonies.
It is also certain that Germans immigrating to Pennsylvania in this period brought the Hackbrett, which accompanied the violin at dances, as it had in Germany.
Immigrants from Ireland probably also brought it to America.
After independence, the instrument moved with the population to the newer settlements in the interior.
Surviving instruments and literary references suggest that it was an instrument used in the parlors of wealthier families, at least before 1830.
Unlike the more prestigious and desirable piano, it was cheaper and did not require a music master to learn it.
The makers of the dulcimer also tended to live in the interior, rather than on the seaboard cities, where manufacturers of pianos and other instruments tended to operate.
Among the earliest known dulcimer manufacturers were Richard Vernon, of Jefferson County, Indiana, who shipped flatboat loads of his products down to New Orleans in the 1830s, and Philander Cogswell, of Steuben County, New York, active at the same time.
By 1848, when the unknown C. Haight wrote and published a method, commercial production was fully underway.
In the latter 1850s, two factories, producing hundreds of dulcimers per year, were located around Sherman, New York.
Both located second factories on the Kentucky side of the Ohio River and had agents as far west as Missouri.
Between 1850 and 1880, traveling salesmen and makers themselves sold thousands of instruments all over the country.
The nature of manufacture and distribution was different from that of the piano, banjo, or guitar.
Dulcimer makers and manufacturers were located in rural areas, rather than urban areas, and sold them directly or through salesman, rather than through catalogs and music retailers.
Most of the purchasers were probably farmers who bought them for their children to play alone or to participate in family music making.
One common use of the instrument was as accompaniment to the fiddle.
This style was prevalent in an area stretching from western New York State and northern Pennsylvania westward through northern Ohio and Indiana, parts of Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, and probably elsewhere, including Utah.
There were few players in this region who played more than a few tunes on it; most played "chords" in four keys (A, D, G, and C major) and three rhythms (2/4, 3/4, and 6/8).
This was adequate for most informal rural dance music, which was the instrument's main venue.
Elsewhere, the dulcimer was mostly played as a solo instrument, although sometimes with other instruments, but "chording" was unknown.
These areas included northern West Virginia, Tennessee, New England, and probably other areas.
As reed organs and then pianos became affordable, the interest in the dulcimer declined, and by 1920 it was rare.
Here and there, individuals continued to play it at square dances, family reunions, and neighborhood parties, and for their own amusement.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, a revival of the instrument began to take place, and it has continued unabated since.
The Hammered Dulcimer: A History
You can also check out the Mel Bay version of this, which includes a couple of photographs & a tune, plus a photo of Paul himself & an E-mail link.
The Hammered Dulcimer: A History @ Mel Bay
The Hammered Dulcimer (Hackbrett) A History by Musica Antiqua
In English-speaking countries, dulcimer (or dowcemere, dulcimor, dulcimur, doucemelle, doulcemelle, dolcimela, or dolcema, all from dulce melos, Greek for sweet sound) was the name given to the type of psaltery or box zither which had a trapizoidal soundbox and which was played by striking the strings with hammers. In areas around Germany, the term was Hackbrett (or hackbrad, hackbrade, hakkebrett, or hakkebord) meaning chopping board or chopping block.
The King James translation of the Bible occasionally translates nebel as dulcimer, but the ancient Hebrews didn't have a dulcimer as we know it from the Middle Ages.
A 12th century ivory book-cover made in Byzantium contains oldest known evidence of the typical trapiziform instrument with lateral strings.
Then no other dulcimer representation is found until the middle of the 1400's, when the instrument was introduced to western Europe.
Shortly thereafter, dulcimers were found in Germany, Italy, Poland, Hungary, Bohemia, Flanders, northern France and England.
Dulcimers often had one or two bridges over which the strings crossed providing the opportunity for more pitches because the performer could strike a sound on each side of the bridge.
In 15th century images, dulcimers had single courses of six to nine strings and were played on the lap or on a table.
The hammers seem to be held between the index and middle fingers.
A century later, the multiple bridges were more common, with between eight and twelve double courses.
A neck strap could be used for portability. Soundboards were commonly decorated.
While images portray the dulcimer held by angels and individuals of the upper classes, Gehard de Jode portrayed it in 1600 along with the hurdy-gurdy and bagpipe.
In 1609 a dulcimer was recorded along with a violin in a ship's log in Jamestown, Virginia.
The Hammered Dulcimer (Hackbrett) A History by Musica Antiqua
The King James translation of the Bible occasionally translates nebel as dulcimer, but the ancient Hebrews didn't have a dulcimer as we know it from the Middle Ages.
A 12th century ivory book-cover made in Byzantium contains oldest known evidence of the typical trapiziform instrument with lateral strings.
Then no other dulcimer representation is found until the middle of the 1400's, when the instrument was introduced to western Europe.
Shortly thereafter, dulcimers were found in Germany, Italy, Poland, Hungary, Bohemia, Flanders, northern France and England.
Dulcimers often had one or two bridges over which the strings crossed providing the opportunity for more pitches because the performer could strike a sound on each side of the bridge.
In 15th century images, dulcimers had single courses of six to nine strings and were played on the lap or on a table.
The hammers seem to be held between the index and middle fingers.
A century later, the multiple bridges were more common, with between eight and twelve double courses.
A neck strap could be used for portability. Soundboards were commonly decorated.
While images portray the dulcimer held by angels and individuals of the upper classes, Gehard de Jode portrayed it in 1600 along with the hurdy-gurdy and bagpipe.
In 1609 a dulcimer was recorded along with a violin in a ship's log in Jamestown, Virginia.
The Hammered Dulcimer (Hackbrett) A History by Musica Antiqua
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Hammer Dulcimer History and Playing
It is no wonder that King Nebuchadnezzar's decree was opposed, for the sound of the dulcimer makes one feel much more like dancing than "worshipping." In fact, the modest revival of dulcimer playing in America seems due in large measure to the delightful manner in which dance tunes can be played on it. The hammer dulcimer is capable of a range of tones from a sort of music-box sound to powerful and percussive piano-like effects which can stand out in any band.
Although the plucked dulcimer (also called Appalachian or mountain dulcimer) shares the same name, the two instruments differ considerably in form, sound, evolution, and manner of playing. Both have strings stretched across a neckless soundbox, which identifies them in certain classification schemes as belonging to the zither form. The plucked dulcimer relies on the shortening (fretting or stopping) of strings to produce many pitches with one or few strings. Guitars, banjos, and fiddles work in this way. The alternative is to have one string or course of strings tuned to each desired pitch, as in the harps, piano, psaltery, and hammer dulcimer.
The name dulcimer comes from the Latin and Greek works dulce and melos, which combine to mean "sweet tune." The meaning and the biblical connections no doubt made the word attractive to those who named the Appalachian dulcimer. All evidence seems to indicate that the Appalachian dulcimer dates back no more than 200 years and that Bibles refer to the hammered type.
The true hammer dulcimer is a close relative to the psaltery, the chief difference being that the psaltery is usually plucked and the dulcimer is usually struck. Early varieties were rather simple, having relatively few strings which passed over bridges only at the sides.
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Hammer Dulcimer History and Playing
Although the plucked dulcimer (also called Appalachian or mountain dulcimer) shares the same name, the two instruments differ considerably in form, sound, evolution, and manner of playing. Both have strings stretched across a neckless soundbox, which identifies them in certain classification schemes as belonging to the zither form. The plucked dulcimer relies on the shortening (fretting or stopping) of strings to produce many pitches with one or few strings. Guitars, banjos, and fiddles work in this way. The alternative is to have one string or course of strings tuned to each desired pitch, as in the harps, piano, psaltery, and hammer dulcimer.
The name dulcimer comes from the Latin and Greek works dulce and melos, which combine to mean "sweet tune." The meaning and the biblical connections no doubt made the word attractive to those who named the Appalachian dulcimer. All evidence seems to indicate that the Appalachian dulcimer dates back no more than 200 years and that Bibles refer to the hammered type.
The true hammer dulcimer is a close relative to the psaltery, the chief difference being that the psaltery is usually plucked and the dulcimer is usually struck. Early varieties were rather simple, having relatively few strings which passed over bridges only at the sides.
Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Hammer Dulcimer History and Playing