A network for historic guitars and vihuelas
I am planning to build myself a baroque guitar (based on either the 1688 or 1700 Stradivari), can anyone recommend a reference book that covers the construction of baroque guitars? I have plenty of books on the construction of modern classical guitars, and on baroque guitar music and stringing etc, but I need something that covers the differences in construction and construction methods used in baroque guitars. I'd be very grateful for any suggestions.
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Also on Stradivari's guitars, something that has been niggling at me for many years.
Almost all extant baroque guitars have bridges with moustachios. However a large proportion of those by Stradivari do not, and perhaps never have had? His best known instrument until fairly recently was the one in the Ashmolean. This does not have moustachios BUT did have during the 19th c. when it was illustrated in Hipkins and Gibb's book of 1888. (I have been told, although I have no idea how reliably, that it was being restored by the Hills, and that the repairer failed to survive the 1914-18 war.) Are some of the extant "Strads" copies of the Ashmolean instrument's current condition?
The only surviving Strad guitar with its original moustachios still in place is the "Guistiniani" (see below). Neither of the bridges, however, are original, albeit still being copied by makers all over the world, with some choosing the "Hill", others "Rawlins" type bridges (both, I believe, were made by either the Hill brothers themselves or whoever was working for them). Just as an example, for the very recent restoration of the "Sabionari" Strad guitar (which was announced on this forum a few weeks ago), the "Hill" bridge design (with its triangular-shaped slots) was chosen for the reconstruction; and the "HIll" rose too!? An odd sort of choice really for such an important historical guitar ...
I'm not quite sure which particular "battented" guitar you have in mind? Can you put up a scan, so as to get an idea?
Anyway, just to finish off with the Strad bridges, here is a compilation of those from three guitars, on two Stradivaris and one on G.Sellas, all of which once belonging to W.E.Hill & Sons:
It's pretty much clear that all of them were probably made about the same time and, quite possibly, by the same hand. Also, as far as I can see the soundboard on the "Rawlins" is not original but only the rose with its surrounding rim (from the original soundboard?) and the inlaid circle.
I'm attaching two photos taken directly from the Milan catalogue perhaps as much as thirty years ago. They were poor photos then and have not improved! Hope they will be sufficiently legible.
Q. Elizabeth's virginals are/were not in the instrument gallery of the V&A. They are/were kept in the series of 'period room' mock-ups.
What about suppliers who might have produced roses, tuning pegs, maybe mustaches? Is there evidence to show that there might have been suppliers of parts that makers like Strad. and others could have taken advantage of. If so that might throw a wrench into identifying instruments by those parts that were "mass" produced.
I attended a renaissance lute lecture with a prominent maker last summer where he mentioned historical references to soundboards (with roses carved), necks and bridges that were available from craftsmen that made only those parts and the implication was that they traveled about selling their goods.
Just wondering if that sort of thing might have carried over into the baroque and indeed many luthiers use these kinds of services today.
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