Violoncellum

Violoncellum[1](Italiane violoncello) est chordophonum arcuatum (et aliquando digito tactum), cui plerumque sunt quattuor[2] nervi in quintis perfectis intonatum.

Violoncellum hodiernum.

Fabricatores instrumentorum

Violoncella facta sunt a lyrificibus[3] hominibus chordophonorum faciendorum et reficiendorum a citharis ad violina peritis. Inter clarissimi violoncellorum lyrifices a se factorum numerantur sequentes.

  • Nicolaus Amatius et alii in familia Amatiana
  • Gulielmus Forster (Anglicus)
  • Nicolaus Gagliano
  • Mattaeus Goffriller
  • Ioannes Baptista Guadagnini
  • Iosephus Guarnerius
  • Dominicus Montagnana
  • Ioannes Baptista Rogeri
  • Franciscus Ruggierius
  • Stephanus Scarampella
  • Antonius Stradivarius
  • David Tecchler
  • Carolus Iosephus Testore
  • Ioannes Baptista Vuillaume

Media


Nexus interni

  • Apocalyptica
  • Cello Rock
  • Cithara Brahmsiana
  • Concentus Duplex pro Violina et Violoncello
  • Quadricinium fidium
  • Rasputina
  • Ütogardon, instrumentum percussivum Hungaricum, violoncelli constructioni simile
  • Violoncellum electricum

Notae

Bibliographia

Spatium tonorum.
Instrumentum magnitudinis octavae partis, cum violoncello magnitudinis usitatae.
  • Bonta, Stephen. grovemusic.com "Violoncello." Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (situs lucrativus).
  • Cyr, Mary. 1982. "Basses and basse continue in the Orchestra of the Paris Opéra 1700-1764." Early Music 18 (Aprilis): 155–70.
  • Grassineau, James. 1740. A Musical Dictionary. Londinii: J. Wilcox.
  • Ghigi, Marcella. 1999. Il violoncello. Conoscere la tecnica per esprimere la musica. Praefatio Marii Brunello. Mediolani: Casa Musicale Sonzogno. ISBN 88-87318-08-5.
  • Holman, Peter. 1982. "The English Royal Violin Consort in the Sixteenth Century." Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association 109: 39–59. doi:10.1093/jrma/109.1.39.
  • Jesselson, Robert. 1991. "The Etymology of Violoncello: Implications on Literature in the Early History of the Cello." Strings Magazine 22 (Ian.-Feb.). URL.
  • Machover, Tod. 2007. "My Cello." In Evocative objects: things we think with, ed. Sherry Turkle. Cantabrigiae Massachusettae: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-20168-1.
  • National Music Museum. The King Violoncello by Andrea Amati, Cremona, after 1538.
  • Woodfield, Ian, Howard Mayer Brown, Peter le Huray, et John Stevens, eds. 1984. The Early History of the Viol. Cantabrigiae: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-24292-4.

Nexus externi

Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Violoncellum spectant.