| |
Mandolins: A Brief History
The history of the mandolin |
Its origin was probably the 'oud', which can still seen in
the near east today, which after it's spread at the time of the Moorish
invasions of Europe, evolved into various forms of lute during the middle ages.
By the mid-sixteenth century, the small, shallow-bowled, high-pitched members of
the lute family, originally 'gitterns' in England, and 'quinterns' in Germany, came
to be known as 'mandora' or 'mandola', and 'mandores' in France. The
smallest version was called the 'mandolina' in Italy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Arabic Oud |
Oud |
Gittern, J. Bisgood |
Gittern |
Mandore |
Modern arabic buzuk |
Most had 3 or four courses of gut strings, running over 7 to 9
frets on a flat fingerboard, to a reclining carved peghead. The scale length was
about half that of the lute, and later strings were added in double courses.
From about 1650, the
mandores with 5 or 6 courses of double strings began to die out, but the
soprano version became known as the mandolino continued to develop, and were
tuned (gg) (bb) e'e' a'a' d"d" g"g". This is the instrument of Vivaldi's mandolin concerto.
Milanese or baroque mandolin gradually developed with 6 of
gut strings, tuned g b e' a' d" g". This in turn became the Lombardic
mandolin (also called mandore) with 6 gut strings, still tuned g b e' a'
d" g", from the beginning of the 19th century. It had a rounder body,
raised fingerboard and often an oval sound hole, with no rosette.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mandolino/pandurine |
Mandolino (repro- L. Faria, Brazil) |
Mandolino |
Milanese mandolino |
Lombardic mandolin |
Lombardic mandolin/mandore |
At the same time in France, a small instrument called a mandore
developed, with 6 strings tuned E A d g b e'. The Genoses mandolin,
with 12 strings and rear pegs also made an appearance in the 18th century, but
did not last long. Another short-lived instrument was the Cremona mandolin
with 4 strings tuned g d' a' e" .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
French mandore |
Genoevse mandolino (repro by Pandini |
Genovese mandolino |
Genovese repro |
Cremona/Brescian mandolin |
Cremonese by Cecconi |
Finally in Naples, from all these strands, and the Turkish tanburs
and buzoks, the Neapolitan mandolin was developed in the mid 18th
century. The
Neapolitan mandolin,
which became so popular during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It
seems to have been made from about 1760 onwards, with 8 frets, and a
fingerboard flush with the belly. The mandolin had 4 double courses of
metal strings, tuned in the violin tuning gg' d'd' a'a' e''e''. In the
beginning, as it was difficult to get proper metal strings, the highest string
was often made of gut. Important features were the cant in the top, to resist
increased pressure from metal strings, and a floating bridge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Early mandolins/mandolinos from 1750s to 1850s |
Nickel frets and geared metal machine heads
improved the instrument from about 1850, replacing the rear pegs with initially
enclosed, but later open tuners to the side. There was a fashion for oval sound holes
and butterfly tortoise shell scratch-plates, sometimes backed with gold leaf,
though many other scratch plate designs were current. It was played with a
plectrum.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Salsedo 1899 |
Calace 1897 |
U. Ceccherini |
E. DE CRISTOFARO |
G. Lingetti 189? |
Maratea 1897 |
With the development of the 'modern' Neapolitan mandolin, it is
important to remember, that all the other styles did not immediately cease to be
made. Many of these different styles of mandolin existed side by side; the
popularity of one declining gradually as the popularity of another rose
gradually. Thus Lombardy and Milanese mandolins were still made right up to the
end of the 19th century, as illustrated below.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hybrid by S.Casini Firenze 19C |
Lombardo by Cecconi |
Milanese by Carlo Albertini 1870 |
Milanese by Carisch & Janichen 19C |
Milanese by Lavezzari 19C |
Lombardo-esque by P. Gavelli |
In Spain, the early lutes seem to have evolved into the
'bandurria',
a mandolin like instrument with 6 courses of strings, and the Portuguese 'guittara',
larger than the mandolins, but both with the characteristic 'floating
bridge'. It
may have been the latter that led to the development of the flat back mandolin,
from the original 12 stringed instrument. In Germany in contrast, the medieval
lute seems to have evolved into the cittern, which remained little changed up to
the 20C waldzither (or forest cittern) with characteristic double courses
and floating bridge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jose Ramirez bandurria |
Contreras bandurria |
Portuguese guittaras |
waldzither Hamburg type |
Waldzither thuringer type |
At the end of the nineteenth century, the mandolin moved to
America with Italian immigrants, and became hugely popular. In 1900, a company
called Lyon & Healy boasted 'At any time you can find in our factory upwards
of 10,000 mandolins in various stages of construction'. They continued to be
made in Italy by many famous violin-making families, and throughout the rest of
Europe also. Almost all the mandolins
made before 1900 were the traditional bowl-back design.
At the turn of the century, an American, Orville
Gibson, filed a
patent that included a carved-top and flat back. This quickly became the
industry standard in the States. The Gibson company made two styles of mandolins, each having
the violin style of carved-tops and backs. The A-series mandolins had
symmetrical bodies (also referred to as teardrops), and the F-series had a
scroll on the bass side and two-points on the treble side. Each of these models
had either a round or oval sound hole until the 1920s. The
mandolinists of the era who were playing ragtime and dance tunes extolled the
virtues of the
Gibson mandolin, which was bigger and more powerful, but for the most part the
classical mandolinists disliked it, because the long fingerboard made it
impossible to play the more intricate, classical pieces. During twenties
America, the banjo became more popular, with the explosion of jazz, and the
popularity of the mandolin declined.
Lloyd Loar, a mandolin virtuoso and an expert on the science
of acoustics, joined the Gibson Company in 1919. It is said that he was the mind
behind the F-5 mandolin and signed about 250 of them. The top of a Style 5
instrument was braced with two tone bars, versus one on the violin. The
fingerboard raised off the top, as in violin design, allowed the top to
vibrate more freely. The neck on the F-5 was significantly longer, with three
more frets clear of the body than earlier Gibson models. The result was an
instrument with an extremely rich and powerful tone that Gibson were never
consistently able to reproduce after Loar left the company in December 1924.
These instruments were, and are now, still highly prized, but the height of mandolin popularity
had passed.
It was to see a resurgence in America in the 40s when the mandolin was
beginning to be used in a new form of country music called 'bluegrass'. The man
who coined the term, William "Bill" Monroe, played his mandolin, a
Loar F-5, very quickly, with brilliantly fast solo passages and a blues
influence.
Bluegrass and country music in America continue to ensure a place for the
mandolin, whilst new mandolin orchestras are being formed in the style of the
early twentieth century. In Europe, the folk and Celtic revivals have
provided the same boost for the mandolin's popularity, and it continues to be
made all over the world, in all of its various forms.
Many thanks to John Troughton, Don Lashomb, Daniel
Coolik and Mandolin Cafe, from whose articles this brief history has been
cobbled together.
|
| |
|