When was the flamenco guitar invented
The Spanish guitar in the eighteenth century increased in size, with a wider and deeper body. This instrument has a large internal space while maintaining a similar proportion in the plantilla body profile as the earlier Renaissance guitars, where the upper and lower bouts were more equal in size and were separated by a wide waist. This body shape would change, however, and Spanish guitar makers were again in the forefront of design innovation.
An instrument made in by Benito Sanchez de Aguilera These accentuated curves would become an increasingly popular feature of early nineteenth-century guitar making in Madrid. The soundboard of a guitar has to withstand a formidable amount of string tension while also being able to vibrate freely. Most guitars made before the mid- to late eighteenth century had no bracing on the soundboard below the bridge, and at this time some makers attempted to produce louder instruments by making the top of the guitar thinner and adding braces on the inside.
This period also saw the addition of a sixth course, and instruments became wider, making internal bracing all the more necessary. The earliest guitar with fan bracing is thought to have been made in Seville by Francesco Sanguino in From the beginning of the nineteenth century, the six double-course guitar, with pairs of unison strings, began to give ground to those with six strings.
There was a fascination with Spanish guitar music throughout the nineteenth century and a growing demand for these instruments to be used in concert halls. Works by Sor, Paganini, and Berlioz were transforming the amateur image of the guitar into an object of musical finesse. This period coincided with the arrival of German guitar maker C. Martin in New York, in Martin was well trained in the Viennese school of guitar making, but in America it soon became evident that he would have to accommodate the demand for Spanish-style guitars.
By the end of the s, Martin was advertising his ability to manufacture Spanish guitars, instruments that he also actively imported into the country. We are closed for vacations of August All online orders placed during this period of August will be shipped on August Free Shipping for all Felipe Conde guitars — till the end of summer ! While the singer remained the leading figure, the guitarist came to take a less subservient part as time went on.
Good guitarists were in great demand, the competition was fierce. In their efforts to outdo each other, the players introduced new techniques, and sometimes even resorted to tricks and outrageous acts of showmanship such as playing with a glove at one hand or with the guitar held above their head.
The years uo to were to be the years of the theatrical presentation of flamenco, of the "Opera Flamenca" and "Flamenco Ballet". War in Europe and the aftermath of civil war in Spain made the 's an unpropitious decade for flamenco, with little opportunity for paid performance outside the Americas. However, a concern for true flamenco began to reappear in the 's bringing with it opportunities for serious performance. Festivals in Cordoba, Jerez and Malaga in the late fifties and early sixties stimulated public interest and encouraged a new generation of artists.
The modern flamenco guitar. The modern flamenco guitar is first cousin to the modern classical guitar. The two have a common ancestry, and are handbuilt by essentially the same methods. The flamenco guitar, however, has a particularly distinctive sound and playing action of its own, achieved by the use of different timbers for the body and subtly different dimensions and proportions.
There are three primary differences between the flamenco and classical instruments:. The traditional flamenco instrument is made entirely of cypress, and is generally lighter in construction, giving it overall a lighter and more percussive sound.
Forms which do not fit into either category but lie somewhere between them are classified as cante intermedio. Many flamenco artists, including some considered to be amongst the greatest, have specialised in a single flamenco form.
View this article at Wikipedia. Flamenco Flamenco is a song, music and dance style which is strongly influenced by the Gitanos, but which has its deeper roots in Moorish musical traditions.
Flamenco culture originated in Andalusia Spain , but has since become one of the icons of Spanish music and even Spanish culture in general. Flamenco history Many of the details of the development of flamenco are lost in Spanish history. There are several reasons for this lack of historical evidence: The turbulent times of the people involved in flamenco culture.
The Moors, the Gitanos and the Jews were all persecuted and expelled by the Spanish Inquisition at various points in time as part of the Reconquista. The Gitanos mainly had an oral culture. Their folk songs were passed on to new generations by repeated performances in their social community. Flamenco was for a long time not really considered an art form worth writing about according to Spaniards.
Flamenco music has also slipped in and out of fashion several times during its existence. Flamenco styles Flamenco music styles are called palos in Spanish.
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