Viola d’Amore

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A01=Rachael Durkin
Alto Clarinet
Arnold Dolmetsch
Author_Rachael Durkin
Baroque music
baroque string instruments
baryton
baryton research
Bayerisches National Museum
BNM
Bow String
Bowed Strings
Category=AVRL
early modern music
early music instrument evolution
Early Music Revival
eighteenth century music
Elizabethan music
englische violet
English music
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_music
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Extant Instruments
eye-catching string instrument
fashion amid orchestral standardisation
Front Plate
Germanisches National Museum
Gut Strings
Hardanger Fiddle
Harry Danks
historical instruments
historical performance
historical performance practice
history of musical instruments
iconography
instrument history
instrument-making
Lyra Viol
material culture
metal sympathetic strings
Montagu Cleeve
Musical Instrument Museum
Open Tunings
organology
performance practice
seventeenth century music
sixteenth century music
string instruments
Sympathetic Strings
sympathetically strung
Treble Viol
Trumpet Marine
viol
Viol Consort
Viola Bastarda
viola d'amore
Violin Family
viols
West Dean College
Wire Strings
Wire Strung Instruments
wire-strung
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367513733
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book provides the first scholarly history of the viola d’amore, a popular bowed string instrument of the Baroque era, with a unique tone produced by a set of metal sympathetic strings. Composers like Bach made use of the viola d’amore for its particular sound, but the instrument subsequently fell out of fashion amid orchestral standardisation, only to see a revival as interest in early music and historical performance grew.

Drawing on literary accounts, iconography, and surviving instruments, this study examines the origins and development of this eye-catching string instrument in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It explores the rich variation of designs displayed in extant viola d’amore specimens, both as originally constructed and as a result of conversion and repair. The viola d’amore is then set into the wider context of Elizabethan England’s development of instruments with wire strings, and its legacy in the form of the baryton which emerged in the early seventeenth century, followed by a look at the viola d’amore’s own nomenclatorial and organological influence. The book closes with a discussion of the viola d’amore’s revival, and its use and manufacture today. Offering insights for organological research and historical performance practice, this study enhances our knowledge of both the viola d’amore and its wider family of instruments.

Rachael Durkin is a Senior Lecturer in Music at Northumbria University, specialising in the field of organology. She holds a doctorate from The University of Edinburgh (2015), and has previously worked at both The University of Edinburgh and Edinburgh Napier University.

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