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Gemshorn

 

A medieval folk instrument of the recorder type, made originally from an animal horn. It was made at different pitches and had a soft, husky tone; it is suitable for medieval or early Renaissance dance music or secular polyphony. The name is also used for an organ stop with a gentle, ocarina-like quality.



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Gemshorn
Gemshorn
Classification *Wind
Playing range

1 octave

Related instruments

The gemshorn is an instrument of the ocarina family that was historically made from the horn of the chamois, goat, or other suitable animal.[1] The gemshorn receives its name from the German language, and means a chamois horn.

Contents

History

The gemshorn was in use in the 15th century. Examples have been unearthed in Italy and in Germany, including one intact instrument made of clay which dates at least to 1450, as it was found buried beneath the foundation of a house built at that time.[1] The early history of the instrument is not well known, but the oldest known illustration of one in a reference work is in Musica Getutscht (1511), by Sebastian Virdung. A skeletal figure is seen holding one in a Danse Macabre illustration dated to 1485.[2] There is also mention of this instrument in "The Complaynt of Scotlande" as "ane gatehorn"(goat horn). Volume 2 of Praetorius's "De Organographica", from the early 1600s, provides detailed construction plates and diagrams for the gemshorn. They were primarily a pastoral instrument and were not widely known after the mid-to-late 1500s. With resurgent interest in early music in the 19th and 20th centuries, they have received new attention. Horace Fitzpatrick developed a form of gemshorn which adopted the fingering method of recorders and produced them in consort families, which have proven very popular since the 1960s.[2]

Construction

Gemshorn as depicted in Musica Getutscht

Modern gemshorns are often made of the horns of domesticated cattle, because they are readily available, and their use prevents endangering wild species. The hollow horn has tone holes down the front, like a recorder or clarinet. The pointed end of the horn is left intact, and serves as the bottom of the instrument. A fipple plug, usually of wood, is fitted into the wide end of the instrument, with a recorder type voicing window on the front of the horn, for tone production.

On more advanced models, there is a "tuning ring". This is a metal band or ring, placed between the voicing window and the top tone hole. A hole is drilled through this ring and the horn beneath. When the ring is turned with the fingers the hole is partially blocked. This lowers the flute's keynote by up to about 1 major tone. Partial wax closure of the dorsal (rear) thumb hole will accomplish the same keynote tuning.

Some recent makers have used synthetic materials in place of the animal horn.[3] Another alternative, offered by some makers, is wooden gemshorns.[4]

Playing and Sound

fingering chart

16th century illustrations show an instrument which had only a few tone holes, and a very limited range. The intact clay gemshorn, mentioned above, which was found beneath a 15th Century house, had a chromatic range of one octave. Modern makers have often chosen to build them using the Baroque recorder fingering.

The sound of the gemshorn is like that of other flutes, but with an ocarina-like lack of harmonic overtones.

Organ Stop

There is a gemshorn organ stop, modeled after this instrument. Its pipes are conical, with the wind going in at the wide end, as in the actual gemshorn.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b Windkanal 2/01 p. 9
  2. ^ a b Windkanal 2/01 p. 7
  3. ^ The Susato plastic gemshorns are an example of this.
  4. ^ Buffalo Moon Flutes produces a wooden version of the gemshorn, with pentatonic tuning.
  5. ^ The Encyclopedia of Organ Stops

See also

External links


 
 
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Miracles & Mountains (1995 Album by San Quilmas Consort)
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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gemshorn" Read more