Information AboutViolone |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT VIOLONE | |
| bowed instruments | |
| string instruments | |
| early musical instruments | |
| contrabass instruments | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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USAGE The violone is most often used today as the contrabass bowed string instrument in Early Music groups performing Renaissance and early Baroque music. Only a few players specialize in the instrument, with most using contemporary reproductions rather than actual historical instruments. HISTORY After the decline of the other members of the viol family, the violone continued to have a place in orchestral music and, for example, Bach scored his cantatas for violone as the contra-bass instrument. It was eventually ousted by the modern Double Bass . The term ''violone'' is sometimes used to refer to the modern Double Bass , which belongs almost as much to the viol family as to that of the violin, having sloped shoulders, a flat back (often) and tuning in fourths. The double bass, unlike the original violone, is an unfretted instrument. "Violone" is also the name given to a non-imitative string-tone pipe organ stop, constructed of either metal or wood, and found in the pedal division at 16' pitch or, more rarely, 32' EXTERNAL LINKS
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