Lira da braccio
{{Short description|Musical instrument}}
{{Infobox instrument
| name = Lira da braccio
| image = Lira da braccio.png
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| caption ="Lyra de bracio" as illustrated by Michael Praetorius in his Syntagma Musicum
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| names = Lyra de bracio
| classification =Bowed string instrument
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| developed =15th century
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The lira da braccio (or lyra de bracioMichael Praetorius. Syntagma Musicum Theatrum Instrumentorum seu Sciagraphia Wolfenbüttel 1620) was a European bowed string instrument of the Renaissance. It was used by Italian poet-musiciansAccording to Giorgio Vasari's account of the life of Leonardo da Vinci in Vasari's work the Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, Leonardo was a talented player of the lira da braccio in court in the 15th and 16th centuries to accompany their improvised recitations of lyric and narrative poetry.Howard Mayer Brown and Sterling Scott Jones. "Lira da braccio", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (accessed November 11, 2006), [http://www.grovemusic.com/ grovemusic.com] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080516041031/http://www.grovemusic.com/ |date=2008-05-16 }} (subscription access) It is most closely related to the medieval fiddle, or vielle,{{cite book|last=Pio Stefano|title=Viol and Lute Makers of Venice 1490 -1630|year=2012|publisher=Venice research|location=Venezia, Italy|isbn=9788890725203|pages=441|url=http://www.veniceresearch.com|access-date=2020-02-28|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180313180801/http://veniceresearch.com/|archive-date=2018-03-13|url-status=dead}} and like the vielle had a leaf-shaped pegbox with frontal pegs. Fiddles with drone strings are seen beginning in the 9th century (Byzantine lyra), and the instrument continued to develop through the 16th century. In many depictions of the instrument, it is being played by mythological characters, frequently members of angel consorts, and most often by Orpheus and Apollo. The lira da braccio was occasionally used in ensembles, particularly in the intermedi, and may have acted as a proto-continuo instrument.
The instrument was shaped essentially like a violin, but with a wider fingerboard and flatter bridge. Generally, it had seven strings, five of them tuned like a violin with a low d added to the bottom (that is,
History
Image:Montagna lira da braccio.jpg, c. 1500]]
The lira da braccio was first cited in 1533 by Giovanni Maria LanfrancoGiovani Maria Lanfranco (1533): Sentille di Musica, p.136 ff (using the term "seven-stringed lyra"), also describing its tuning: [c-c' / g-g'-d'-a'-e]. Lira was devised to accompany humanist sung verse by poets, such as the 14th century Petrarch and his later imitators, and was popular in the North Italian city-states such as Florence, Ferrara, Mantua, Venice and so on. In this role, the Lira enjoyed a prestige among instruments that it was never quite to achieve again. Amongst its exponents at the time were several great painters, notably Leonardo da Vinci, who according to Emmanuel Winternitz, was widely held to be the doyen among performers upon the Lira.
File:Giovanni d'andrea veronese, lira da braccio con mascherone, 1511 (vienna, khm) 01.jpg Vienna]]
The rise of the madrigal, and its counterpart, the instrumental consort, as well as the meteoric rise of the more vocal Violin, soon toppled the Lira from its pre-eminent position at court, and by the 1530s it had been relegated to stage use, in the great Renaissance festivals held by the city states and their powerful ruling dynasties. Here it was typically found onstage associated with the presence of the god Apollo, or blended in proto-continuo offstage ensembles.
The Pesaro Manuscript, from the mid-16th century, an important document in the history of the Lira, records a Passemezzo Moderno, (contemporary dance measure) written in lira tablature. Discovered in the town of Pesaro, on the Adriatic coast, this strange, mutilated script is the sole surviving example of written music for the Lira. It suggests at least the possibility that the instrument was being used as a dance instrument by this time. Its harmonic character, and useful range of home keys would have been ideally suited to render the fashionable dance music of the day.
The Italian musicologist Disertori showed that it was possible to reconstruct highly convincing examples of the lira da braccio in its early forms, from the meticulous paintings and drawings of Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Giovanni Bellini, Vittore Carpaccio and many other artists from the late 15th/early 16th century, thus opening many exciting possibilities relating to the re-creation of late 15th century performance practice.
There are up to ten surviving examples of the later, violin-like Lira, though their authenticity is still in, somewhat acrimonious, contention.{{Citation needed|date=December 2007}}
See also
References
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Further reading
- {{cite journal |last=Baldassarre |first=Antonio |title=Die Lira da braccio im humanistischen Kontext Italiens |journal=Music in Art: International Journal for Music Iconography |volume=24 |issue=1–2 |date=1999 |pages=5–28 |issn=1522-7464 }}
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Category:Bowed string instruments