fiddle

{{Short description|Bowed string instrument}}

{{About|the musical instrument and its playing styles|the Indian film|Fiddle (film){{!}}Fiddle (film)}}

{{Redirect|Fiddler}}

{{Infobox Instrument

| name = Fiddle

| names = Violin

| image = Morris fiddler - Festivals of Winds, 2012.jpg

| image_capt = A morris dance fiddler playing a fiddle.

| background = string

| classification = Bowed string instrument

| hornbostel_sachs = 321.322-71

| developed = Early 16th century

| range = Image:Range violin.png

| related = *Violin family (viola, cello)

| musicians = *List of fiddlers

| builders = *Luthiers

}}

{{Violin}}

A fiddle is a bowed string musical instrument, most often a violin or a bass.{{cite journal|last=Gyles|first=Mary Francis|title=Nero Fiddled While Rome Burned|journal=The Classical Journal|date=January 1947|volume=42|issue=4|pages=211–17|jstor=3291751}} It is a colloquial term for the violin, used by players in all genres, including classical music. Although in many cases violins and fiddles are essentially synonymous, the style of the music played may determine specific construction differences between fiddles and classical violins. For example, fiddles may optionally be set up with a bridge with a flatter arch to reduce the range of bow-arm motion needed for techniques such as the double shuffle, a form of bariolage involving rapid alternation between pairs of adjacent strings.{{cite book |last1=Reiner |first1=David |last2=Anick |first2=Peter |date=1989 |title=Mel Bay's Old-Time Fiddling Across America |publisher=Mel Bay Publications, Inc. |page=37 |isbn=978-0-7866-5381-2 |quote=Double shuffle: syncopated string crossing on a chord, with the top note changing. }} To produce a brighter tone than the deep tones of gut or synthetic core strings, fiddlers often use steel strings. The fiddle is part of many traditional (folk) styles, which are typically aural traditions—taught "by ear" rather than via written music.{{cite web |url=http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=FI001|title=Fiddling|last=Harris |first=Rodger |publisher=The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture|date=2009|website=Okhistory.org|access-date=2017-04-07}}

Fiddling is the act of playing the fiddle, and fiddlers are musicians who play it. Among musical styles, fiddling tends to produce rhythms that focus on dancing, with associated quick note changes, whereas classical music tends to contain more vibrato and sustained notes. Fiddling is also open to improvisation and embellishment with ornamentation at the player's discretion, in contrast to orchestral performances, which adhere to the composer's notes to reproduce a work faithfully. It is less common for a classically trained violinist to play folk music, but today, many fiddlers (e.g., Alasdair Fraser, Brittany Haas, and Alison Krauss{{Cite web|url=http://nodepression.com/article/alison-krauss-bluegrass-rose-blooms|title=Alison Krauss - The bluegrass rose blooms | No Depression|date=29 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161229100342/http://nodepression.com/article/alison-krauss-bluegrass-rose-blooms|access-date=21 April 2021|archive-date=2016-12-29}}) have classical training.

History

The medieval fiddle emerged in 10th-century Europe, deriving from the Byzantine lira ({{langx|grc|λύρα}}, {{langx|la|lira}}, {{langx|en|lyre}}), a bowed string instrument of the Byzantine Empire and ancestor of most European bowed instruments.{{cite encyclopedia |title=fiddle |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |date=6 March 2009}}{{cite book |first=Anthony |last=Baines |title=The Oxford Companion to Musical Instruments |publisher=Oxford University Press USA |date=November 12, 1992}}

Lira spread widely westward to Europe; in the 11th and 12th centuries European writers use the terms fiddle and lira interchangeably when referring to bowed instruments.

The violin in its present form emerged in early 16th-century northern Italy. The earliest pictures of violins, albeit with three strings, are seen in northern Italy around 1530, at around the same time as the words "violino" and "vyollon" are seen in Italian and French documents. One of the earliest explicit descriptions of the instrument, including its tuning, is from the Epitome musical by Jambe de Fer, published in Lyon in 1556.

{{Cite web

|url=http://www.violinonline.com/historicalbackgroundoftheviolin.htm

|title=Historical Background of the Violin

|publisher=ViolinOnline.com

|first=Robin Kay|last=Deverich|year=2006|access-date=2006-09-22

}} By this time, the violin had already begun to spread throughout Europe. The fiddle proved very popular among both street musicians and the nobility; the French king Charles IX ordered Andrea Amati to construct 24 violins for him in 1560.{{Cite web

|url=http://www.bartruff.com/history.php

|title=The History of the Violin

|first=William|last=Bartruff|access-date=2006-09-22

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070208112530/http://www.bartruff.com/history.php |archive-date = 2007-02-08}} One of these instruments, the Charles IX, is the oldest surviving violin.

Over the centuries, Europe continued to have two distinct types of fiddles: one, relatively square-shaped, held in the arms, became known as the viola da braccio (arm viol) family and evolved into the violin; the other, with sloping shoulders and held between the knees, was the viola da gamba (leg viol) group. During the Renaissance the gambas were important and elegant instruments; they eventually lost ground to the louder viola da braccio family.{{cite encyclopedia |editor-last= Sadie |editor-first=Stanley |author1= Diana Poulton |entry= Viol |encyclopedia= The New Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments |year=1984 |id= Volume 3 |pages= 736–741}}

Etymology

The etymology of fiddle is uncertain: it probably derives from the Latin fidula, which is the early word for violin, or it may be natively Germanic.

{{cite OED |fiddle| access-date = 2008-03-28|quote=The ultimate origin is obscure. The {{bracket|Teutonic}} word bears a singular resemblance in sound to its {{bracket|medieval Latin}} synonym vitula, vidula, whence {{bracket|Old French}} viole, Pr. viula, and (by adoption from these {{bracket|languages}}) {{bracket|Italian}}, {{bracket|Spanish}}, {{bracket|Portuguese}} viola: see {{bracket|viol}}. The supposition that the early {{bracket|Romance}} vidula was adopted independently in more than one {{bracket|Teutonic language}} would account adequately for all the {{bracket|Teutonic}} forms; on the other hand, *fiÞulôn- may be an {{bracket|Old Teutonic}} word of native etymology, although no satisfactory {{bracket|Teutonic}} derivation has been found.}}

{{verify inline|reason="Teutonic" and "Old Teutonic" are not modern linguistic terms; online OED probably does not use them. Modern terminology is "Germanic" / "Proto-Germanic"|date=December 2024}}

The name appears to be related to Icelandic {{lang|is|fiðla}} and also Old English {{lang|ang|fiðele}}.{{cite web |url=http://web.ff.cuni.cz/cgi-bin/uaa_slovnik/gmc_search_v3?cmd=formquery2&query=fiddle&startrow=1 |title=Bosworth and Toller |website=Germanic Lexicon Project |access-date=2012-04-30 |archive-date=2013-10-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131023060800/http://web.ff.cuni.cz/cgi-bin/uaa_slovnik/gmc_search_v3?cmd=formquery2&query=fiddle&startrow=1 |url-status=dead }} A native Germanic ancestor of fiddle might even be the ancestor of the early Romance form of violin.Mario Pei, The Story of the English Language (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1967), p. 109.

In medieval times, fiddle also referred to a predecessor of today's violin. Like the violin, it tended to have four strings, but came in a variety of shapes and sizes. Another family of instruments that contributed to the development of the modern fiddle are the viols, which are held between the legs and played vertically, and have fretted fingerboards.{{Cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/viol/hd_viol.htm|title=The Viol |publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art|last=Weinfield|first=Elizabeth|website=The Met's Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History|language=en|access-date=2018-04-09}}

Ensembles

File:Musiciens pub Gus O'Connor-Doolin.JPG

In performance, a solo fiddler, or one or two with a group of other instrumentalists, is the norm, though twin fiddling is represented in some North American, Scandinavian, Scottish and Irish styles. Following the folk revivals of the second half of the 20th century, it became common for less formal situations to find large groups of fiddlers playing together—see for example the Calgary Fiddlers, Swedish Spelmanslag folk-musician clubs, and the worldwide phenomenon of Irish sessions.{{cite web | url = http://www.thesession.org/sessions/index.php | title = The Session: Sessions | access-date = 28 August 2006}}{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/16/arts/music/traditional-irish-music-in-new-york-city.html |title=Traditional Irish Music in New York City |newspaper=The New York Times|first=Andy |last=Webster |date=16 March 2012 |access-date=6 February 2018}}

Orchestral violins, on the other hand, are commonly grouped in sections, or "chairs". These contrasting traditions may be vestiges of historical performance settings: large concert halls where violins were played required more instruments, before electronic amplification, than did more intimate dance halls and houses that fiddlers played in.

The difference was likely compounded by the different sounds expected of violin music and fiddle music. Historically, the majority of fiddle music was dance music, while violin music had either grown out of dance music or was something else entirely. Violin music came to value a smoothness that fiddling, with its dance-driven clear beat, did not always follow. In situations that required greater volume, a fiddler (as long as they kept the beat) could push their instrument harder than could a violinist.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} Various fiddle traditions have differing values.

=Scottish, with cello=

In the very late 20th century, a few artists successfully reconstructed the Scottish tradition of violin and "big fiddle", or cello. Notable recorded examples include Iain Fraser and Christine Hanson, Amelia Kaminski and Christine Hanson's Bonnie Lasses,{{cite web|url=http://www.willockandsaxgallery.com/kaminski.htm |title=Amelia Kaminski Productions |publisher=Willockandsaxgallery.com |access-date=2011-11-14 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111112125429/http://www.willockandsaxgallery.com/kaminski.htm |archive-date=2011-11-12 }} Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas' Fire and Grace,{{cite web |url=http://www.culburnie.com/albums/AlasdairFraser/fire_and_grace.htm |title=Fire & Grace |publisher=Culburnie.com |access-date=2011-11-14 |archive-date=2011-09-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928193410/http://www.culburnie.com/albums/AlasdairFraser/fire_and_grace.htm |url-status=dead }} and Tim Macdonald and Jeremy Ward's The Wilds.{{cite web|url=http://www.timandjeremy.com/wilds |title=The Wilds |publisher=Tim Macdonald and Jeremy Ward |date=2017-11-15 |access-date=2018-08-24}}

=Balkan, with ''kontra''=

Hungarian, Slovenian, and Romanian fiddle players are often accompanied by a three-stringed variant of the viola—known as the kontra—and by double bass, with cimbalom and clarinet being less standard yet still common additions to a band. In Hungary, a three-stringed viola variant with a flat bridge, called the kontra or háromhúros brácsa makes up part of a traditional rhythm section in Hungarian folk music. The flat bridge lets the musician play three-string chords. A three-stringed double bass variant is also used.

Styles

To a greater extent than classical violin playing, fiddle playing is characterized by a huge variety of ethnic or folk music traditions, each of which has its own distinctive sound.

=Europe=

==Great Britain==

  • English folk music fiddling, including
  • Northumbrian fiddle style, which features "seconding", an improvised harmony part played by a second fiddler.
  • Lakeland or Cumbrian fiddling has a repertoire largely based upon hornpipes but also incorporates reels and jigs.{{cite web |last1=Gilchrist |first1=Anne Geddes |title=Some Old Lake Country Fiddlers and their Tune Books |url=http://www.cpartington.plus.com/Links/Irwin/Lake%20District%20Fiddlers.html}}
  • Scottish fiddling, including:
  • Shetland fiddling, which includes trowie tunes said to come from peerie folk. The style is characterised by "ringing strings" and syncopated rhythms.
  • A North East (particularly Aberdeenshire and Moray) tradition strongly influenced by baroque violin technique with staccato and Scotch snap bowing techniques and double stops.
  • A Scottish Borders tradition with a repertoire heavy in hornpipes and with heavy use of double stops.
  • A Highland tradition, highly influenced by the ornamentation and mixolydian scale of the Great Highland Bagpipe, as well as smoother bowing than other Scottish fiddle styles and a swinging of the 6/8 jig rhythm.
  • A West Highland and Hebridean Tradition, very closely related to the Highland tradition with major influence from the Gaelic song tradition.
  • An Orkney tradition with simpler bowing and ornamentation but with tunes featuring accidentals.{{cite web|author=Joseph Lyons |url=http://www.scotlandsmusic.com/Home/scottish-fiddle.htm |title=Scottish Fiddle Music |publisher=Scotlandsmusic.com |access-date=2012-04-30 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419115950/http://www.scotlandsmusic.com/Home/scottish-fiddle.htm |archive-date=2012-04-19 }}
  • Welsh fiddling (Welsh Ffidil; see Ar Log), a recently revived tradition.

==Ireland==

  • Irish folk music fiddling including:
  • Donegal fiddling from the northwest in Ulster, which features mazurkas and a Scottish-influenced repertoire including Strathspey and Highland Fling dances. Fiddlers tend to play fast and make heavy use of staccato bowing and may from time to time "play the bass", meaning a second fiddler may play a melody an octave below where a first fiddler is playing it.
  • Sligo fiddling from northern Connacht, which like Donegal fiddling tends to be fast, but with a bouncier feel to the bowing.
  • Galway fiddling southern Connacht, which is slower than Sligo or Donegal traditions, with a heavier emphasis on ornamentation. Tunes are occasionally played in Eb or Bb to match the tonality of flat pipes.
  • Clare fiddling from northern Munster, which tends to be played near the slower Galway tempo yet with a greater emphasis on the melody itself rather than ornamentation.
  • Sliabh Luachra fiddling from the southwest in Munster, characterized by a unique repertoire of polkas and slides, the use of double stops and drones, as well as playing the melody in two octaves as in Donegal.{{cite web |url=http://www.irishfiddle.com/article_on_styles1.html |title=Regional Irish Fiddle Styles |publisher=Irishfiddle.com |access-date=2012-04-30 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120423204037/http://www.irishfiddle.com/article_on_styles1.html |archive-date=2012-04-23 }}

==Nordic countries==

File:JPP Areenalla.jpeg at the 2015 Kaustinen Folk Music Festival in Kaustinen, Finland]]

==Continental Europe==

File:KLEZPO.png

  • Austrian fiddling
  • French fiddling, including an old tradition from Corrèze and a revived one from Brittany
  • Hungarian folk music traditions
  • Italian fiddling{{cite web|url=http://www.fiddlingaround.co.uk/med/Med+mid%20frame.html |title=Middle Eastern and Mediterranean Fiddle |publisher=Fiddlingaround.co.uk |access-date=2011-11-14}}
  • Klezmer fiddling{{cite web|url=http://www.fiddlingaround.co.uk/klezmer/Klezmer%20frame.html |title=Klezmer Fiddle |publisher=Fiddlingaround.co.uk |access-date=2011-11-14}}
  • Polish fiddling
  • Mainland Portuguese and Azorean fiddling
  • Romanian fiddling{{cite web|url=http://www.fiddlingaround.co.uk/easterneurope/Easterneurope%20frame.html |title=East European and Gypsy Fiddle |publisher=Fiddlingaround.co.uk |access-date=2011-11-14}}

=Americas=

==United States==

Image:Peter Stampfel 08.jpg from The Holy Modal Rounders]]

American fiddling is a broad category including traditional and modern styles:

===Traditional===

  • Blues fiddling
  • Cajun and Zydeco fiddling
  • Native American fiddling, including:
  • Cherokee
  • Creek
  • Tohono O'odham waila music, a style heavily influenced by Mexican fiddling{{cite web|url=http://store.canyonrecords.com/index.php?app=ecom&ns=prodshow&ref=CR-8082 |title=Gu-Achi Fiddlers - Old Time O'odham Fiddle Music (CR-8082) |publisher=Store.canyonrecords.com |access-date=2012-08-03 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120803000540/http://store.canyonrecords.com/index.php?app=ecom&ns=prodshow&ref=CR-8082 |archive-date=2012-08-03 }} and featuring irregular counts and harmonies in thirds, fourths, and sixths.{{citation needed|date=June 2013}}
  • Old time fiddling, including:
  • Fiddling from Appalachia, the most well-known style today, featuring heavy use of droning and double-stops as well as syncopated bowing patterns.
  • Athabaskan fiddling of the Interior Alaska.
  • Midwestern fiddling, highly influenced by Scandinavian music.
  • Ozarks fiddling, faster and crisper bowing than Appalachia.
  • Texas fiddling, with influences from Mexican fiddling and an emphasis on competitive playing.File:Kenny Baker-fiddle.jpg]]
  • New England fiddling, with strong influences from Québécois/French Canadian and British repertoires.
  • Northwest fiddling, with influences from both Ozark and Midwestern fiddle styles, though with a strong emphasis on competitive playing like Texas fiddling.

===Modern===

  • Bluegrass fiddling
  • Country fiddling
  • Western swing style fiddling{{cite web|url=http://www.fiddlingaround.co.uk/westernswing/wswingframe.html |title=Western Swing Fiddle |publisher=Fiddlingaround.co.uk |access-date=2011-11-14}}

==Canada==

Fiddling remains popular in Canada, and the various homegrown styles of Canadian fiddling are seen as an important part of the country's cultural identity, as celebrated during the opening ceremony of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics.

  • Cape Breton fiddling, with a distinct Scottish influence
  • French Canadian fiddling including "crooked tunes", that is, tunes with irregular beat patterns.
  • Métis fiddling, of central and western Canada featuring strong French Canadian influence, but with even more "crooked" tunes.{{cite web |url=http://jsis.washington.edu/canada/collections/metis2.shtml |title=Jackson School of International Studies - Canadian Studies Center |publisher=Jsis.washington.edu |access-date=2012-08-03 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131023062109/http://jsis.washington.edu/canada/collections/metis2.shtml |archive-date=2013-10-23 }}
  • Newfoundland fiddling, also featuring many crooked tunes, colloquially termed ‘singles’ or ‘doubles’.
  • Maritimes, Acadian or Downeast style of fiddling, which has many similarities to Cape Breton fiddling
  • English Canadian fiddling or Anglo-Canadian fiddling

==Mexico==

Image:Silvestre Vargas Orfeon.JPG (1901–1985), fiddler of the Mariachi Vargas from 1921 to 1975, director from 1931 to 1955]]

Mexican fiddling includes

==South America==

=Africa, Asia and Australia=

Related instruments

=Variants=

File:Apachefiddler.jpg musician, playing the Apache fiddle, 1886[http://siris-archives.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?&profile=all&source=~!siarchives&uri=full=3100001~!33821~!0#focus "Portrait of Chasi, Bonito's Son..."] National Anthropological Archives. (retrieved 11 June 2010)]]

=Near relations=

=Distant relations=

See also

References

= Citations =

{{Reflist|30em}}

= Sources =

  • The Fiddle Book, by Marion Thede, (1970), Oak Publications. {{ISBN|0-8256-0145-2}}.
  • The Fiddler's Fakebook, by David Brody, (1983), Oak Publications. US {{ISBN|0-8256-0238-6}}; UK {{ISBN|0-7119-0309-3}}.
  • Oldtime Fiddling Across America, by David Reiner and Peter Anick (1989), Mel Bay Publications. {{ISBN|0-87166-766-5}}. Has transcriptions (standard notation) and analysis of tunes from multiple regional and ethnic styles.
  • The Portland Collection, by Susan Songer, (1997), {{ISBN|0-9657476-0-3}} (Vol. 2 {{ISBN|0-9657476-1-1}})
  • North American Fiddle Music: a research and information guide by Drew Beisswenger (2011) Routledge. {{ISBN|978-0-415-99454-5}}