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  1. The translations of the Latin mottos are "Without skill art is nothing" and "While I lived I was silent—in death I sweetly sing." The harpsichord was an important keyboard instrument in Europe from the 15th through the 18th centuries, and as revived in the 20th, is widely played today.

  2. What Does a Harpsichord Sound Like? Kenneth Slowik, curator of the Musical Instrument Collection at National Museum of American History and artistic director of the Smithsonian Chamber Music Society, shows us how he plays the harpsichord.

  3. By the time of George Washington’s birth there were two such keyboard instruments at times called harpsichord and were popular among the upper class in colonial America. While both created sound by plucking strings, the smaller and less expensive version, known as a spinet, first appears at Mount Vernon in 1761 for the use of young Martha ...

  4. harpsichord. A wooden French harpsichord, with two keyboards, by Louis Bellot, 1742; in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. (more) It should be emphasized, however, that the harpsichord of the 16th–18th centuries normally had only one or two keyboards and only two or three sets of strings and jacks per note.

  5. Jun 27, 2018 · The harpsichord is the distinguished, classical ancestor of the piano. Its shape, described as a large wing shape, was developed hundreds of years before the similar shape of the grand piano. But the operation of the harpsichord and its history are far different from those of its descendant.

  6. Designer and maker of many types of musical instruments, he is best known for constructing the complex musical mechanisms that he displayed in his Galleria Armonica e Matematica in Rome, one of the first museums of musical instruments. One of these machines was the instrument now known as the Metropolitan Museum’s Golden Harpsichord, a large ...

  7. A harpsichord is any of a family of European keyboard instruments, including the large instrument currently called a harpsichord, but also the smaller virginals, the muselar virginals and the spinet. All these instruments generate sound by plucking a string rather than striking one, as in a piano or clavichord.

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