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    • Kind of lute

      • The Chitarrone is a kind of lute that was popular around 1600. It has an extended neck to hold the very long bass strings. These strings have no fingerboard, and are played "open" - each string sounding only its own pitch. The high (short) strings have their own fingerboard with frets, and are fingered like those of the modern guitar.
      instrumentsoftheworld.com › instrument › 26-Chitarrone
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TheorboTheorbo - Wikipedia

    Although the words chitarrone and tiorba were both used to describe the instrument, they have different organological and etymological origins; chitarrone being in Italian an augmentation of (and literally meaning large) chitarra – Italian for guitar.

  3. A theorbo, also sometimes called a chitarrone, is a lute with a long neck extension. A theorbo has two pegboxes, one at the top of the fingerboard and the other at the end of the extension. The extended neck is necessary allows for a clear and sustained sound from low bass strings.

  4. Chitarrone, large bass lute, or archlute, developed in Rome about 1600. It was usually about 6 feet (less than 2 m) tall, with a normal lute body. The chitarrone had six to eight strings running over the fingerboard to a pegbox (the part of the instrument in which the tuning pegs are set)

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Jan 4, 2024 · Chitarrone ‘s -one suffix transforms its host word to mean beyond itself, here an ultra-guitar. That’s because the notes of the chitarrone’s 6th through 2nd courses overlap with the top five courses of a guitar: ADGBE. In the baroque era, professional chitarrone players also played guitar.

  6. The Chitarrone is a kind of lute that was popular around 1600. It has an extended neck to hold the very long bass strings. These strings have no fingerboard, and are played "open" - each string sounding only its own pitch.

  7. www.theorbo.com › theorboinformation › theorboinformationLynda Sayce - About the theorbo

    The instrument was known initially by its formal academic name 'chitarrone', derived from the Greek 'kythara'. 'Tiorba' was only used initially in informal contexts, but by the middle of the 17th century, it had completely usurped 'chitarrone' as the normal name in everyday use. The two names were synonymous in Italy during the early 17th century.

  8. Jul 13, 2015 · The chitarrone or theorbo was visually similar but distinct from the arciliuto or archlute, designed in 1594 by Alessandro Piccinini. The archlute retained standard lute tuning, and Piccinini recommended that it be played with nails rather than flesh on the right hand, creating a sharper, thinner, more trebly sound.

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