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COUNTRY MUSIC INSTRUMENTS Instruments used in Country Music

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Country Music Instruments. Instruments used in Country Music. A Guitar. The Guitar. Early guitars were first used in the 12 th century in Europe , descendant from instruments in China and India The oldest representation of a guitar is a 3,000 year old carving - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Country Music Instruments

COUNTRY MUSIC INSTRUMENTSInstruments used in Country Music

Page 2: Country Music Instruments

A Guitar

Page 3: Country Music Instruments

The Guitar Early guitars were first used in the 12th

century in Europe, descendant from instruments in China and India

The oldest representation of a guitar is a 3,000 year old carving

Inspiration for the guitar could have come from a four stringed instrument called an oud brought to Europe by invading Moors in the 8th century, or the Scandinavian six stringed lute (800AD)

Two types of guitars were common by 1200AD (Moorish and Latin)

Page 4: Country Music Instruments

A picture of Latin medieval guitars

Latin Guitars

Page 5: Country Music Instruments

The Guitar The Spanish vihuela was created in the 15th

century and was the main influence for our modern style of guitar

It had a body much like a modern guitar, larger than its contemporaries, with six strings and a system for tuning

In the late 15th century, some vihuelas were played with bows leading to the violin/viola.

The vihuela died out by the end of the 16th century The five stringed Baroque guitar took over in

popularity until modern guitars

Page 6: Country Music Instruments

Painting depicting a viheula player from 1520

Vihuela

Page 7: Country Music Instruments

The Guitar There are many, many different types of

guitar in use today. Types of guitars most commonly used

today fall generally into three categories: Acoustic Electric Classical

Page 8: Country Music Instruments

Classical Guitar Also known as Spanish guitars Nylon strings played with fingers Wide, flat neck allows for ease of

playing scales and arpeggios Comes in different sizes (Flamenco

guitars, requinto, guitarron)

Page 9: Country Music Instruments

Classical guitar

Page 10: Country Music Instruments

Electric Guitar Invented in 1931, used first by jazz musicians Can have hollow, semi-hollow, or solid bodies Steel strings played with picks Produce very little sound without

amplification Electromagnetic pickups transfer the

vibrations of the strings into signals that are then fed through the amp via a cable

Sound can be modified through other electronic means

Usually have seven strings, though can have as few as one and as many as fourteen

Page 11: Country Music Instruments

Electric Guitar

Page 12: Country Music Instruments

Acoustic Guitar A group of guitars that create sound

without amplification Uses an acoustic soundboard to project

the sound Strings vibrate against the soundboard,

the soundboard resonates at the same frequency, creates a different timbre without changing pitch

Has a hollow body to increase resonance Sound travels from string to

soundboard to body cavity to outside air

Page 13: Country Music Instruments

Acoustic Guitar

Page 15: Country Music Instruments

A Fiddle

Page 16: Country Music Instruments

The Fiddle The Fiddle and the violin are

technically the same instrument Fiddle or fiddling refers to the style

of playing, NOT the instrument itself Fiddling is done on stringed instruments

that are played with bows Emerged in Europe in the 10th

century Two different lira (stringed instruments)

developed in this time- one played sitting up and one played while being held up

Page 17: Country Music Instruments

The Fiddle The instrument held sitting up was called

the lira di gamba and was held by the legs. It died out in the Renaissance, due to its inferior sound

The instrument held up by the arm was called the lira di braccio. It became the violin.

Fiddling was normally done as solo work, because it was done in small dance settings where a group of instruments would be too loud

By the 20th century, groups of instrumentalists were more common

Page 18: Country Music Instruments

The Fiddle Fiddlers could push their instruments

harder than classical violinists Violin playing is generally smoother

and more classical in nature Fiddling usually keeps a stronger beat,

and is a harsher sound from pushing the bow harder onto the strings.

Page 20: Country Music Instruments

The Banjo

Page 21: Country Music Instruments

The Banjo A four, five or six stringed instrument with a

piece of animal skin or plastic stretched over a circular frame

 Simpler forms of the instrument were fashioned by Africans in Colonial America, adapted from several African instruments of similar design.

Occupied a central place in African American traditional music, then became popular in the minstrel shows of the 19th century.

Slaves influenced early development of country and bluegrass, through the introduction of the banjo

Page 22: Country Music Instruments

The Banjo Original African instruments did not

have tuning or frets; those notions came from the Caribbean in the 17th century

Instruments in many other countries throughout the 15th and 16th centuries were very similar to the banjo, but were derived from the lute

In the 1830s, Joel Sweeney was the first white man to play the banjo on stage

Page 23: Country Music Instruments

The Banjo Banjos usually have a wooden rim with a

tightened animal skin or synthetic head, like a drum

Some banjos have resonator plates on the back, to give the instrument more volume

Two techniques are used to play the Banjo- drones and rolls Drones play quick single melody notes Rolls play accompaniment chord

patterns