[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Crystallophone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Glass harmonica: spinning glass disks (bowls) on a common shaft are arranged with the lower notes (larger disks) to the left and higher notes (smaller disks) to the right.
A glass harp being played in Rome, Italy. The rims of wine glasses filled with water are rubbed by the player's fingers to create the notes.
The Cristal Baschet

A crystallophone is a musical instrument that produces sound from glass.

One of the best known crystallophones is the glass harmonica, a set of rotating glass bowls which produce eerie, clear tones when rubbed with a wet finger. Musical glasses, the glass harp, were documented in Persia in the 14th century.[1] The "ethereal" quality of instruments such as the glass harmonica exemplified the Empfindsamkeit and for a while, "the instrument was extraordinarily popular...[but] About 1830 the instrument fell into oblivion."[1]

The glasschord (or glasscord) resembles the celesta (a struck plaque idiophone operated by a keyboard) but uses keyboard-driven hammers to strike glass bars instead of metal bars.

The glass marimba is similar to the marimba (a stick percussion instrument with a keyboard layout), but has bars of glass instead of wood. The bars, which the performer strikes with padded sticks, are perched on a glass box to provide the necessary resonance.

A rare Thai instrument called ranat kaeo (ระนาดแก้ว; literally "glass xylophone") has been used by the Thai music ensemble Fong Naam; it appears on their 1992 CD The Sleeping Angel: Thai Classical Music.

[edit]

In Lydia Syson's biography, Doctor of Love: James Graham and his Celestial Bed,[2] sexologist James Graham uses the glass harmonica for musical therapy purposes.[citation needed]

Benjamin Franklin was inspired to create his glass harmonica in 1763 after attending a recital performed on musical glasses in London in 1761.[1]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Apel, Willi (1969). Harvard Dictionary of Music, p.347. Harvard. ISBN 9780674375017.
  2. ^ Syson, Lydia. Doctor of Love: James Graham and his Celestial Bed. ISBN 9781846880544.
[edit]
  • Glass music
  • Oddmusic - a website dedicated to unique, odd, ethnic, experimental and unusual musical instruments and resources.