Gut Strings
Author(s): Djilda Abbott and Ephraim Segerman
Source: Early Music, Vol. 4, No. 4 (Oct., 1976), pp. 430-431+433+435+437
Published by: Oxford University Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3126157
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Gut strings
DJILDA ABBOTT and EPHRAIM SEGERMAN
Whenever, on a lute having reasonably authentic con-
struction, one replaces the plain nylon strings with gut, the
as high as it will go without breaking,
the above relationships between length
result invariably makes one marvel at the more interesting,
and absolute pitch obtain, as well as we
lively tone of gut. This is probably because gut, being a
can determine it. These pitches are not necessarily the same
natural material, is not as uniform as nylon, and this leads to
as the names of the notes early writers gave-'nominal
slight mistuning of the harmonics which sound simul-
pitch'-because of varying pitch standards. Most lute players
taneously with the fundamental note.
will find that conversion to gut strings would require them to
Whenever one replaces the metal higher strings of a viol or
play their instruments at unaccustomed pitches-a powerful
violin with gut, there may be a loss of some ringing edge in
deterrent. We do not mean to imply that their lutes are the
the tone, but most players appreciate the greater warmth of
wrong size, only that they are expecting to tune them at non-
gut tone.'
authentic pitches for their sizes.
If, in the interests of pre-18th century authenticity, one
replaces the overspun strings on either of these instruments
2. Pitch distortion
with the appropriately thicker plain gut strings, the result is
Pressing a string down on to a fret stretches it slightly. Press-
not as immediately attractive as before. The tone sounds
ing it hard down behind the fret stretches it some more. The
thicker or duller, since some of the glitter of the higher harstretching sharpens the pitch. Strongly bowing or plucking a
monics that come through with overspun strings is missing
string also stretches it so that the average tension over each
with gut. In addition, intonation problems start to appear on
cycle of the vibration is greater, thus sharpening the pitch.
fretted instruments.
Bowing can be disconcerting when varying loudness also
Half-way measures are rather irksome. Mixed stringing
varies pitch. Our perception of the pitch of a plucked note
creates its own tuning and balance problems, and one's
may be disorientated when the pitch drops as the note dies
'authenticity conscience' is not well satisfied. What does one
away. In each case the rise in pitch is negligible for treble
do?
strings but can get disturbingly big with bass strings.
We offer no magic solution to this dilemma. There are
differences between the gut on the market today and that
3. Pitch ranges
available three centuries ago. And there are perhaps
Pitch distortion on the bass strings can be reduced by
differences between expectations of tone quality and intona-
making them more elastic. This is the main advantage of
tion accuracy common at that time and earlier, and our own.
overspun strings (alternatively called 'wound' or 'covered'),
Our intention here is to share some of the understanding
where the total mass of the material creates the low pitch
we have acquired of the properties of gut and their effect on
but only the elasticity of the core governs the pitch distor-
musical use.
tion.
There is no convincing evidence of overspun strings being
available in England or elsewhere before the 1660s.2 Jean
1. String lengths and highest pitches
Nylon and steel have greater tensile strength than gut, so gut
treble strings cannot be tuned as high as these other
materials for a given string length. Thus, trying to use a gut
Rousseau in his Traite' de la Viole (Paris, 1687) says that
'Sainte-Colombe introduced the seventh string about 1675 at
the same time that he introduced the use of strings spun with
silver wire for the three lower strings'.3
treble string on a lute with 60 cm string length tuned to g'
will lead to disappointment, since the string will not last
more than a week or so if played regularly. A pitch of f'
The tonal discontinuity in going from plain trebles to
overspun basses was soon bridged by using open-wound
strings, as mentioned by Forqueray.4 We suspect that over-
would be much more comfortable as well as conforming to
spun strings were slow to be adopted in England, since
early practices of relating pitch to length as can be deduced
Talbot's manuscript5 as late as 1690 only mentions Venice
from Praetorius's 'data'. Other recommended pitch-length
relationships are given in the first two rows of Table 1.
When lute or viol tutors recommend tuning the top string
Catlines.
Before the introduction of overspun strings, instruments
usually used plain gut for every string. The lower strings were
430
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thick and suffered from pitch distortion. The lowest note an
ably stretchy for a bass string. The trouble with these strings
instrument could play was determined by (i) the amount of
was that they had already been polished, making them hairy
distortion that was tolerated, and (ii) how forcefully the
strings were played. We can deduce this only from noting the
maximum ranges of the instruments in use.6 The maximum
range increased in steps in the course of time, and may be
associated with advances in the technology of string twisting.
The more twist there is in a gut string, the more elastic it is,
and the less pitch distortion it offers.
Gut with a low twist is found on treble strings and tennis
racquets where strength or stiffness are needed. Moderate-
twist bass strings sounded acceptable to medieval ears if
tuned within about an octave and a sixth of the highest pitch
and excessively bumpy on re-twisting, and that having been
compacted in their first twisting they were not as flexible and
twistable as fresh gut would have been. To make Venice Cat-
lines properly requires the normal twisting process in the
string manufacture to be replaced by the Catline twisting
process. So far we have not been able to convince any gut
manufacturer to do this or to provide us with the material to
do it ourselves. Our experiments with fresh gut from the
abattoir have convinced us that it is not feasible in the time
we can devote to this project for us to develop the basic skills
and equipment for gut selection and processing on our own.
a string of that length could reach. From the late 15th to late
16th centuries, high-twist bass strings (as high as the straight-
5. Authentic way of coping with pitch
forward traditional technology, as is still used today, would
distortion on fingering
allow) offered a range up to two octaves and a tone. From the
The obvious and logical way to minimize pitch distortion on
late 16th century until overspun strings replaced them,
fingering is to have the lowest possible action and the lowest
maximum-twist bass strings (using special rope technology)
possible frets. Making a low action was certainly an authenoffered an open-string range of two octaves and a fifth. They
tic practice, but the grading of frets for fine adjustment of the
were known in England as Venice Catlines. At each advance
action made them remarkably thick at low positions (near
of string technology the new, more elastic strings were used
the nut).' This implies an aspect of technique that modem
to improve the quality of courses within the old range
players have not yet developed: having the frets positioned
besides offering courses that extended the range. There was
flatter than theoretical and controlling intonation by fingerno significant change in tone quality or cost in these changes,
pressure on the string. This aspect of technique offers
so there was no serious delay in acceptability as there was
another dimension of expression yet to be explored by
with overspun strings.
modern exponents of early music on fretted gut-strung
instruments.
4. Venice Catlines
Even Venice Catlines did not have anything like the elasticity
6. String uniformity
possible with overspun strings, so pitch distortion will be a
new problem that the player converting to gut will need to
cope with. The only evidence we have on the construction of
Venice Catlines lies in their name. As Dowland explains in
the Varietie of Lute-Lessons they '... are made at Bologna in
Gut strings, being natural products, are inherently less
uniform than alternatives. Historically, metal-strung instru-
ments had frets placed at permanent positions while gut-
strung instruments had movable frets. This was because of
Lumbardie, and from thence are sent to Venice: from which
the difference in uniformity, and the frets were movable to
place they are transported to the Martes, and therefore com-
make the best compromise against out-of-tuneness of the gut
monly called Venice Catlines'. They must have needed
strings. Capirola8 used a most complex system for fixing
special skills, being in such widespread use yet only made in
strings, some with the thick end at the nut, some with the
one place. The 'catline' in the name indicates something of
thick end at the bridge, to effect this compromise. Various
the construction. On a ship the catline is the rope used to 'cat
sources indicate that a string that is out of tune may be im-
the anchor' (i.e. to lash the anchor to the 'cathead', a beam
proved if the direction in which it lies is reversed, i.e. the
fixed to the side of the ship for that purpose). The job needs
string is turned end for end, since the end of the string at the
to be done quickly and so the catline is an especially flexible
rope. This flexibility comes from the way the rope is made.
Any rope is made from a number of small ropes twisted
together, but when the twisting together of the small ropes is
in the opposite direction to the twisting of the strands that
make up each small rope, the result is a highly flexible and
somewhat stretchy rope, of which the catline is an example.
(The other kind of rope, where both twistings are in the same
direction, is less flexible and stretchy but stronger.)
As an experiment we imitated the catline rope con-
pegbox might be truer than the end near the bridge.
Non-uniform strings give rise to another problem which
affects both fretted and unfretted instruments, in that the
harmonics of a non-uniform string are out of tune with one
another and with the fundamental. Thus they beat with one
another instead of developing a steady vibration.9 On
plucked instruments this can cause poor or attenuated tone;
on bowed instruments it can, in addition, make the string
difficult to control. The extent to which this is a problem
depends both on the degree of non-uniformity within the
string, and on the acoustic response of the instrument.
struction in gut, twisting half-a-dozen wet thin strings
individually, then twisting them all together in the opposite
Generally the more resonant the instrument, the more it is
adversely affected by non-uniform strings. This problem can
way. The result is very encouraging in that the string is suit-
431
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be particularly acute on those extremely resonant instru-
ments which are built in a modern tradition to cater for
-Eferodobvdfa
modern concert hall conditions.
Treble strings are most affected by non-uniformity. Lutes
before about 1580 had single first courses because of the
difficulty of getting two treble strings to sound in tune
together on all the frets. More uniform treble strings were
available from Munich from Capirola's time (1517), but they
seem to have been in general use only by vihuelistas until
double first courses became standard (in Italy and England,
at least). They were called 'minikins' in England and were
very expensive.'1
GANASSI 1543
Though minikins were a vast improvement over other thin
gut strings they certainly were not up to the standard of uni-
formity to which we have become used in nylon or metal
wire. Thus lower standards of intonation are to be expected
if using authentic gut.
7. Testing for uniformity
Since strings were variable in gauge along their length,
players could not expect simply to buy a string and put it on
an instrument, and practically every lute tutor explains how
to test strings to be sure that they are true, except for
MERSENNE 1636
Dowland" who says, 'it is so ordinaire and so well knowne, I
hold it not fit to trouble you with the relation'. Others,
BurwelHl' for instance, are more helpful: '.... their goodness
is known thus: holding the two ends in each hand and strik-
ing the string with the middle finger, if they part in two only;
...' Illustrations from Ganassi'3 and Mersenne14 show what
Fig. I
is meant (Fig. 1).
Nowadays one can also use this method to economize by
maker's art, now as well as then, is to twist the string so uni-
buying cheap, less uniform strings, and finding the best parts
formly that a minimum of polishing is necessary.
to use for the bit that vibrates. Note that a treble string, to
sound right, needs to be truer than a bass, and how it per9. Tuning ease and stability
forms in the test will depend on how tightly you stretch the
If a player is converting from nylon to gut on an instru-
string. Some experience is necessary to get the best out of the
ment, he should make sure his pegs are very well fitted since,
method, but it is well worth learning. One point which the
for the same increment of pitch and the same tension,
old authors could not have anticipated is that fluorescent
because of the difference in elasticity and density, he will only
lighting confuses the vibration pattern, and should therehave about - of the peg movement that he had with nylon. If
fore be avoided. Daylight is best. An indication of how stanconverting from single-strand iron or steel, he would enjoy
dards of intonation for gut-strung instruments have changed
ten times more peg movement than he was used to. Metal
through the centuries is that when the early tutors described
stringing of viols can well exert twice the tension of gut, and
this method there was never a hint that it might have been
the steel is often made of twisted strands which increases the
inadequate, but in the late 19th century Heron-Allen'5 stated
elasticity so the increased peg-movement for a given pitch
that it was not a sure test.
increment could well be no more than double. If the player
is used to fine tuners on his strings, he will have to accept
8. String polishing
more difficulty in tuning as well as the need (see next section)
It is possible by very careful polishing to get good uni-
formity, but the more polishing a string is subjected to, the
more the microscopic fibres are broken down when they
appear at the surface. This tends to lower the tensile strength
and invites more breakage of higher strings. (Bachmann'6 in
his description of violin string-making mentions that violin
E strings were usually not polished.)
String polishing is not new. Mersenne mentioned a dried
grass abrasive used for this purpose. However, the string-
for tuning more often.
Gut tends to swell when placed in moist conditions
because of water absorption between the fibres. Since the
fibres are twisted, the swelling would shorten its length if it
could, but on an instrument it can only increase the tension,
which tends to raise the pitch. The increased moisture also
adds weight, thus tending to lower the pitch. The more twist
a string has, the more important we would expect the tension
effect to be. With a slight increase in moisture the tension
433
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effect usually predominates and the pitch goes sharp, but as
/ Fibre Angle /Fibre Angle
moisture increases, mass overcomes tension and the pitch
goes down.
Dry heat lowers the pitch because of the tension effect as
the moisture is dried out of the string.
/ Moderate Twist / High Twist
FIBRE ANGLE RANGES
10. Effect of treatment to improve
-- 30< >40< > 50 < >55
Some modern strings are varnished to resist moisture abLow Moderate High Catl ine
sorption. The increased density without increased tensile
Fig. 2
strength resulting from this treatment lowers the breaking
that music gut needs to be twisted more than tennis-racquet
pitch and thus decreases the life of treble strings. Many
gut, but they do not seem to appreciate the significance of
authors mention oiling strings, which helps them to resist
increasing the tightness of twist for musical applications.
moisture swelling as well as preventing bacterial decay.
Occasionally one finds the high-twist gut amongst a batch of
Bachmann (fn. 12) mentions olive oil and recommends the
music strings, but the manufacturers we deal with will not
addition of 1/10 its weight of laurel oil to prevent it turning
accept orders specifically for these.
rancid. We have found almond oil, as mentioned in Burwell
The other way to get a high-twist string is to take a
(fn. 16) to be satisfactory.
moderate-twist string and soak it thoroughly in water, then
hang it up to dry with just enough tension to keep it from
11. Chemical attack
coiling on itself while twisting it up as much as it will take.
Gut strings are more susceptible to chemical attack from
The diagram (Fig. 3) shows one possible set-up for doing
sweat, an effect that can decrease the life of strings, particu-
larly treble ones. Antiperspirant spray on the fingertips
: ---c r
helps.
gut tied to a hook ->
* 0 : c=== c
12. Converting nuts and bridges
All-gut strings are thicker than overspun strings. When con-
verting to gut on viols the notches on the bridge and nut
r wall =
need to be widened so that the strings run freely. The widen-
ing is concentric on the original positions. This is not the
case for lutes because of the closeness of the strings within a
vice-grip pliers - C== 0 ce
course and because of the different type of bridge. To avoid
:---:C :2 C: t--
strings of the same course slapping together, the distance
between their nearest surfaces must be preserved, which
stick El cJC--c
means that the notches on the nut are widened outwards
from the centre of the course. On the bridge where the string
Fig. 3
goes through a hole, that hole is similarly widened out-
this. The stick wedged into the vise-grip pliers is there to
wards, but also upwards as well so as not to lower the action
catch against the wall and stop the gut from untwisting. As
and cause slapping against the frets.
the gut starts to dry out it will be able to take more twist. The
The widening of a notch or hole in a non-symmetric way
result can be hairy and bumpy to look at, but provided the
without making it deeper leaves a flat bottom which can
string has not become too uneven it cbuld work well.
cause trouble if conversion back to overspun strings is ever
Since Venice Catlines are not available we simulate them
wanted. Replacement nuts may be preferred.
(and high-twist strings) with open-wound and close-wound
To give an estimate of how much an effect we are con-
overspun strings designed so that the moderate-twist core
sidering here, let us give Mersenne's statement (pp. 79 and 17
gives the same elasticity as the original string. The tone of a
of Chapman's translation) that the thickest lute or bass viol
string depends on its elasticity, its mass per unit length and
string is one line in diameter, i.e. 2.35mm or 0.093 inches
its sound-absorbing properties. Metal absorbs very little
(conversion to modern units on p.573 of the translation).
sound and on a plain metal string the first two factors are
Overspun lute strings rarely exceed Imm in diameter.
adequate in specifying tone quality."8 Plain gut strings have
considerable absorption. Overspun strings have absorption
13. What to do to approach the authentic
characteristics beyond that of their components due to their
gut sound
In Table 2 we summarize the appropriate types of gut strings
used at different periods, and in Figure 2 we show how to tell
the amount of twist in a string."7 Moderate-twist gut is what
is generally available nowadays. Gut manufacturers realize
construction, but their total absorption is still less than that
of an equivalent plain string. Thus the simulated early gut
strings that we make do not match the absorption charac-
teristics of the originals but they are the best we can do at
present.
435
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modation, the smoothness of transition from string to string
There are no difficulties in reproducing early overspun
and the purity of tone confers a unique beauty of sound
strings.
which is well worth the trouble. If a player agrees to cope
In conclusion, gut strings do not last as long, are more
with all these disadvantages, he will be rewarded by a
trouble to keep in tune, are inherently more out of tune, and
developing relationship with his instrument which parallels
allow much less latitude in pitch than usual modern alter-
that of the early players, with the consequent impetus to dis-
natives. In addition, gut bass strings have less brilliant tone
cover authentic components of technique and tone pro-
and their sound dies away faster after being plucked. They
duction which he would otherwise never have predicted, and
are harder to start sounding with a bow (especially near to
which will, of course, add to the rediscovery of the life of the
the bridge), and they emit a hiss during bowing which can be
music itself.
disconcerting if one is not used to it. Nevertheless, we have
found that after a remarkably short period of accom-
8 Compositione di Meser Vincenzo Capirola
Table 1. Usable pitch ranges of the different types of gut strings
(c. 1517), ed. O. Gombosi (1955).
9 E. Heron-Allen, Violin-Making as it Was,
STRING LENGTH cm 43 45 48 51 54 57 61 64 68 72 76 81
and Is (1885), p 213.
10 Import duties in 1660 on 12 dozen knots
Highest pitch b' b' a' g"' g' f' P e' eb' d' c'? c'
of minikins were ?1.6s.8d., while the duty on
the same quantity of thick strings was 2s.8d.;
Lowest pitch
and for comparison that on a dozen lutes
Moderate twist e e d c$ c B Bb A G G F' F
made in Cologne with cases was ?8 (see
'Import and Export Duties on Musical
Lowest pitch
Instruments in 1660' by Guy F. Oldham,
High twist B B A G G F F E E D Cs C
Galpin SocietyJournal IX (1956), p 97). In
contradistinction, Thomas Mace in Musick's
Lowest pitch
Monument (1676), p 66, said that minikins
Venice Catlines FS F E E D C$ C B E A G G
were the same price as Venice Catlines.
These are the usual ranges. One semitone or more higher is possible with particularly high
Burwell (see note 12 below), p 7, called a
quality gut but was not the usual practice because of the short life of the string.
knot a 'bunch' and said it was hard to get two
Plucked instruments often go one tone lower, bowed instruments rarely do since bowing thick
good strings out of one of them, but those
gut near the bridge is quite difficult.
were from Rome, not Munich. Her
Instruments played forcefully rarely had strings tuned so low.
explanation of the first two courses on the
lute being singles parallels that given above
for single first courses before the 1580s.
Table 2. Types of gut strings used at various times
11 John Dowland in Robert Dowland,
TREBLE RANGE:
Varietie of Lute-Lessons (1610), facs. Edgar
Hunt (1958), p 14.
Low or I Low or I Low or I Low or
12 The Burwell Lute Tutor. Reproduction
Moderate Twist Moderate Twist Moderate Twist Moderate Twist
ed. Richard Rastall; introduction by Robert
Spencer (1974); or transcription by Thurston
MIDDLE RANGE:
Dart, 'Miss Mary Burwell's Instruction Book
Moderate Twist Moderate Twist Moderate Twist, Moderate or
for Lute', Galpin SocietyJournal XI, (1958),
or High Twist 0 High Twist or 0 High Twist
p 3.
, Venice Catline Venice Catline
13 Silvestro Ganassi, Lettione Secondapur della
Overspun
BASS RANGE:
prattica di sonare il violone d'arco da tasti (1543).
Facs. Forni.
14 Marin Mersenne, Harmonie Universelle
Moderate Twist C High Twist Venice Catline Venice Catline or
(1635), transl. Robert E. Chapman (1957),
Overspun
p 79.
1s E. Heron-Allen, op. cit., p 208: 'It is often
1 Our experience is contradicted by some
2 Ian Harwood, 'An introduction to
laid down that the truth of a string may be
statements by early authors. Michael
renaissance viols', EM (October 1974), p 235.
determined by vibrating it between the
Praetorius in Syntagma Musicum II, 'De
3 Translation from Edmund S. J. van der
fingers, and that if it present only two even
Organographia' (1619), p 48, said that metal
Straeten, History of the Violoncello, Viol da
lines it is true, and if more, false. It is certain
strings offered smoother and more beautiful
Gamba, their Precursors and Collateral
that if it produce an irregular or multiplied
resonance. J. Matheson in Das Neu-Erdffnete
Instruments (1914), p 16.
figure it is false, but it does not follow that if
Orchestre (1713), p 282, described a viola
4 Lucy Robinson, 'La Basse de Viole', French
the lines be clear and distinct it is true. .. .'
d'amore with metal melody strings as
Music and the Fitzwilliam (1975), p 33.
16 Alberto Bachmann, An Encyclopedia of the
'languishing and tender'. Jean Rousseau in
1 Robert Donington, 'James Talbot's
Traiti de la Viole (1687), p 22, mentioned a
Manuscript', Galpin SocietyJournal III( 1950),p 27.
Violin (1925, repr. Da Capo Press paperback,
1975), p 146.
viol d'amour as a treble viol with metal
6 Djilda Abbott and Ephraim Segerman,
" A magnifying lens helps to see the angle of
rather than gut strings, but he objected to
'Strings in the 16th and 17th Centuries',
the fibres on the string surface.
their effect on the bowing and to their shrill
Galpin SocietyJournal XXVII (1974), p 48.
1' William R. Thomas and J.J. K. Rhodes,
tone. We suspect that modern metal strings
' Ephraim Segerman and Djilda Abbott,
are at much higher tension and are played
'On Lute Bridges and Frets', EM (July 1975),
more forcefully than those used then.
p 295.
'The String Scales of Italian Keyboard
Instruments', Galpin SocietyJournal XX (1967),
p 48.
437
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