March 10, 2023 | Author: Gavin Thomas | Category: Instruments
The cello's full name means 'The little big viol'
Why is the tenor oboe called an English horn? Are violinists are really playing little violas? What links the bassoon and Benito Mussolini? And are viols really vile? The names of the major classical instruments are so familiar that we usually take them for granted, but digging into their origins reveals an intriguing hotchpotch of multicultural influences, from ancient Greece and Rome via medieval Europe through to the present day. Some names reveal surprisingly simple origins; others make no sense whatsoever but offer entertaining glimpses into languages ability to mistranslate, mislead and sometimes downright mangle the original meaning of things.
Flute
Origins obscure. The name might be derived from the Latin flare (to blow, inflate), although serious word scholars have largely rubbished this claim. All we really know is that its got nothing to do with lute.
Piccolo
From the Italian piccolo flauto, meaning small flute. Which seems to pretty much sum it up. Although theres another school of thought which claims its related (we dont quite understand how) to the Latin verb piccare, meaning to pierce, which also makes sense if youve ever been sat anywhere near a piccolo playing a top C.
Oboe
Still known in French as the hautbois (haut + bois literally high wood), which seems pretty self-explanatory. The Italians subsequently transliterated the French hautbois (which sounds something like oh-bwa to non-French ears) into oboè, from whence it transformed into the English oboe.
English Horn (Cor Anglais)
A good example of something being not so much lost in translation as completely destroyed, given that the cor anglais isnt a horn and has nothing whatsoever to do with England. Early versions of the instrument were known in German as the engellisches Horn literally angelic horn due to its alleged resemblance to the instruments played by angels in medieval paintings. Except that engellisches also means English in Middle High German, which then got mistranslated into the French as cor anglais, and then into its Anglo equivalent, English horn.
Bassoon
From the Italian bassone (basso + the suffix -one, literally big bass). More interesting is the instruments other Italian name, fa*gotto, meaning something like a bundle of sticks, which may (or may not) be related to words ranging from the old English fa*ggot (a bunch of firewood sorry bassoonists) and the Italian fascist, derived from the Latin word fasces, the name of an Ancient Roman emblem comprising sticks-plus-axe which was carried by judges to indicate their power to grant life, death or other unspecified forms of punishment over all who came into their presence. Just remember that the next time you try to mess with a bassoonist.
Clarinet
First recorded in 1710, the name clarinet derives from the Latin word clarus meaning clear, which also gave us the word clarion, used in the Middle Ages in England to describe a type of early trumpet. And just to confuse matters the clarinet was also widely known as the clarionet up until the early 20th century, making it sound like a little trumpet, which its not.
Saxophone
This one makes much more sense. Invented by instrument-maker Adolphe Sax in the 19th century, the word saxophone simply combines the name Sax and the Greek suffix -phone, meaning something which makes a sound, as in your latest Samsung Galaxy.
Trumpet
Variants of this name can be found in northern European languages back to at least the 14th century, although exactly where it comes from isnt clear. One theory is that its related to medieval words for the drum (known as trommel in Old German) although we dont really understand why medieval folk might confuse the two.
Trombone
From the Italian tromba (trumpet) plus the suffix -one (big). Which kind of makes sense, even if it isnt actually a trumpet.
Tuba
From the Latin tubus (meaning tube or pipe"). Nothing to do with potatoes .
Viola, Violin, Viol
From the latin verb vitulari, meaning to exult or to be joyful (vitulari may also be the root of the violins other name, the fiddle say vitul fast and youll see what we mean). This morphed over time into viol, to describe the Renaissance consort instrument beloved of Byrd and Purcell, and thence into viola, to describe the modern viola, and violino (little viola) to describe its smaller relation, also known as the modern violin.
Cello
The ancestor of the modern double bass was known as the violone (viol plus the Italian suffix -one meaning big). A smaller version of the instrument was called the violoncello (little violone cello being an Italian suffix meaning little). So the instruments full name violoncello actually means little big viol. Over time the first part of the name was gradually dropped, so that the second largest modern string instrument is now called little which seems like a long and complicated way of coming up with one of musics daftest names.
Double Bass
Its a bass instrument which traditionally doubled the bottom line of whatever piece it was playing. Simple as.
Timpani
From the Latin tympanum (drum) which also happens to be the source of the modern English medical term tympanum, referring to the thing inside your head commonly known as the ear drum.
Guitar, lute
The name guitar has an illustrious history, deriving from the ancient Greek kithara (a plucked instrument said to have been created by the god Hermes) which also gave us the Indian name for a plucked instrument, sitar. Relatives of the guitar include the Arabian oud (an instrument still hugely popular across the Middle East to this day), whose name is probably the source of the European lute, to which the oud bears a notable resemblance.
Piano
Back in 1710 when instrument maker Bartolomeo Cristofori produced an early piano prototype he called it a gravicembalo col piano e forte ("harpsichord with soft and loud") to distinguish it from earlier keyboard instruments like the harpsichord, clavichord and spinet, none of which could play different dynamics. Cristoforis clunky name was subsequently abbreviated to either pianoforte or fortepiano. These two names basically referred to the same instrument to begin with, although over time the modern instrument became known simply as the piano, while fortepiano is now used to refer to period instruments, meaning that the softly spoken 18th-century instrument played by Mozart now has a much noisier name than the sonorous modern grand.