Table of Contents
What family of instruments is the lute?
String instrument
Lute
Classification | String instrument (plucked) |
Hornbostel–Sachs classification | 321 (Composite chordophone sounded by the bare fingers) |
Developed | Classical antiquity (early lutes) Middle Ages (modern lutes) |
Related instruments | |
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What is similar to a mandolin?
Mandola: The alto, or viola equivalent of the mandolin family. Just like a viola is to a violin, the mandola is larger than a mandolin. The mandola is tuned a fifth lower than mandolin, CGDA. Bouzouki: The bouzouki was picked up by Irish musicians travelling abroad and then adapted for their use by retuning to GDAE.
What instrument is most similar to a lute?
Instruments Similar to Lutes
- Oud. The oud is an Arabic instrument very similar to a European lute in size and shape, sharing the rounded back and bent fretboard.
- Mandolin. Mandolins share many physical and sound characteristics with lutes.
- Pipa. The pipa is a plucked Chinese musical instrument.
- Barbat.
- Guitar.
What is a lute, and how is it different from the guitar?
Depending on the type of the lute strings, the sound can be crisper and brighter than the modern guitar. The most obvious difference between the lute and the guitar is the pear-shaped body of the lute , which is produced by gluing ribs of wood together and then gluing the soundboard on top.
Is the mandolin derived from the lute?
The mandolin is a musical instrument in the string family. The mandolin emerged in the 1500s and 1600s in Naples, Italy, believed to be derived from the lute string instruments dating as far back as 15,000 BC. The mandolin’s body acts a resonator, and it is attached to a neck which is attached to headstock.
Is the tuning the same on a violin as a mandolin?
The standard mandolin tuning is the same as violin tuning : G-D-A-E, from low to high. The only difference is that the mandolin has eight strings, but the violin has only four.
What is a mandolin guitar?
The mandolin is a stringed instrument that has eight strings and is tuned in perfect fifths like a violin (G, D, A, E). Since the mandolin is tuned in perfect fifths, generally the chord shapes that you learned on guitar (if you have prior guitar experience) won’t be of any help when you go to pick up a mandolin.
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