First appearing in
France, at the very end of the sixteenth century, the musette was refined over the next hundred years by a number of instrument-making families. The best-known contributions came from the Hotteterre family: Martin Hotteterre added a second chanter, the
petit chalumeau, extending the instrument's range by six
semitones. The
bourdon, originally designed to accompany essentially modal music, became simpler as the chalumeaux became more complicated. The final form of the musette is fully chromatic, with a range of an
octave and half starting from F above middle C; the bourdon provides drones for C, D and G. The qualification
de cour refers to the instrument's connection with the French court and aristocracy of the early seventeenth century. "Exotic" - in the sense of
imported or
out of place - elements were fashionable, resulting in the appearance of traditional instruments such as
bagpipe,
hurdy-gurdy and
galoubet in
compositions for professionals and amateurs alike. The musette may well have benefited from being a bellows-blown instrument, too; it was generally considered unseemly for women to play any mouth-blown instrument. Borjon de Scellery, however, does explicitly identify grimacing and pulling faces as a habit of ill-trained musette-players. At the height of its popularity, the musette (like the hurdy-gurdy) was used not just for
chamber-music but also in larger-scale compositions such as
operas, where it was associated with shepherds, peasants and other
pastoral elements. After the
French Revolution, the musette seems to have fallen rapidly out of favour while simpler forms of bagpipe remained popular as folk-instruments. As a result,
musicologists examining French
baroque music at the end of the 19th century found it difficult to imagine that what they took to be the same as a simple folk bagpipe could ever have had a place in highly sophisticated music for the court. The "
authentic performance" approach generally familiar from the 1970s onward, plus skillful restoration of original instruments by makers such as Rémi Dubois (
Verviers, Belgium), has made it possible to hear works such as
Chédeville's "Pastor Fido" (based on
Vivaldi's "
The Four Seasons"), chamber-music by
Boismortier and even
Rameau's
opéra-ballet "
Les Fêtes d'Hébé" in their original form. ==Chalumeaux (chanters)==