,
Edinburgh) The choice of musical instruments is an important part of the principle of historically informed performance. Musical instruments have evolved over time, and instruments that were in use in earlier periods of history are often quite different from their modern equivalents. Many other instruments have fallen out of use, having been replaced by newer tools for creating music. For example, prior to the emergence of the modern
violin, other bowed stringed instruments such as the
rebec or the
viol were in common use. The existence of ancient instruments in museum collections has helped musicologists to understand how the different design, tuning and tone of instruments may have affected earlier performance practice. As well as a research tool, historic instruments have an active role in the practice of historically informed performance. Modern instrumentalists who aim to recreate a historic sound often use modern reproductions of period instruments (and occasionally original instruments) on the basis that this will deliver a musical performance that is thought to be historically faithful to the original work, as the original composer would have heard it. For example, a modern music ensemble staging a performance of music by
Johann Sebastian Bach may play reproduction
Baroque violins instead of modern instruments in an attempt to create the sound of a 17th-century
Baroque orchestra. This has led to the revival of musical instruments that had entirely fallen out of use, and to a reconsideration of the role and structure of instruments also used in current practice. Orchestras and ensembles who are noted for their use of period instruments in performances include the
Taverner Consort and Players (directed by
Andrew Parrott), the
Academy of Ancient Music (
Christopher Hogwood), the
Concentus Musicus Wien (
Nikolaus Harnoncourt),
The English Concert (
Trevor Pinnock), the
Hanover Band (
Roy Goodman), the
Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century (
Frans Brüggen), the
English Baroque Soloists (Sir
John Eliot Gardiner),
Musica Antiqua Köln (
Reinhard Goebel),
Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir (
Ton Koopman),
Les Talens Lyriques (
Christophe Rousset),
Les Arts Florissants (
William Christie),
Le Concert des Nations (
Jordi Savall),
La Petite Bande (
Sigiswald Kuijken),
La Chapelle Royale (
Philippe Herreweghe),
Concert de la Loge Olympique (
Julien Chauvin), the
Australian Brandenburg Orchestra (
Paul Dyer), and the
Freiburger Barockorchester (
Gottfried von der Goltz). As the scope of historically informed performance has expanded to encompass the works of the
Romantic era, the specific sound of 19th-century instruments has increasingly been recognised in the HIP movement, and period instruments orchestras such as Gardiner's
Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique have emerged.
Harpsichord ,
Paris (1780) (
Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg) A variety of once obsolete keyboard instruments such as the
clavichord and the
harpsichord have been revived, as they have particular importance in the performance of Early music. Before the evolution of the symphony orchestra led by a
conductor, Renaissance and Baroque orchestras were commonly directed from the harpsichord; the director would lead by playing
continuo, which would provide a steady, harmonic structure upon which the other instrumentalists would embellish their parts. Many religious works of the era made similar use of the
pipe organ, often in combination with a harpsichord. Historically informed performances frequently make use of keyboard-led ensemble playing. Composers such as
François Couperin,
Domenico Scarlatti,
Girolamo Frescobaldi, and
Johann Sebastian Bach wrote for the harpsichord, clavichord, and organ. Among the foremost modern players of the harpsichord are
Ralph Kirkpatrick,
Scott Ross,
Karl Richter,
Alan Curtis,
William Christie,
Christopher Hogwood,
Robert Hill,
Igor Kipnis,
Ton Koopman,
Bob van Asperen,
Wanda Landowska,
Davitt Moroney,
Kenneth Gilbert,
Gustav Leonhardt,
Pieter-Jan Belder,
Trevor Pinnock,
Skip Sempé,
Andreas Staier,
Colin Tilney, and
Christophe Rousset.
Fortepiano During the second half of the 18th century, the harpsichord was gradually replaced by the earliest pianos. As the harpsichord went out of fashion, many were destroyed; indeed, the Paris Conservatory is notorious for having used harpsichords for firewood during the
French Revolution and Napoleonic times. Although names were originally interchangeable, the term '
fortepiano' now indicates the earlier, smaller style of piano, with the more familiar 'pianoforte' used to describe the larger instruments approaching modern designs from around 1830. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the fortepiano has enjoyed a revival as a result of the trend for historically informed performance, with the works of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert now often played on fortepiano. Increasingly, the early to mid 19th century pianos of
Pleyel,
Érard,
Streicher and others are being used to recreate the soundscape of Romantic composers such as Chopin, Liszt and Brahms. Many keyboard players who specialise in the harpsichord also specialise in the fortepiano and other period instruments. Some keyboardists renowned for their fortepiano playing are
Ronald Brautigam,
Kristian Bezuidenhout,
Melvyn Tan,
Steven Lubin,
Bart van Oort,
Gary Cooper,
Viviana Sofronitsky,
Paul Badura-Skoda,
Ingrid Haebler,
Robert Levin,
Alexei Lubimov,
Malcolm Bilson and
Tobias Koch.
Viol by Thomas Cole () A vast quantity of music for
viols, for both ensemble and solo performance, was written by composers of the
Renaissance and
Baroque eras, including
Diego Ortiz,
Claudio Monteverdi,
William Byrd,
William Lawes,
Henry Purcell,
Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe,
J.S. Bach,
Georg Philipp Telemann,
Marin Marais,
Antoine Forqueray, and
Carl Frederick Abel. From largest to smallest, the viol family consists of: •
violone (two sizes, a contrabass an octave below the bass, and a smaller one a fourth or fifth above, a great bass) • bass viol (about the size of a
cello) • tenor viol (about the size of a
guitar) • alto viol (slightly smaller than the tenor) • treble or descant viol (about the size of a
viola) •
pardessus de viole (about the size of a
violin) Among the foremost modern players of the viols are
Paolo Pandolfo,
Sigiswald and
Wieland Kuijken,
Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
Jordi Savall,
John Hsu, and
Vittorio Ghielmi. There are many modern
viol consorts.
Recorder Although largely supplanted by the
flute in the 19th century, the recorder has experienced a revival with the HIP movement.
Arnold Dolmetsch did much to revive the recorder as a serious concert instrument, reconstructing a "consort of recorders (descant, treble, tenor and bass) all at low pitch and based on historical originals". Handel and Telemann, both noted recorder players, wrote several solo pieces for the instrument. Often, recorder players start off as flautists, then transition into focusing on the recorder. Some famous recorder players include
Frans Brüggen,
Barthold Kuijken,
Michala Petri,
Ashley Solomon and
Giovanni Antonini. ==Singing==