Viol
Viol
 1. Structure.
 During its history the viol was made in many different sizes: pardessus (high treble), treble, alto,
 small tenor, tenor, bass and violone (contrabass). Only the treble, tenor and bass viols, however,
 were regular members of the viol consort. The pardessus de viole did not emerge until the late
 17th century, and the violone – despite its appearance in the 16th century – was rarely used in viol
 consorts. The alto viol was rarely mentioned by theorists and there is some doubt as to how often
 it was used. Two small bass instruments called ‘lyra’ and ‘division’ viols were used in the
 performance of solo music in England (see LYRA VIOL and DIVISION VIOL). A full-sized bass viol,
 however, was played by soloists on the Continent in the Baroque era.
 According to Mace (A1676) a consort or ‘chest’ of viols should be ‘all truly and proportionably
 suited’ in shape, wood and colour, but especially in size. The string length from nut to bridge on
 the treble viol, for instance, should ideally be exactly half that on the bass viol, the treble being
 tuned an octave higher than the bass. Application of this principle to the tenor viol is aided by the
 downward a gamb a playing position; if it were applied to the tenor member of the modern string
 quartet, the result would be a viola too large for comfort (see TENOR VIOLIN).
 The shape of the viol was extremely variable during much of its early history. Some 16th-century
 instruments show the influence of the guitar family or the violin family. A few have a festooned
 outline in the manner of an orpharion or bandora. By the 1540s a distinctive shape had evolved in
 Venice, which is characterized by steeply down-sloping shoulders and a narrow upper body. A
 significant number of examples by Francesco Linarol and Antonio and Battista Ciciliano have
 been preserved in collections in Vienna and Brussels, and the shape is also recorded in
 paintings by Titian, for example Venus and Cupid with a Lute player, c1565 (GB-CFm). The most
 characteristic form of viol, however, with its deep ribs, sloping shoulders and middle bouts
 appeared early in the 16th century and became fairly standard during the 17th and 18th centuries.
 The viol is very lightly constructed, both the belly and the back being made of very fine wood. The
 belly is gently arched, whereas the back is flat, except at the top, where it slopes in towards the
 neck. A few crossbars are usually fixed to the back to reinforce it. The ribs of the viol are quite
 deep (often reinforced with linings of parchment or linen), and since neither the belly nor the back
 projects beyond them there are no ‘edges’. The neck of the Renaissance viol and early 17th-
 century English viol was thick and rounded like that of the contemporary cello. In the course of the
 17th century the neck became flatter, and on the later French instruments, it was sometimes very
 thin, resembling that of a lute. Jean Rousseau (A1687) described how the late French makers
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                   1/29
14.3.2011                                             Viol in Oxford Music Online
 gave the viol its ‘final perfection’ by setting the neck at a greater angle, and also by reducing the
 overall thickness of the wood. Frets, made from pieces of stretched gut, are tied round the neck in
 a special fret knot. Normally, double frets are used (see FRET, fig.). There are usually seven frets
 placed at intervals of a semitone, but, according to Simpson (A1659), an eighth might be added at
 the octave. All frets can be finely adjusted to improve the tuning. Simpson said that the strings
 should lie close to the fingerboard ‘for ease and convenience of Stopping’.
 Most viols have six strings, but the solo bass viol played on the Continent during the Baroque era
 often had seven and the pardessus five. The standard tuning of the six-string viol was a sequence
 of 4th, 4th, major 3rd, 4th, 4th. Thus the three principal types of viol in a consort are tuned as
 follows: d–g–c′–e′–a′–d″ (treble); G–c–f–a–d′–g′ (tenor); and D–G–c–e–a–d′ (bass). Players of the
 alto viol sometimes prefer a tuning in which the position of the major 3rd is altered: c–f–a–d′–g′–c
 ″; English (and possibly some continental) bass viol players occasionally tuned their lowest string
 down to C. French bass viols of the Baroque era often had a seventh string (A′), an innovation
 attributed by Jean Rousseau in 1687 to Sainte-Colombe. This string, like the D and G strings,
 would be overspun with silver or another metal (see OVERSPUN STRING), all three preferably having
 the ‘same covering’, according to Jean-Baptiste Forqueray (who experimented also with half-
 covering on the c string). The 18th-century French PARDESSUS was usually tuned g–c′–e′–a′–d″–g″;
 from the 1730s the five-string pardessus was tuned g–d′–a′–d″–g″.
 Like other fretted instruments such as the lute, the viol was usually tuned and played in equal
 temperament. According to Lindley (B1984), some 16th-century theorists such as Ganassi
 advocated a form of meantone temperament. This would have meant tuning the central third purer
 and enlarging slightly the four 4ths between remaining open strings. The frets would then have
 been adjusted to achieve at least some of the unequal tones and semitones that this
 temperament requires. The fact that any single fret determines the intonation for all six strings,
 however, must have imposed severe limitations on its use. Modern experiments suggest that
 meantone intonation on the viol is best reserved for pieces with a very limited range of key
 (see TEMPERAMENTS, §8 ).
 All viols, whether supported on the calves (like the tenor and bass, see fig.10 below) or on the
 knees, are played in an upright, almost vertical, position. The bow is held in an underhand grip,
 the palm facing upwards. Simpson (A1659) wrote:
          "Hold the Bow betwixt the ends of your Thumb and two foremost fingers, near to
          the Nut. The Thumb and first finger fastned on the Stalk; and the second fingers
          end turned in shorter, against the Hairs thereof; by which you may poize and
          keep up the point of the Bow."
 The wrist should be relaxed, since quick notes ‘must be express’d by moving some Joint nearer
 the hand; which is generally agreed upon to be the Wrist’. Heavy accents are not possible on the
 viol because the essence of both the up- (‘forward-’ or ‘push-’) and the down-bow (‘back-bow’ or
 ‘pull-bow’) is a movement across the string and not a movement downwards with the weight of
 the arm above the bow, as it is in violin bowing. Light accents, however, may be obtained by
 means of a small increase in pressure at the beginning of a stroke. This small pushing accent is
 more easily and naturally achieved with an up-bow. Thus viol bowing is the exact reverse of violin
 bowing and, as Simpson wrote, ‘When you see an even Number of Quavers or Semiquavers, as
 2, 4, 6, 8. You must begin with your Bow forward’ (i.e. with an up-bow).
 The early viol bow is characteristically convex (like an unstretched archer’s bow) rather than
 concave like a violin bow. A concave design is found in some 18th-century French bows: this
 gives the advantage of a more sensitive response to nuance. The player governs tension by
 pressure with the middle finger directly on the hair (see figs.10 and 12 below); pressure on the
 stick itself would merely cause the hair to bend towards the arc of the stick. According to Danoville
 (A1687) a viol bow ‘must be of Chinese wood, and should not be too heavy, because it makes the
 [bowing] hand clumsy, nor too light, because then it cannot play chords [easily] enough; but a
 weight proportioned to the hand, which is why I leave that to the choice of the one who plays the
 Viol’. Rousseau, however, wrote: ‘But it seems to me that one finds many other sorts of woods
 used to make Bows, which are no less good than Chinese wood’. Chinese wood is almost
 certainly snakewood, but Trichet (see Lesure, E1955–6) pointed out that Brazilwood (of which
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                   2/29
14.3.2011                                      Viol in Oxford Music Online
 Pernambuco is a superior variety) was also known in France.
 Because of the lightness of its body construction and the relatively low tension of its strings, the
 viol is an extremely resonant instrument and readily responds to the lightest stroke of the bow
 (see ACOUSTICS, §II). Its tone is quiet but has a reedy, rather nasal quality which is quite distinctive
 and makes it an ideal instrument for playing polyphony, in which clarity of texture is of the greatest
 importance. On the other hand the viol is less successful in music to be danced to, partly
 because its sound is rather restrained, but also because it cannot accent heavily enough.
 The viol’s capacity for resonance is enhanced by the way the left hand takes advantage of the
 frets. The finger presses the string down hard directly behind the fret and thereby produces an
 effect akin to that of an open string. A vital technique for achieving resonance – as well as for
 facility in fast passage-work – is the use of ‘holds’, whereby each finger, once placed behind a
 fret, remains there even after the note has been played, until it has to be moved to another
 position. This technique enables the instrument, in Simpson’s words, ‘to continue the Sound of a
 Note when the Bow hath left it’. For this, as for multiple stops, the fact that the placing of the frets
 guarantees stability of intonation enables the left hand to assume a greater variety of postures
 than would be possible on an unfretted instrument such as a violin or cello.
 During the 16th and 17th centuries there were many highly skilled viol makers, particularly
 English craftsmen like John Rose, Henry Jaye and Richard Meares. Outstanding makers of the
 late 17th and 18th centuries included Barak Norman in England, Michel Colichon, Nicolas
 Bertrand and Guillaume Barbet in France, Jacob Stainer in the Tyrol and Joachim Tielke in
 Hamburg. Makers of the pardessus included Jean-Baptiste Dehay (‘Saloman’) and Louis
 Guersan.
Ian Woodfield
 2. 15th-century origins.
 The characteristic playing position of the viol seems to have been known in Europe as early as
 the 11th century, when waisted fiddles were played like viols, resting on the lap or between the
 knees with the bow held above the palm. A 12th-century miniature depicts an unusually large
 instrument of this type, which is sometimes referred to as the medieval viol (see FIDDLE, §1 ).
 Rebecs were also played in this way, as is shown in the famous 13th-century Cantigas de Santa
 María (see REBEC, [not available online]). By the early 14th century, however, this method of playing
 bowed instruments had almost completely disappeared from Europe. But in Aragon rebecs were
 played a gamb a throughout the 14th and 15th centuries, as shown for example in a mid-15th-
 century Aragonese miniature of King David (GB-Lbl Add.28962, f.82; see REBEC, [not available
 online]) and in a painting of St Anthony Abbot by the Almudévar Master (Juan de la Abadía) (in GB-
 Cfm). The Aragonese rebec thus provides a link between the general disappearance of the a
 gamb a playing posture at the end of the 13th century and its re-emergence two centuries later
 with the Renaissance viol.
 Viols appear in late 15th-century paintings from the Aragonese province of Valencia. Fig.1 [not
 available online] shows a painting of the Virgin and Child, by a follower of Valentín Montolíu, which
 comes from the Maestrazgo, a mountainous region to the north of the Valencian district of
 Castellón de la Plana. It is one of the earliest known representations of the Renaissance viol,
 dating from about 1475. By 1500 the viol was regularly depicted in angelic consorts by Valencian,
 Majorcan and Sardinian painters. In the Cagliari Museo Nazionale is a fine full-length picture of an
 angel viol player, painted in about 1500 by the Sardinian Master of Castelsardo. This shows a
 fairly typical early Spanish viol with an extremely long narrow neck, frets, lateral pegs, central rose,
 very thin ribs and tenor-sized body with the characteristic viol shape, waisted but with marked
 corners. Like most other Valencian viols of this period it does not have a raised fingerboard, and
 instead of an arched bridge the strings pass over a low uncurved bar attached to the belly. In other
 paintings the strings are actually fixed to the bar as on a plucked instrument. The Castelsardo
 Master’s viol with its long neck, thin ribs and generally slim outline appears to have been a tall
 instrument, quite distinct from the shorter, deeper-bodied viol that became standard in Italy during
 the 16th century. Later Valencian viols of the type pictured by the St Lazarus Master do, in fact,
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                      3/29
14.3.2011                                        Viol in Oxford Music Online
 have shorter necks and wider, deeper waists, but still retain the thin ribs. On the belly of this
 particular instrument is a pattern of ornaments characteristic of the vihuela de mano.
 Iconographic evidence suggests that the viol was the result of applying the traditional Aragonese
 technique of rebec playing to a new bowed instrument whose size and body construction were
 essentially those of the plucked vihuela de mano. For such instruments, the term vihuela de arco
 seems appropriate.
 The viol quickly spread across the Mediterranean through the Balearic Islands and Sardinia to
 Italy. Its advance was probably assisted by the Borgia family from Valencia, from whose ranks
 came two popes, Calixtus III and Alexander VI. It was during the pontificate of Alexander VI (1492–
 1503) that viols began to appear in Rome and in cities to the north, such as Urbino and Ferrara,
 that were dominated by the Borgias. Some of the earliest representations of viols in Italian art are
 by painters working in those areas: Costa in Ferrara, Francia in Bologna and Raphael (as well as
 Timoteo Viti) in Urbino and Rome.
 The court of Isabella d’Este at Mantua seems to have been particularly receptive to new Spanish
 instruments of all kinds, which included the vihuela de mano and possibly a Spanish form of lute,
 as well as the viol. In the last decade of the 15th century Lorenzo de Pavia, Isabella’s agent, was
 frequently involved in the purchase or repair of a range of instruments made ‘in the Spanish
 manner’: the ‘viola spagnola’, the ‘viola a la spagnola’, the ‘liutto a la spagnola’ and the plain
 ‘spagnola’. It is probable that one of the earliest viol consorts ever made was the one provided for
 Isabella by Lorenzo from a workshop in Brescia.
 In 1493 the chronicler Bernardo Prospero reported that some Spanish musicians had come from
 Rome to Mantua playing viols ‘as tall as I am’ (‘viole grande quasi come me’). These Spanish
 players had probably come from Valencia to Rome with Rodrigo Borgia (Alexander VI). Their ‘viole
 grande’ may have been long-necked Spanish viols. Tall, slim viols with long necks appear also in
 Italian paintings of this period, notably in Lorenzo Costa’s Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints,
 on an altarpiece dated 1497 (in S Giovanni in Monte, Bologna), and Timoteo Viti’s painting of the
 same subject (Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan). In other early 16th-century Italian paintings the viol
 appears as a more fully developed instrument. Raphael in his Allegory of St Cecilia (c1513–16;
 Pinacoteca Nazionale, Bologna) depicted a tenor viol with a carved lion’s head scroll and nearly
 all the characteristics of a typical 17th-century instrument: deep ribs, sloping shoulders, flat back
 bending in at the upper end towards the neck, two c-holes, frets, six pegs and a slightly arched
 belly. This picture illustrates the most important single change that the viol underwent in Italy: the
 older flat-bridged Valencian type gave way to the instrument with an arched bridge and a
 fingerboard. In effect, Italian makers enabled the viol, which had hitherto probably had a melodic
 and a drone-playing capability only, to develop into an instrument fully equipped to play an
 individual line in a polyphonic ensemble. As a direct result of this fundamental change of identity,
 there was now the need to make viols of different sizes. At first, only two sizes, tenor and bass,
 were required. Ensemble music for which these sets of large viols were well suited included
 textless polyphony, and frottolas which could be performed by solo voice and instruments.
 Although there is no iconographic evidence of any viol-like instrument in 15th-century German art,
 numerous references to groups of ‘Geigen’ players in archival sources led Polk (F1989) to
 propose that a tradition of string consort playing began to take root north of the Alps, and that
 German instrumentalists employed in the Italian courts played a significant role in the early
 development of the viol as an ensemble instrument. However, Woodfield (B1991) has argued that
 the term ‘Geige’ itself was a generic one, which could with equal reason be taken to refer to other
 bowed or plucked instruments or to mixed ensembles. The first iconographic evidence that the
 viol had entered the domains of Maximilian I comes in the early years of the 16th century.
 A bass viol is pictured in Grünewald’s famous Isenheim altarpiece (1512/13–15), although the
 bowing technique of the player is obviously unrealistic. Martin Agricola in his Musica
 instrumentalis deudsch (A1529) hinted at the southern origins of viols by describing them as
 ‘grosse welschen Geygen’ (‘large Italian fiddles’). The curious woodcuts of ‘grosse Geygen’
 printed by Agricola, like some Valencian depictions of viols, show instruments without
 fingerboard, bridge or tailpiece; the strings pass over a rose and are attached to a bar on the
 belly. Woodfield noted that the large majority of extant depictions of this instrument come from
 Basle – Agricola’s woodcut, for example, derives directly from that in Virdung’s Musica getutscht
 (Basle, 1511). He suggested that the origins of its characteristic shape may lie in the flamboyant
 lira da braccio outlines the kind depicted by Cima da Conegliano, woodcuts of which were readily
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    4/29
14.3.2011                                           Viol in Oxford Music Online
 available in Basle.
 Early German theorists point to the closeness of the relationship between the viol and lute.
 Judenkünig, for example, equated the viol with the lute. Both instruments are pictured together on
 the title-page woodcut of his 1523 treatise, and in the introduction he stated that his instructions
 were for both. Yet the viol is scarcely mentioned in the text and all the musical examples are for
 lute, so it is not clear how the viol player was expected to use the treatise. Some early
 Renaissance writers classified bowed and plucked instruments together. Tinctoris (De
 inventione et usu musicae, c1487) wrote of two types of ‘viola’, ‘sine arculo’ (‘without a bow’) and
 ‘cum arculo’ (‘with a bow’), as though they were members of the same family.
Ian Woodfield
 Despite the confusing terminology, there is ample evidence that the viol was popular at many
 16th-century courts. Baldassare Castiglione wrote enthusiastically of the viol consort (‘quattro
 viole da arco’) in his Il lib ro del cortegiano (Venice, 1528; Eng. trans. by T. Hoby, 1561), a vivid
 description of life in an early 16th-century court: ‘The musicke with a sette of violes doth no lesse
 delite a man: for it is verrie sweet and artificiall’. Theorists too commented on the upper-class
 status of the viol. Jambe de Fer (A1556), for example, wrote that the viol was played by
 ‘gentlemen, merchants and other men of virtue’ as a pastime, whereas the violin was usually
 considered a ‘professional’ instrument of the lower classes, often played in the streets to
 accompany dances or to lead wedding processions. Shakespeare attests to the viol's noble
 status; and Moll in Dekker and Middleton's The Roaring Girl (1611) is deeply indignant when her
 porter refers to her viol as a ‘fiddle’, although another character suggests that the viol is
 considered by many as ‘an unmannerly instrument for a woman’. By the later 18th century the viol
 was seldom found outside the court music room.
 It would be wrong, however, to suggest that the viol was played only by amateurs for their private
 enjoyment. Many courts employed professional viol players – sometimes complete consorts – to
 perform in the musical intermedi given at royal weddings or other special occasions. In 1502, at
 the wedding of Alfonso d’Este and Lucrezia Borgia at Ferrara, one of the intermedi included music
 played by six viols. Throughout the century, the viol consort remained an essential part of the
 Renaissance intermedio ‘orchestra’. It was most frequently used with other consorts of
 instruments, such as flutes or trombones, and sometimes in even larger ensembles. Some of
 the viol players hired for these special occasions were doubtless skilled professionals able to
 perform elaborate ornamentation. The names of several celebrated violists have survived;
 Ganassi mentioned two in his treatise – Giuliano Tibertino and Lodovico Lasagnino. The
 popularity of the viol with amateur players resulted in the publication of several viol tutors. Many
 general treatises on music, too, included sections devoted to viol playing or viol music (the most
 significant are listed in the bibliography). These treatises, together with iconographic evidence,
 present a surprisingly complete picture of the viol and the way it was played.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                         5/29
14.3.2011                                           Viol in Oxford Music Online
 Ganassi was the first writer to describe in detail the standard method of holding the viol – firmly
 between the knees, but with the knees not impeding the bowstroke. His method is illustrated on
 the title-page woodcut of Regola rub ertina. Yet iconographic evidence shows that viols were often
 played in positions other than those recommended in textbooks. Two of the famous viol players
 pictured by Paolo Veronese in his Marriage at Cana (1562–3) in the Louvre are holding their viols
 in an almost horizontal position. This posture was condemned by Ganassi. Bass viol players are
 sometimes pictured standing, with their viols either resting on the ground or supported on a small
 stool (as described by Jambe de Fer), or even held against the body with no visible means of
 support at all. This last method, illustrated by the woodcut in Judenkünig (A1523), looks highly
 improbable since the player has to support the weight of the instrument while playing it. Jambe de
 Fer, however, described a device used by players of the bass viola da b raccio to help take the
 weight of their instrument. This consisted of a small hook worn by the player which could be
 attached to an iron ring fixed to the back of his instrument – an arrangement which may on
 occasion have been adopted by bass viol players. But despite these and other unusual playing
 positions, the standard posture as described by Ganassi remained almost unchanged and was
 firmly advocated by later 17th-century English theorists.
 In the second volume of his viol tutor (A1543) Ganassi described fingering techniques in some
 detail. He gave five different fingerings for a scale (shown in ex.1). It is clear from his fourth and
 fifth alternatives that he intended the viol player to make full use of high positions. Indeed, his
 ricercares for solo viol contain some quite extended high passages, up to a 9th above the open
 top string. Alternative fingerings avoid unnecessary string crossing (ex.2). The ricercares for solo
 viol and the madrigal arrangement for voice and viol contain many chords, some of which are
 facilitated by Ganassi’s use of the b arré (one finger laid flat across two or more strings).
Ex.1
Ex.2
 The characteristic ‘underhand’ viol bowing was described by Ganassi. He started with the basic
 techniques, such as the grip with the thumb and middle finger holding the bow and the index
 finger applying the required amount of pressure; the different types of bowstroke; the use of arm
 in sustaining long notes, and the wrist in playing fast passage-work; and the need to keep the
 bowing arm firm but flexible. The correct use of up- and down-bows is explained at great length.
 Moreover, some of the musical examples have bowing marks, a dot beneath a note or letter
 indicating a down-bow, and the absence of a dot an up-bow. There are no slur marks as such,
 but there are occasionally two consecutive up- or down-bows, both articulated. Ortiz’s Trattado
 suggests that groups of two or three fast notes (‘semiminimas’) should be played in one bow. But
 the quick passage-work in Ganassi’s ricercares for solo viol is fully bowed out, usually with up-
 bows on the strong beats.
 Ganassi’s most interesting comments concern the style of good viol playing and the variety of
 tone which a good viol can produce. In the section on bowing, for example, he wrote that the best
 place to bow is at a distance of four fingers’ width from the bridge. But he also described the
 rougher sound of the strings near the bridge and their more restrained sound near the
 fingerboard. The viol player, it would seem, was completely at liberty to use these different sound
 qualities if he so desired. Ganassi also referred to a ‘tremar’ (shaking) of the bowing arm and the
 left hand, possibly an indication of tremolando and vibrato. These and similar passages all serve
 to emphasize Ganassi’s view that viol playing should be above all else expressive, and that the
 best way to play expressively is to imitate the human voice. To illustrate this, one of his most
 important points, he compared the viol player to the orator, who expresses his meaning to his
 listeners by gestures of the hand and changes in the tone of his voice. In the same way, he wrote,
 the good viol player should aim at variety and be sensitive to the music that is being played; and
 should not, for example, bow with vigour in ‘sad and afflicted’ music.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    6/29
14.3.2011                                          Viol in Oxford Music Online
 The earliest printed source of viol tunings is Agricola’s Musica instrumentalis deudsch (A1529),
 which gives the following tunings: f–a–d′–g′–c″ (discantus); c–f–a–d′–g′ (altus, tenor); G–c–f–a–d′–
 g′ (b assus). These tunings are clearly based on a single sequence of intervals for the whole
 consort, and consequently the position of the third varies within the consort. Most later theorists
 gave tunings in which all viols have the same sequence of intervals.
 Ganassi devoted a large section of his tutor to explaining four ‘regole’ (rules) for consort tuning.
 The first three are given in Table 1. The fourth rule, which according to Ganassi was used by most
 players, is rather different. Entitled ‘Modo de sonar una quarta piu alta’ (‘how to play a 4th higher’),
 it consists of a tuning for five-string viols (Table 2). It seems that the purpose of this tuning was to
 enable the performer to play in a higher position on a viol tuned to a lower pitch. The tenor viol, for
 example, is tuned just like the bass viol of the first three tunings without its lowest string: [D–]G–
 c–e–a–d′. The note g′, therefore, which in the first tuning is the open top string, has to be played
 on the fifth fret above the top string. In other words, the fourth rule involves a change of position,
 not pitch. Gerle gave an identical tuning for viols with five strings. Unlike Ganassi, however, he
 implied that a sixth string could be added, a 4th below the other five. A six-string bass, therefore,
 would presumably be tuned [A′–]D–G–B–e–a, although Gerle did not actually give the low notes in
 any of his charts.
                       TABLE 1
          Soprano           Tenor        Bass
 rule 1 d–g–c′–e′–a′–d″ G–c–f–a–d′–g′ D–G–c–e–a–d′
 rule 2 d–g–c′–e′–a′–d″ A–d–g–b–e′–a′ D–G–c–e–a–d′
 rule 3                     G–c–f–a–d′–g′ D–G–c–e–a–d′
          c–f–b –d′–g′–c″
                     TABLE 2
 Soprano Tenor              Bass
 d–g–b– G–c–e–a–d′          D–G–b–e–a
 e′–a′
 Theorists of the late 16th and early 17th centuries gave one of two tunings. Cerreto and Mersenne
 gave the normal ‘d tuning’ as in Ganassi’s first and second rules. Zacconi, Banchieri, Cerone and
 Praetorius gave a ‘G tuning’, a 5th lower. Banchieri, for example, gave the tunings in Table 3. The
 problem of these two quite different tunings is partly one of confusing terminology. The ‘tenor’ viol
 of the low-pitched consort was the exact equivalent of the ‘bass’ viol of the high-pitched consort.
 Thus the name given to a viol depended more on its relative position in the consort than on its
 absolute size or pitch. Very little music appears to have been composed for the low G-tuned
 consort; almost all 16th- and 17th-century viol music is for the higher d-tuned instruments. It has
 therefore been suggested that the low-pitched viols were used in concerted music, doubling other
 instruments and voices. The origins of the low G-tuned viol consort remain something of a
 mystery. The relationship between the low-pitched viols of the late 16th century and the earlier
 five-string viols described by Gerle and by Ganassi in his fourth rule may be significant (Table 4).
                      TABLE 3
 violone in contrabasso (violone)       D′–G′–C–E–A–
                                        d
 violone da gamba (bass)                G′–C–F–A–d–
                                        g
 viola mezana da gamba (tenor, alto) D–G–c–e–a–d′
 quarta viola in soprano (treble)       G–c–f–a–d′–g′
           TABLE 4
 Gerle       [A′]–D–G–B–e–a
 Ganassi     D–G–B–e–a
 Praetorius A′–D–G–B–e–a
             (or G′–C–F–A–d–g)
 An interesting regional variant in viol tunings was given by Jambe de Fer, who contrasted the
 tunings of Italy and France. His ‘Italian’ tuning follows the standard sequence of intervals (4th–
 4th–3rd–4th–4th). In France, however, it was apparently the custom to play on five-string viols
 tuned to a sequence of 4ths without the 3rd. This ‘French’ tuning is confirmed by Mareschall’s
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                      7/29
14.3.2011                                         Viol in Oxford Music Online
 Porta musices (Table 5).
                 TABLE 5
 Jambe de Fer         Mareschall
 dessus e–a–d′–g′–c″ discant
                               f –b–e′–a′–d″
 taille   B–e–a–d′–g′ tenor    B–e–a–d′–g′
 bas      E–A–d–g–c′ bass      E–A–d–g–c′
 The earliest printed collections of music for viol consort are the two editions of Gerle’s Musica
 teusch (A1532, A1546), which contain transcriptions of vocal music – German Tenorlieder and
 Parisian chansons. These pieces are short and often quite chordal. There is a similar collection
 of German secular music transcribed for viols in an earlier manuscript dated 1524 (D-Mu 4o
 cod.718). But such collections are exceptional, since most 16th-century consort music was
 neither composed nor arranged for specific instruments. Instead composers usually gave a
 general direction such as ‘da sonar’ (‘to be played’). There can be little doubt, however, that viol
 consorts regularly performed both vocal music – masses, motets, madrigals and chansons –
 and instrumental ricercares and fantasias. Several printed collections of ricercares by composers
 such as Willaert and Tiburtino (a violone player) were published during the mid-16th century.
 These would almost certainly have been used by viol players.
 The first printed source of solo viol music is Ganassi’s Regola rub ertina, which includes several
 ricercares for viol and one madrigal arrangement for viol and voice. The ricercares are short
 ‘improvisations’ consisting of running scales, cadential flourishes and some double stopping. In
 the arrangement of the madrigal Io vorei dio d’amor the viol accompanies the voice with a series
 of chords. This most interesting piece was probably intended as an imitation of the chordal style
 of playing associated with the lira da b raccio. Regola rub ertina also includes three exercises for
 practising various intervals. Some similar exercises are given in Mareschall’s Porta musices; like
 Ganassi’s they are intended to help the student practise difficult intervals and awkward leaps. The
 art of playing divisions (i.e. improvising ornaments) was an essential part of the musical
 education of all 16th-century musicians, and Ortiz devoted the whole of his treatise on viol playing
 to this subject. His musical examples include ornamented cadential patterns for viol consort,
 freely ornamented versions of vocal pieces for solo viol and keyboard, and ‘improvisations’ over
 well-known bass patterns like the folia and the romanesca. Ortiz’s arrangements of Sandrin’s
 chanson Doulce memoire and Arcadelt’s madrigal O felici occhi miei are among the most
 beautiful 16th-century pieces for solo viol. The ornamentation is restrained but by no means
 confined to standard cadential patterns. Towards the end of the century a small bass viol, the
 VIOLA BASTARDA, was developed specifically to perform divisions.
Ian Woodfield
 4. England.
 The viol was introduced into England some time early in the reign of Henry VIII, perhaps, as
 suggested by Holman (C1993), by members of the van Wilder family. In 1526 two viol players,
 Hans Hossenet and Hans Highorne, entered regular employment at a monthly salary of 33s. 4d.
 In contrast with Italy and Germany, where its impact was immediate, there is little evidence to
 suggest that the viol spread rapidly into English society, and not until the 1530s is there any
 significant evidence of ownership of viols outside the royal court. In 1540 the appointment of
 Henry VIII’s ‘newe vialles’, who comprised a complete consort of string players from Venice, Milan
 and Cremona, provided a strong impetus to the growth of the viol’s popularity in England. Despite
 their official Italian identities, Prior (C1983) has shown that Henry’s viol players were in fact Jews
 from northern Italian sephardic communities. The rapidly increasing popularity of the viol at the
 Tudor court is reflected in the inventory of Henry VIII’s great collection of instruments (GB-Lbl
 Harl.1419), compiled at the end of his reign in 1547. It includes an item ‘xix Vialles greate and
 small with iii cases of woodde covered with blacke leather to the same’. A few years later, English
 viol players were employed: in 1549 Thomas Kentt was ‘admitted to the Vialles in place of greate
 Hans deceased’, and from 1554 Thomas Browne appeared regularly in the lists of players.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    8/29
14.3.2011                                               Viol in Oxford Music Online
 English and French manners of playing the viol: (a) title-page from Simpson’s ‘The Division-Violist’ (London, 1659);
 (b) engraving by Nicolas Bonnart, 1664; note the bow grips, and the 7th string of the French instrument
 Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris
 The introduction of the viol into the curriculum of London choir schools during the reign of Henry
 VIII marked a new era of growth in England. By the mid-century, selected choirboys at the Chapel
 Royal, St Paul’s Cathedral and Westminster Abbey were receiving regular tuition. In 1582
 Sebastian Westcote, the Master of the Children at St Paul’s, bequeathed to the Almonry his
 ‘cheste of vyalyns and vialles’ for the use of the pupils. For a while in the 1560s the children viol
 players of St Paul’s occupied an especially prominent place in the ceremonial and theatrical
 activities undertaken by their school. At the Goldsmiths’ Annual Feast on 17 June 1560, for
 example, company members were regaled with musical entertainment during their meal: ‘And all
 the dynner tyme the syngyng chyldren of Paules played upon their vialles & songe verye pleasaunt
 songes to the delectacion & rejoysynge of the whole companie’. Incidental music and song
 accompaniments were also provided for plays. The interlude ‘Wyt and Science’ (c1545) by John
 Redford, organist of St Paul’s, calls for a viol consort on stage: ‘Heere cumth in fowre wyth violes
 and syng’. The long-term influence of the choirboy viol players was considerable. Generations of
 trained musicians entered the wider musical community in young adulthood with their viol playing
 skills. Furthermore, musical genres which had some early association with the choir schools (the
 In Nomine, the consort song and the consort anthem) retained a prominent place in the English
 repertory for the instrument.
 The extent to which viol playing was taken up by amateur players in 16th-century England has
 been the subject of some controversy. Doe (C1977) argued that the spread of the viol outside the
 immediate environs of the Tudor court was very limited indeed. It is clear from Woodfill’s
 documentary evidence, however, that there was a steady increase in the ownership of sets of
 viols in large Elizabethan households. In 1537, to take an early example, the accounts of the Earl
 of Rutland show that 53s. 4d. was paid for ‘four viols bought at London’. Neither this, nor the
 activities of the choirboy consorts, however, prove the existence of a strong tradition of amateur
 playing; not until the beginning of the 17th century did the viol consort achieve widespread
 currency. Even then, pictorial evidence of its popularity remains surprisingly scarce. The painting
 of Sir Henry Unton from shortly after 1596 (in the National Portrait Gallery, London; see MASQUE,
 [not available online]) is exceptional. It depicts a domestic CONSORT of five viol players seated
 round a table. A typical 17th-century ‘chest’ of viols as described by North (see Wilson, C1959)
 included two trebles, two tenors and two basses.
 With the instruments of the younger JOHN ROSE (d 1611), the English viol found its classic outline
 (although not all Rose's surviving instruments are to this pattern). His father, also named John (fl
 1552–61), was well established as a viol maker by the mid-16th century and successfully
 exported his instruments to Italy. John Stow rated the son's gifts ‘as a maker of Bandoras, the
 Voyall de Gamboes and other instruments’ as ‘far exceeding’ those of his father (Annales, 1631).
 John Rose's viols in the elegant classical shape share the same basic features of the Venetian
 instruments of Ventura Linarol (b 1539/40): both are lightly built with sloping shoulders, deep ribs
 and a flat back with the bend and slope towards the neck, and the table and back meeting the ribs
 flush at right angles. A distinctive feature of English viol design, perhaps developed by Rose
 himself, was the use of five pieces of wood for the belly. A further characteristic of some of Rose's
 surviving instruments, which was used by the later English makers, is extravagant decoration
 using geometrical designs in purfling and cross-hatching etched out with a hot needle. The viols
 of Henry Jaye (fl c 1610–67) of Southwark were the most prized in the mid-17th century. Two other
 makers of particular importance were Richard Meares and Barak Norman; the latter's surviving
 bass viols are generally of the smaller division size, which seems to have been preferred in the
 late 17th and early 18th century.
Instruction books on viol playing appeared during the 17th century. Robinson’s The Schoole of
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                                  9/29
14.3.2011                                           Viol in Oxford Music Online
 Musicke (A1603) and Playford’s A Breefe Introduction (A1654) were intended primarily for consort
 players. For viol players wishing to learn the solo techniques of the lyra and division viols there
 were Playford’s Musick’s Recreation on the Lyra Viol (A1652), Simpson’s remarkably
 comprehensive The Division-Violist (A1659) and Hely’s The Compleat Violist (A1699). The
 existence of a flourishing school of solo viol playing led to some refinements of technique
 including the slur, the ‘thump’ or pizzicato (on the lyra viol), and the hold (see §1 above and Table
 6). Hume even made use of the col legno, instructing the player to ‘Drum this with the back of your
 bow’. On the more basic matters of posture, bowing and fingering, 17th-century writers mainly
 followed their 16th-century predecessors. The importance of a correct or ‘decent’ posture,
 however, was given particular emphasis. Simpson, for example, criticized the playing of fast notes
 with the whole arm, on the grounds that ‘it will cause the whole body to shake, which (by all
 means) must be avoyded; as also any other indecent Gesture’. There was also controversy about
 how best to use the elbow joint in bowing. Some, like Simpson, preferred it rigid; others, like
 Mace, ‘Something Plying or Yielding to an Agile Bending’.
 Consorts of viols continued to be popular in England longer than on the Continent. As North
 observed, ‘the use of chests of violls, which supplyed all instrumental consorts, kept back the
 English from falling soon into the modes of forrein countrys, where the violin and not the treble viol
 was in use’. In fact it was the bass viol that lasted the longest, for despite North’s comments the
 ‘extraordinary jolly’ violin had begun to rival the treble viol quite early in the 17th century. The
 popularity of the violin was finally established during the Restoration period. Charles II detested
 the contrapuntal fancies of viol consorts, preferring instead the ‘brisk and arie’ sound of violins.
 Yet the bass viol lingered on as an amateur instrument, particularly for playing basso continuo
 lines, because of its subtle tone and ease in executing fast passages. Samuel Pepys enjoyed
 evenings devoted to ‘the vyall and singing’; the practice of singing to an improvised chordal
 accompaniment on the bass viol (as an alternative to the lute or theorbo) persisted throughout the
 17th century.
 The earliest source of English consort music is Henry VIII’s songbook (GB-Lbl Add.31922; ed. in
 MB, xviii, 1962, 2/1969), which dates from the early 16th century. The short, textless ‘consorts’
 contained in that manuscript were probably not composed with any particular instrument in mind.
 In the mid-16th century English composers began to write textless polyphony, some of which may
 well have been intended for performance on viols. The most characteristic form was the
 plainsong In Nomine, a cantus-firmus composition based on a short section of plainsong from
 the Benedictus of Taverner’s Mass ‘Gloria tib i trinitas’ (see Dart and Donington, C1949). The
 earliest settings by Tallis are very vocal in style with smoothly flowing melodic lines. Tye, the first
 prolific composer of In Nomines, gave many of his compositions titles like Rachells Weepinge,
 Weepe no more Rachell and My death. The In Nomine came to be regarded as a kind of test
 piece in which the composer tried to display contrapuntal skill or experimental ingenuity. Tye’s In
 Nomine Trust, for example, is in 5/4.
 Although few in number, William Byrd's works for viol consort are diverse and of uniformly high
 quality. They range from the exquisitely crafted and intensely polyphonic three-part fantasias to the
 large-scale six-part, multi-sectional works, which include popular tunes and dance-like sections
 (in one case a complete galliard). Some of the finest are sui generis: the famous ‘Browning’ with
 its astonishing ending exploring exquisitely controlled false relations, and the very fine five-part
 canonic fantasia. Not least remarkable of Byrd's qualities as a composer for viols is the
 transparency of texture he achieves, even in the most complex polyphony.
 With a new generation of composers led by Alfonso Ferrabosco (ii), the polyphonic fantasia
 became the favoured form of composition for viol consort. In some ways the early English fantasia
 resembled its continental model, but North’s opinion was that English composers improved on
 their Italian predecessors by ‘working more elaborately’. Of the many 16th-century dances the
 stately pavan was most popular with composers of viol consort music. Ferrabosco and Tomkins,
 in particular, wrote some remarkably sonorous five-part pavans. The influence of the fantasia on
 the pavan was sometimes marked. By the mid-17th century some pavans, such as those by
 Jenkins, had developed into quite extended contrapuntal compositions.
 The most significant development in late 16th-century consort music was undoubtedly the growth
 of idiomatic writing for the viol. On the Continent ricercares, fantasias and canzonas were still
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                     10/29
14.3.2011                                          Viol in Oxford Music Online
 being described as ‘da sonar’ (‘to be played’). But in England instrumentation was often specified
 in more detail. Thus English composers were able to distinguish between the comparatively
 restricted range of the voice and the wider compass of the viol. Tomkins, for example,
 commenting on a series of fantasias by Ferrabosco (GB-Lbl Add.29996), wrote ‘made only for the
 vyolls and organ which is the Reason that he takes such liberty of compass which he would have
 Restrayned; if it had bin made for voyces only’. Playing above the frets, therefore, became quite
 common as the viol’s upper register was increasingly exploited. The solo viol repertory was also
 influential in the development of idiomatic consort music. Although the technique of playing
 divisions was well known, some early 17th-century composers wrote out the divisions they
 wanted rather than leaving them to be improvised by the performer. Two examples of this, from an
 In Nomine by Gibbons and a fantasia by Ravenscroft, are given in ex.3. Simpson (A1659) printed
 a table of ornaments or ‘graces’ for the solo viol player including ‘beats’, ‘elevations’, ‘backfalls’
 and ‘relishes’. Ornament signs, however, varied greatly at this period. Some ornaments could be
 performed ‘by the bow’. Simpson mentioned ‘a Shake or Tremble with the Bow, like the Shaking-
 Stop of an Organ’ (?tremolo), but he did not recommend ‘the frequent use thereof’.
Ex.3 (a) Gibbons: In Nomine (MB, ix, 1955) (b) Ravenscroft: Fantasia (GB-Lbl Add.19758)
 The development of idiomatic writing is perhaps best seen in the ‘broken’ consorts of the early
 17th century in which bowed, plucked, keyboard and wind instruments were combined. A typical
 instrumentation is found in Morley’s First Booke of Consort Lessons (1599), which contains
 original compositions and arrangements for treble and bass viols, ‘flute’ (recorder), cittern, lute
 and bandora, each instrument with its own idiomatic part. During the 17th century many different
 instrumentations were tried, including both consort viols and solo lyra and division viols, as for
 example in the consorts for treble, bass and lyra viols by Ferrabosco and Hume, the consorts for
 violin, division viol, theorbo and harp by William Lawes, the duets for keyboard and bass viol
 published in Parthenia In-Violata (RISM c1614²³) and the fantasia-suites for one or two violins,
 bass viol and organ by Ferrabosco and Coprario.
 There can be little doubt that viols were often used in the performance of vocal music. Directions
 such as ‘Apt for Viols and Voyces’ or ‘to be played on Musicall Instruments’ are frequently found
 on the title-pages of late 16th- and early 17th-century publications. Moreover, printed vocal music
 was sometimes copied out without text and (in the words of Roger North) ‘for variety used as
 instrumentall consorts, with the first words of the song for a title’. A large selection of Italian
 madrigals by Marenzio, Monteverdi, Ferrabosco and others was copied out in this way (GB-Lbl
 Add.37402–6). Unlike the madrigal, the English consort song, which dates from the mid-16th
 century, was written specifically for viols and solo voice or voices. The greatest composer of
 consort songs was undoubtedly Byrd, whose lament for his friend Tallis, Ye sacred muses, is a
 magnificent example of the genre. During the early 17th century the consort song continued to
 flourish and even influenced other forms: composers such as Orlando Gibbons used the viol
 consort in the verse anthem.
 By the mid-17th century newer forms such as the suite or ‘sett’, a flexible combination of fantasias
 and dances, were becoming increasingly popular. There were also some important changes in
 instrumentation. The ‘whole’ consort of three to six viols was often replaced by the ‘broken’
 consort of violins, bass viols and organ. The organ, in fact, became a regular member of the viol
 consort. Parts for the organ varied from simple score reductions of the viol parts (as in the
 magnificent set of five-part fantasias by Jenkins) to completely independent parts, sometimes
 with quite extended solo sections (as in Jenkins’s airs for two trebles, two basses and organ).
 The treble-bass polarity of these airs is indicative of the move towards trio sonata texture. In later
 trio sonatas (e.g. by Purcell) the viol continued to be given phrases independent of the keyboard;
 during the 18th century, however, the cello superseded the viol in this genre. Locke and other
 Restoration composers wrote much music for the new instrumentation of one or two trebles (viols
 or violins), bass viol and organ. Tempo and dynamic indications such as ‘long tyme’, ‘away’,
 ‘drag’, ‘lowde’ and ‘verrie softe’ became more common during this period. By the time of Purcell
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    11/29
14.3.2011                                           Viol in Oxford Music Online
 polyphonic fantasias and In Nomines were old-fashioned. Much of this kind of viol music was
 used, in the words of North, ‘in the fire for singeing pullets’. Yet Purcell’s compositions in these
 forms are among the finest ever composed, a fitting conclusion to the long tradition of consort
 music in England.
 The post-Restoration repertory is small. It includes, besides the Purcell fantasias, several works
 by Simpson, among them 12 fantasias (‘The Monthes’) and four fantasia-suites (‘The Seasons’),
 as well as the seven examples of divisions at the back of his influential tutor, The Division-Violist,
 which was highly admired by North and republished as late as 1712. Other late uses of the viol
 are by Gottfried Finger (for one or two bass viols with and without continuo – some of which use
 scordatura – and trios for violin, bass viol and continuo), Benjamin Hely (for unaccompanied bass
 viol, and duos with and without continuo) and William Gorton (Never Pub lish'd Before a Choice
 Collection of New Ayres Compos'd and Contriv'd for Two Bass-Viols, 1701). Virtuosic
 transcriptions for bass viol exist of Corelli's op.5 violin sonatas and also of vocal works in Walsh
 and Hare's publication Aires and Symphonies for the Bass Viol (c1710). As late as 1724 Handel
 supplied a bass viol part, making idiomatic use of chords and arpeggio patterns, in an aria from
 Giulio Cesare.
 The bass viol remained popular with amateur musicians well into the 18th century, as both a solo
 and a continuo instrument, and the arrival in England during the 1758–9 season of Carl Friedrich
 Abel, the instrument’s last famous virtuoso, stimulated a short-lived but significant revival of
 interest. Abel’s playing, according to Burney ‘was in every way complete and perfect’ and his
 compositions ‘easy and elegantly simple’. His works for viol include a large number of easy
 sonatas with continuo, an aria with viol obbligato and several virtuoso and highly idiomatic
 sonatas for unaccompanied bass viol. After his death in 1787 Burney remarked that Abel’s
 ‘favourite instrument was not in general use and will probably die with him’.
 Gainsborough, an enthusiastic amateur, and a friend of Abel, wrote to a friend on 4 June 1772:
 ‘I’m sick of Portraits and wish very much to take my Viol da Gamba and walk off to some sweet
 Village when I can paint Landskips and enjoy the fag End of Life in quietness and ease’. Another
 artist who studied ‘viol di gamba’ in his youth (c1766) was Thomas Jones. One of the aristocratic
 enthusiasts for the viol at this period was Lady Spencer. The Althorpe accounts in 1773 and 1774
 (GB-Lbl Althorpe F 184) contain references to the purchase of two complete sets of viol strings, to
 the ‘Puting a Viol da Gamba in order’, and to the supply of a ‘Bow for the Viola da Gamba’. Mrs
 Howe wrote to Lady Spencer on 29 December 1779 (GB-Lbl Althorpe F 45) that she was looking
 forward to ‘hearing one of yr new pieces of musick upon yr Viol de gambo’. New and fashionable
 repertory was provided not only by Abel but apparently also by J.C. Bach, who in 1773 took legal
 action against Longman, Lukey & Co. for publishing an unauthorized edition of ‘a new sonata’ for
 keyboard and viola da gamba. A manuscript of three sonatas for viola da gamba and keyboard by
 Bach was auctioned at Sotheby’s at the sale of 28–9 May 1992. The only 18th-century public
 performance with piano and viola da gamba so far recorded took place at Coopers’ Hall in King
 Street, Bristol, on 17 January 1771. The programme included: ‘a song by Miss Marshall,
 accompanied by the Piano Forte and Viol de Gambo’ and ‘a favourite Lesson on the Harpischord
 by Miss Marshall, accompanied by the Viol de Gambo’. It is likely that easy sonatas for other
 instruments were played by this last generation of English amateur viol players, as indeed was
 viol music by other string players. Sir William Hamilton (having taken up the viola) wrote to Lord
 Herbert from Naples: ‘I should think some of Abel’s Musick for Viol di Gamba wou’d do well on the
 Tenor if you cou’d get any old solos or pieces of his Musick copied for me out of Lady Pembroke’s
 books’. The last work with a part for ‘Viola di Gamba’ to be published in England was perhaps
 no.7 of William Jackson’s Twelve Songs, op.16 (c1790).
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    12/29
14.3.2011                                            Viol in Oxford Music Online
 compositions were by Girolamo Dalla Casa (Il vero modo di diminuir, 1584) and the last by
 Vincenzo Bonizzi (Alcune opere di diverse auttori a diverse voci, passaggiate principalmente per
 la viola b astarda, 1626). In addition to its solo role, the viol continued to be used in ensembles.
 Pietro de' Bardi, in a letter to G.B. Doni (1634), recalled Vincenzo Galilei's stile rappresentativo
 setting of Dante's lament of Count Ugolino (performed with the Florentine Camerata in 1582) as
 being ‘intelligibly sung by a good tenor and precisely accompanied by a consort of viols’.
 Monteverdi's scoring of Orfeo (1607) includes three b assi da gamb a. In this work, as in the
 intermedi of the previous century, the contrasting instrumental timbres have an important
 symbolic significance: the viol family was associated with the gods, the supernatural and the
 nobility, and the bass members were thus suitable for depicting the underworld (with trombones).
 Monteverdi later specified a contrab asso da Gamb a in his Comb attimento di Tancredi et Clorinda
 of 1624 (published 1638).
 As the 17th century progressed the viols were gradually ousted by the violin family: already by the
 time of Monteverdi's Orfeo the treble had fallen to the brilliant and fashionable violin (though it
 continued to be used in Germany until the middle of the century and in England and France for
 even longer). By the second quarter of the century Italian string continuo parts increasingly
 demanded the new cello. Writing from Rome in 1639, the French virtuoso André Maugars
 lamented
          "as for the viol, there is no one in Italy now who excels at it; and indeed it is very
          little played in Rome, at which I was greatly astonished, since formerly they had
          Horatio [Bassani] of Parma, who did marvellous things with it and left to
          posterity some very fine pieces. "
 Nevertheless the viol family did not die out. There is evidence that consorts of viols still persisted
 in cultural isolation, e.g. in Sicily and in convents, and the bass viol is specified in two Venetian
 operas of the 1670s, Petronio Franceschini's Arsinoe (1676) and Carlo Pallavicino's Nerone
 (1679). Ten patterns survive by Stradivari for a ‘Viola da Gamba of the French Form’ from 1701,
 and a number of fine Italian six- and seven-string instruments from the first two decades of the
 18th century also exist. And despite its unpopularity at the time of Maugars' visit, it appears to have
 been particularly in Rome that an interest in the viol was rekindled in the early 18th century,
 notably by the patrons Benedetto Pamphili and F.M. Ruspoli. Pamphili employed a viol player
 named ‘Monsieur Sciarli’ and Ruspoli retained Bartolomeo Cimapane to play at his Sunday
 afternoon conversazione; and in 1708 the celebrated German virtuoso E.C. Hesse visited Italy,
 performing in Rome, Naples and Venice. The Roman lutenist Lelio Colista (1629–80) left a duet
 sonata for violin, bass viol and continuo and a further four (incomplete) sonatas which included
 the viol. Alessandro Scarlatti scored his cantata Già sepolto è fra l'onda for soprano, 2 violins,
 violetta, bass viol and continuo; the work was probably intended for a Roman patron. But the most
 significant compositions with bass viol are Handel's cantata Tra le fiamme (1707) for soprano, 2
 recorders, 2 violins, bass viol and continuo and his sumptuous Oratorio per la Resurrezione
 (1708), composed for Pamphili and Ruspoli respectively. In the opening sonata of La
 Resurrezione the bass viol makes an arresting entrance as a member of the concertino group
 paired with the solo violin (played in the first performance by Corelli). Handel assigned to the viol
 melodic lines (commonly as the second part in a trio texture), Italianate arpeggiated figurations
 and figured bass; the choice of the viol for a Resurrection oratorio is in keeping with the German
 association of the viol representing the solace of the Resurrection.
Lucy Robinson
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                     13/29
14.3.2011                                            Viol in Oxford Music Online
 Roberday, Du Mont and Louis Couperin are evidence of this. These fantasias do not, however,
 exploit the resources of the viol as distinctively as their English counterparts. Indeed, many were
 played by viol consort, organ or other instruments according to the choice of the performers.
 Idiomatic English consort music was also known in France, and Mersenne chose a fantasia by
 Alfonso Ferrabosco (ii) as an illustration of viol music in his Harmonie universelle (1636–7). The
 viol was not only used in consort; Trichet recommended it as ‘highly suitable for all musical
 ensembles’. Herouard recalled a group comprising ‘a lutenist, a harpsichordist and violist named
 Pradel, an excellent player if ever there was’ playing for Louis XIII in 1609.
 Both Mersenne and Jean Rousseau (A1687) paid tribute to the skills of André Maugars
 (c1580–c1645) as the first great French virtuoso. Maugars worked in London as a musician to
 James I in the 1620s and acknowledged his debt to the English players, particularly Ferrabosco,
 regarding their use of chords. Mersenne marvelled at Maugars' ability to execute alone ‘two, three
 or many parts on the bass viol, full of ornaments and with a rapidity of fingers which seemed to
 preoccupy him little’. Furthermore, Mersenne considered the viol to be the instrument which most
 perfectly imitated the human voice. He described the standard French viol as having six strings
 (tuned in 4ths with a 3rd in the middle) and his illustration of the modern viol portrays the classical
 English model. Rousseau named Nicolas Hotman (d 1663) as the next early player of distinction.
 On Louis Couperin's death in 1661, the position of viol player to the king was divided between
 Hotman and Sébastien Le Camus, ‘the two best players of the viol and theorbo that the King had
 ever heard’. In the 17th century it was normal for players to double on the viol and theorbo; Robert
 de Visée is another example. Hotman was celebrated for his pièces d'harmonie with beautiful
 melodies imitating the voice, in the style of the air de cour. Hotman taught De Machy, Rousseau
 and the celebrated Sainte-Colombe, teacher of Marin Marais. Rousseau credited Sainte-Colombe
 with introducing silver-covered strings, adding the seventh, low A string and developing a left-
 hand position in which the thumb fell behind the second finger instead of the first, as was
 common practice on the theorbo. This gave the left hand greater flexibility, and Rousseau
 especially commended Sainte-Colombe for his ability to imitate all the vocal graces. Sainte-
 Colombe's new hand position was the one that survived into the 18th century but for a while it
 caused deep division between the old-fashioned players led by De Machy, who remained faithful
 to the theorbo hand position, and the progressives of Sainte-Colombe's school. 67 Concerts a
 deux violes esgales (F-Pn) and 180 pieces for solo bass viol survive by Sainte-Colombe; they
 reveal a highly idiomatic and mature style, rich with chords and ornamentation. He was unique
 among viol player-composers in his use of unmeasured passages.
 From about 1675 to 1760 the French virtuoso bass viol school led the rest of Europe in viol
 playing. Foreign virtuosos such as Ernst Christian Hesse were sent to Paris by their employers to
 study with viol players like Marin Marais and Antoine Forqueray, and it was to Jean-Baptiste
 Forqueray that Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia looked for advice on viol playing. A large and
 important corpus of French viol music was also circulated in England, Germany and the Low
 Countries; Marais' pièces de violes were particularly widely known. The viol was often played in
 private concerts in the salons of the nobility, and professional players began to arrange recitals
 themselves; according to Titon du Tillet, Sainte-Colombe was known for ‘concerts chez lui, where
 two of his daughters played, one on the treble viol and the other on the bass, thus forming a
 concert for three viols with their father, which was a great pleasure to listen to’.
 Both Louis XIV and Louis XV employed a viol player among their Musiciens ordinaires de la
 chamb re du roy, and a demand for teachers arose as the instrument came to be considered a
 fashionable one for the nobility themselves to play. Amateur players at court included the Regent,
 the Duke of Orleans and Louis XV's daughter Princess Henriette Anne. Continuo playing
 constituted an important role for the viol in chamber music, and it was as a continuo instrument
 that it appeared in the petit choeur of the Académie Royale de Musique from the time of Lully until
 at least 1726, when Quantz heard Roland Marais and Jean-Baptiste Forqueray perform. But only
 rarely, as for example in the air ‘Beaux lieux’ added to the second version (1708) of Destouches'
 opera Issé, was the viol given an obbligato part.
 Four important sources of information on viol playing were printed between 1685 and 1687:
 collections of pièces de viole (prefaced by long avertissements) by De Machy and Marais, and
 treatises by Danoville and Jean Rousseau containing comprehensive instruction on playing
 technique, the instrument and bow, tuning and ornamentation. 18th-century information is found
 in avertissements (particularly to the later collections by Marais), in Hubert Le Blanc's Défense de
 la b asse de viole (A1740) and in a series of letters from Jean-Baptiste Forqueray to Friedrich
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                     14/29
14.3.2011                                          Viol in Oxford Music Online
 Wilhelm of Prussia which discuss the construction and stringing of the instrument as well as its
 playing technique. In the late 17th century, taste dictated playing in the 1st or half-position
 whenever possible, but by the 18th century viol players began using the upper positions on the
 three top strings to avoid changing position unnecessarily. From 1717 Marais frequently used
 positions from the seventh fret upwards, known as the petit manche. Jean-Baptiste Forqueray
 developed this technique still further when, inspired by the mid-18th-century virtuoso violinists
 such as Leclair, he aimed to achieve a smooth and unified line by extensive use of the petit
 manche, on both high and low strings. This produced new and unusual tone colours and enabled
 him to obtain an exotic new range of chords (not only in the petit manche but also combined with
 open strings). The pièces de viole were often, when composed by a viol player, carefully marked
 with fingering, bowing and ornament signs. Ornaments played an essential rhetorical role in
 pièces de viole, just as in the airs de cour on which they were modelled. Rousseau described
 them as a ‘melodic salt which seasons the melody and gives it taste’. Viol ornaments included
 the rare semitone glissando (called by Marais the coulé de doigt) and a form of vibrato in which a
 finger is placed on the string, touching the one on the fret, beating lightly on the string ‘with an
 even shaking movement’. This kind of vibrato, which Marais indicated by a horizontal wavy line,
 was often preferred to a one-finger vibrato (used on the modern cello and indicated by Marais with
 a vertical wavy line), except of course when the note itself was played by the little finger. Vibrato is
 regularly marked only in tomb eaux, plaintes and suchlike pieces; the coulé de doigt was
 regarded as suitable for ‘languishing melodies’, generally on the second finger and ascending,
 though according to Rousseau it could be used descending as well.
 Jean-Baptiste Forqueray drew special attention to the bowing hand: ‘it should express all the
 passions … [the middle] finger presses on the hair to make more or less sound, and by pressing
 and relaxing imperceptibly this makes the expression both soft and loud’. By 1725 a variety of
 different bowstrokes had been developed, including enormous slurs of 24 notes and more,
 portato bowing on both single notes and chords, and the tremolo. Le Blanc (p.83) described the
 rich yet airy and resonant sound that the great French viol players made:
          "Père Marais and Forcroi le Père … strove to make a sonorous sound, like the
          Great Bell of St Germain, which they achieved by playing on air just as they
          recommended, that is to say that having bowed a stroke they allowed time for
          the string to vibrate."
 He went on, however, to distinguish between the ‘old’ style of Marais which resembled ‘so much
 the plucking of the lute and guitar’ and the ‘new’ mid-18th-century technique characterized by the
 imperceptible bow change ‘which reproduces and multiplies the expression like the Sun's rays’.
 The term ‘pièce de viole’ generally implies music for one viol and continuo, which was likely to
 consist of a second viol with harpsichord or theorbo (the latter was strongly recommended by
 Marais). There are also pièces de viole for two unaccompanied viols (notably Sainte-Colombe's
 Concerts à deux violes esgales) and for two viols and continuo (including pieces by Marais in his
 first and fourth books of pièces de violes); furthermore there are solo pièces d'harmonie for viol,
 among them four suites by Du Buisson of 1666 and pieces by De Machy. The latter's collection of
 1685 is the first published set of pièces de viole; four suites are written in staff notation and four in
 tablature. From 1685 to 1748 a constant stream of pièces de viole, usually by viol players, were
 published; Marais, the outstanding and most prolific composer of this school, published five
 books (596 pieces) between 1686 and 1725; his works are remarkable for their exceptional
 craftsmanship and variety. Other important composers were De Machy, Caix d'Hervelois, Morel,
 François Couperin, Cappus, Roland Marais, Dollé and Jean-Baptiste Forqueray – all professional
 viol players except Couperin. Pièces de viole were normally arranged in suites; those of the late
 17th century usually comprised a prelude and a conventional selection of dances, but 18th-
 century suites contained an increasing number of pièces de caractère (such as Marais' Le
 tab leau de l'opération de la taille). The French style of virtuoso writing for the viol is characterized
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                       15/29
14.3.2011                                         Viol in Oxford Music Online
 by an extensive use of chords, which are particularly idiomatic to the viol because of its frets. De
 Machy likened writing for the viol without chords to playing the harpsichord or organ with only one
 hand.
 Independent parts for the viol in chamber music appeared before the end of the 17th century in
 works such as Charpentier's Sonate à 8 (c1686) and the sonades of François Couperin (early
 1690s); and in scattered movements in works for violin (or flute) and continuo by Elisabeth
 Jacquet de La Guerre (1707), La Ferté (1707), Dornel (1711), Jean-Féry Rebel (1713) and
 Montéclair (1724–5) the viol is often freed from the bass. Violin, viol and continuo was a medium
 used by several composers including Marais, in his 1723 book La gamme et autres morceaux
 (where the Sonnerie de Sainte-Geneviève du Mont de Paris is found), Leclair (op.2 no.8, c1728)
 and Boismortier (1732, 1734); and Louis-Gabriel Guillemain included the viol in his Sonates en
 quatuors (1743, 1748). Several solo and trio collections were issued with a part for viol, cello or
 bassoon. Rameau's Pièces de clavecin en concerts (1741) for violin (or flute), viol and
 harpsichord contains some of the finest French Baroque chamber music; here the viol plays an
 independent part which generally lies above the bass line, sometimes even in the same register
 as the violin.
 In the early decades of the 18th century, the secular cantate came into vogue and some
 composers, including Bourgeois, Bousset, Clérambault, Montéclair, Rameau and Stuck, used the
 viol there as a concertante instrument as well as for continuo. They did not attempt to write for the
 viol in the style of their player-composer contemporaries, but rather exploited the viol's tone
 quality, weaving a melodic line around that of the voice and often using the same motivic material
 for both parts. Occasionally the viol was offered as an alternative for a concertante flute part, for
 example in collections by Clérambault and Collin de Blamont.
 The French bass viol was a large, lightly built instrument, which generally had seven strings
 though some survive with six. Le Blanc described its tone as like ‘the voice of an Ambassador,
 delicate and even a little nasal, always being highly proper’. The internal workmanship was
 extremely delicate: the linings were of linen or parchment and occasionally a series of little cubes
 of wood was used between the table and ribs to increase the adhesive area. Michel Collichon (fl
 1666–93) was highly regarded as a maker in the latter half of the 17th century. Nicolas Bertrand
 and Guillaume Barbey were the most celebrated of the next generation, their finest viols being
 valued at around 100 livres. Both Marin Marais and Antoine Forqueray possessed instruments by
 Barbey; nonetheless the outstanding viol in the inventory taken at Marais' death was ‘une viole
 Anglaise fait par Robert Grille en mil six cens seize’ valued at 600 livres. Jean-Baptiste Forqueray
 believed Barbey to be ‘the best maker we have had for the shape, thickness, quality and
 dimensions’ and explained that his father had two of Barbey's viols ‘l'une pour les pièces, l'autre
 pour l'accompagnement’. He also wrote on the importance of setting up the viol correctly so as to
 obtain a free sound and promote ease of playing, and the necessity of the strings being in true
 proportion to one another. He advocated that the lowest four strings be covered with the same
 covering (the C string half covered) and warned that too much rosin on the bow would make it
 liable to squeak and dull the tone. By the 1740s the ‘pardessus de viole’ was valued more highly
 than the bass; André Castagnery's bass viols were priced at 6 livres whereas his pardessus
 were estimated at between 10 and 12 livres in the inventory taken at his death in 1747. The finest
 pardessus of Jean-Baptiste Salomon (1713–48) and Louis Guersan were the most expensive
 instruments of their genre at up to 38 livres; some of Guersan's pardessus and quintons were
 still valued at between 30 and 36 livres in 1770.
 Between the late 17th and mid-18th centuries the bass viol was gradually superseded throughout
 Europe by the cello as the string continuo instrument. In the early Baroque period, the bass
 member of the violin family had been less refined in tone than an 18th-century cello, so the viol
 was preferred for its beautiful sound and ease in playing fast passages. But as the cello and its
 stringing were improved, and instrument making in general was developed, the cello was
 favoured because it was better suited to supporting the louder 18th-century ensemble. It overtook
 the viol first in Italy, where fine cellos were made from the middle of the 17th century, and later in
 France as well as in England and Germany as the Italian innovations in cello making and playing
 spread to the rest of Europe. Le Blanc and Jean-Baptiste Forqueray fought a fierce rearguard
 action on behalf of the bass viol, but though Forqueray's talents were highly respected, Ancelet
 remarked in his Ob servations sur la musique, les musiciens et les instrumens (Amsterdam, 1757)
 that ‘the Violoncello, which is without doubt one of the most beautiful instruments … is generally
 used everywhere … Only the Basse de Viole declared war on the Violoncello, which won the
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    16/29
14.3.2011                                           Viol in Oxford Music Online
 victory’.
 In France, unlike the rest of Europe, treble viols remained popular long after the demise of the viol
 consort. Louis Couperin and Sébastien Le Camus were renowned treble players in the mid-17th
 century. Rousseau emphasized the vocal character of the instrument and the need to adopt ‘la
 delicatesse du Chant’ and ‘to imitate all a beautiful Voice might do with all the charms of the Art’.
 He proceeded by stressing that ‘one must not abandon the spirit of the instrument, which does
 not wish to be treated like a violin, with which it is correct to animate, in place of which it is correct
 for the Dessus de Viole to flatter’. Initially the treble viol largely played instrumental renditions of
 the fashionable airs de cour, although there are fine 17th-century obbligati for it, notably in sacred
 works by Du Mont and Charpentier, particularly the latter's 1ère leçon du vendredi (‘De
 lamentatione Jeremiae’). The first published music for the dessus de viole was Louis
 Heudelinne's Trois suites de pièces à deux violles (Paris, 1701). By this time the dessus had
 become popular among noble ladies; it was believed to be more appropriate for women to play a
 small viol on their lap rather than a violin on their shoulder.
 As the vogue for the new Italian violin sonata grew, the six-stringed pardessus de viole was
 developed on which the low d of the treble viol was exchanged for a high g″, enabling players to
 reach top d‴, necessary for playing violin music, in 1st position. By the time Michel Corrette
 published his Méthode pour apprendre facilement à jouer du pardessus de viole a 5 et à 6 cordes
 (A1748) a new variant, the quinton, had been ‘invented’, strung with the bottom three strings like
 the lowest three on the violin and the top two in the manner of the pardessus: g–d′–a′–d″–g″ .
 Corette described this ‘new instrument’ as having the refined ‘flute-like treble of the pardessus de
 viole and the sonorous bass of the violin’ adding that ‘it sounds much better than the ordinary
 Pardessus’; he recommended it unreservedly for ‘violin sonatas and concertos’. Corette, Ancelet
 and Brijon praised the playing of Mlle Levi, who rendered ‘her instrument equal to a violin by the
 beauty of her playing’. By the 1760s a third type of pardessus, with four strings tuned like a violin,
 had emerged. The celebrated violinist L'abbé le fils mentioned it on the title page of his Principes
 (1761): ‘Those people who play the four-string Pardessus can use these Principes, they only have
 to remember to give the opposite significance to the bowing signs’. And Brijon remarked in his
 Méthode nouvelle et facile pour apprendre à jouer du par-dessus de viole (A1766) that ‘in Paris
 lots of people play the pardessus with four strings’. Interestingly Brijon, who was a violinist,
 suggested using an overhand bowing on the pardessus. About 20 volumes of pièces and
 sonates were published specifically for the dessus and pardessus. Some of the finest music is by
 Dollé and Barthélemy de Caix; other composers include Thomas Marc, Jean Barrière, C.H. de
 Blainville, and Louis de Caix d'Hervelois. Villeneuve transcribed over 200 of Marais' pièces and
 published them under the title Pièces de viole ajustées pour le pardessus de viole à cinq cordes
 (Paris, 1759). There is also a wealth of duos for two pardessus, flutes, violins or vielles. The
 pardessus' popularity outlived that of the bass viol; as late as 1783 the Almanach musical
 advertised ‘trois Maistres du pardessus de viole’.
Lucy Robinson
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                        17/29
14.3.2011                                            Viol in Oxford Music Online
 volumes of dance music, such as Schein's Banchetto musicale (Leipzig, 1617), group the dances
 into suites (Padouana, Gagliarda, Courente, Allemande and Tripla). The viol is designated in
 some of the progressive three- and four-part Canzoni e concerti (1627) by the Polish violinist
 Adam Jarzebski. In 1649 Johann Hentzschel published a canzona for eight bass viols and
 continuo in a solemn, contrapuntal Venetian style using double choir writing. David Funck's
 Stricturae viola di gamb icae, ex sonatis, ariis, intradis, allemandis (Leipzig, 1677) for four bass
 viols exploits the viol's full three-octave range. The divisions composed by Daniel Norcombe and
 Henry Butler, who worked in Brussels and Spain respectively, were warmly commended by
 Christopher Simpson as models ‘worthy to be imitated’. Butler's 13 surviving sets are of grand
 proportions, exploring the range of the instrument with taxing virtuosity and developing up to 49
 variations. The first published sonatas by an Englishman were William Young's Sonatae à 3, 4, e
 5 for two to four violins, obbligato bass viol and continuo (Innsbruck, 1653). The virtuosity
 displayed by the British expatriates was taken up by their continental pupils, most notably Johann
 Schop (i), Nicolaus Bleyer and Gabriel Schütz.
 An indication of the viol's high profile in 17th-century Germany is its frequent appearance in the
 scoring of the new Lutheran church music. The German predilection for consorts of low
 instruments is clearly evident in the many sacred works scored for multiple bass viols, both
 alongside other instruments and as a consort of their own. Ensembles consisting of three viols
 with two violins superimposed were common, as was a consort of four viols. Often the inner parts
 of 17th-century cantatas are simply marked ‘viola’ and it is uncertain whether they were intended
 for violas da gamb a or da b raccia; in the middle of the century it seems that whichever instrument
 was more readily available took the part, but later the violas da b raccia increasingly ousted the
 violas da gamb a. An early use of a consort of viols in German sacred music is Heinrich Schütz's
 Historia der … Auferstehung … Jesu Christi (1623), in which Schütz used four bass viols to
 accompany the Evangelist. Thomas Selle wrote for two obbligato bass viols in his St John
 Passion (1641–3), Johann Sebastiani used four in his St Matthew Passion (1663), and Johann
 Thiele used two for the inner parts of his St Matthew Passion (1673), employing dramatic tremoli
 to depict an earthquake. Idiomatic bass viol parts appear in eight of Buxtehude's cantatas; his
 Jub ilate Domino for alto, viol and continuo demands a range of three and a half octaves (D to a″)
 and begins with a ‘sonata’ for viol and continuo; both Laudate pueri and Ad cor: vulnerasti cor
 meum are scored for five bass viols. This last cantata is an eloquent and deeply felt Lutheran
 lamento and a fine example of the 17th-century German use of viols to express that affect. The
 final section incorporates tremolo quavers for the viols (embellishing the return of the opening
 material), a device which Buxtehude reserved for particularly expressive phrases. Many other
 sacred German works are scored for viols, including Franz Tunder's wonderful chorale prelude for
 five viols and soprano, An Wasserflüssen Bab ylon, whose disturbed chromaticism anticipates
 Bach. In central and southern Germany the viol continued to be used in sacred compositions until
 the 1680s, after it had fallen from favour in the north. Viols were not, however, the exclusive
 preserve of Protestant music. Roman Catholic Austria maintained a tradition of viol playing,
 despite the prevailing taste for Italian music, from the time of John Price (i) and William Young
 until the 1730s. Here as in north Germany viols were associated with the affect of lamento, and
 were used in the uniquely Viennese Passiontide genre, the sepolcro. A.M. Bononcini, Antonio
 Draghi and G.B. Pederzuoli all wrote for the viol as did Emperor Leopold I.
 With the universal acceptance of the Italian four-part string quartet as the core of the 18th-century
 orchestra, the viol lost its position in the instrumental ensemble of Protestant church music.
 However, 18th-century composers occasionally chose to employ its unusual timbre for special
 effect, particularly in Passions and funeral compositions. Telemann used two in his funeral
 cantata Du ab er, Daniel, gehe hin and C.P.E. Bach also employed two in his St Mark Passion.
 The outstanding composer of 18th-century sacred music for viol was J.S. Bach, who scored for it
 in three sacred cantatas (BWV76, 106 and 152), the Trauer Ode (BWV198) and three Passions. His
 most famous arias with obbligato viol are ‘Es ist vollbracht’ in the St John Passion and ‘Komm
 süsses Kreuz’ in the St Matthew Passion; the latter is preceded by an arpeggiated recitative and
 features a virtuoso chordal obbligato (originally conceived for lute) – Bach's only truly idiomatic
 writing for the viol in the French virtuoso style. In these arias Bach, following the 17th-century
 tradition, used the viol to symbolize the lament for and the kingship of the person of Christ.
 Parallel with its role in sacred vocal music, the viol was also used in secular continuo lieder by
 Heinrich Albert, Georg Neumark and Thiele. Viol obbligatos are found in Viennese operas by
 Antonio Cesti, Fux and Ziani, and the instrument features in secular cantatas by Christian Geist,
 J.G. Graun and J.A. Hasse. Bach also used it in his cantata Äolus.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                   18/29
14.3.2011                                                Viol in Oxford Music Online
Lady playing the treble viol: portrait by Caspar Netscher, c1670 (private collection)
 The German-Netherlandish virtuoso viol school had its roots in the English division style, as
 exemplified by Nicolaus a Kempis's divisions on Philips's Pavana dolorosa (Antwerp, 1642), but
 towards the end of the 17th century it came under the influence of the latest virtuoso techniques of
 the thriving Italian-inspired Austro-German violin school. The marriage of ideas was facilitated by
 the fact that many 17th-century German string players, such as Schop, Nicolaus Bleyer and Biber,
 played both the violin and the viol. Thus bold passages of showy scales and arpeggios are
 increasingly found alongside the more rhythmically intricate English figurations, which in turn
 virtually disappear after August Kühnel (1645–c1700). German viol player-composers also
 assimilated ideas from the improvisatory stylo phantastico of the north German organists; this is
 manifest in a taste for abrupt tempo changes, exciting chordal passages (often marked arpeggio)
 and dramatic pause marks, the latter occurring not only in preludes but also in the middle of
 dance movements. Finally some of these virtuosos, notably Johannes Schenck, introduced
 elements of the French dance suite and the delicate style b risé technique. German and
 Netherlandish viol players and composers generally did not finger their music (unlike the French),
 although Kühnel gave some guidance in this respect, and as regards ornamentation they did no
 more than mark the occasional trill with a cross (+). The Netherlands school included Carolus
 Hacquart and Jacob Riehman, who were both employed by the nobility. Schenck was the most
 prolific composer of the school producing ten collections of music between 1685 and 1710; his
 four surviving viol publications are the most important legacy of the German and Netherlandish
 tradition. Schenck's first publication of viol music, Tyd en konst-oeffeningen (Amsterdam, 1688),
 comprises 15 sonatas for viol and continuo of a breathtakingly virtuosic nature. In marked contrast
 to his outstanding French contemporary Marais, Schenck relished virtuosity as an end in itself.
 Multiple stopping, polyphonic writing and the use of high positions are hallmarks of his style. This
 cultivation of virtuosity finds a parallel in the brilliant violin sonatas of J.J. Walther. Schenck
 sometimes required the continuo viol to depart from its normal role and become an obbligato
 instrument (ex.4). Kühnel's Sonate ô partite (Kassel, 1698) consist of six works for two viols and
 continuo followed by eight for a single viol and continuo; the final four may be played
 unaccompanied. Some movements take the form of virtuosic divisions on Lutheran chorale
 melodies. The virtuosic obbligatos in the sacred works of J.P. Krieger were presumably written for
 the viol player Konrad Höffler, with whom Krieger had a lifelong association. Gottfried Finger was
 unique among the later viol players in using scordatura tunings, a technique that he probably
 acquired from Biber. Telemann wrote one work in the German virtuosic tradition, his
 unaccompanied sonata in D. Carl Friedrich Abel was the last member of the German school; his
 27 brilliantly virtuosic unaccompanied pieces employ the gamut of virtuoso string techniques
 such as resonant arpeggiated passage work and large slurs of up to 30 notes, some of which
 are marked staccato.
 The viol was also incorporated in Austro-German chamber music, although the parts were
 generally less idiomatic. In the second half of the 17th century, there was a vogue for writing trio
 (and occasionally four-part) sonatas for one (or two) violins, obbligato bass viol and continuo.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                  19/29
14.3.2011                                             Viol in Oxford Music Online
 This seems to have originated in Austria with Young and J.H. Schmelzer, and swiftly reached the
 southern German states where such compositions were published by Matthias Kelz (ii), J.M.
 Nicolai, Johann Rosenmüller, J.P. Krieger and others. The Hamburg musicians Dietrich Becker
 and J.A. Reincken also published works of this type but the crowning achievements of this
 fashionable genre were Buxtehude's two collections (Hamburg, ?1694 and 1696), which, with the
 funeral music for his father, were the only major compositions published during his lifetime. In the
 18th century, diversity of scoring became a feature of north German composers and the viol was
 frequently paired with the flute or recorder. The most prolific composer of trios and quartets
 incorporating viols was Telemann, but there are also works by J.C. Schickhardt, Antonio Lotti, J.C.
 Pepusch, J.M. Molter and Theodor Schwartzkopff; these last two composers both include a treble
 as well as a bass viol. When Telemann visited Paris in 1737, he played his celebrated Paris
 Quartets (for flute, violin, viol and cello with continuo) with J.-B. Forqueray among others;
 Telemann recalled how the exquisite playing of the artists ‘made the ears of the court unusually
 attentive, and won me, in a short time, an almost universal honour, which was accompanied with
 increasing politeness’. Telemann also wrote three sonatas for viol and continuo, which, though
 sensitively written for the instrument, do not exploit it idiomatically. Abel's tuneful sonatas for viol
 and keyboard make few technical demands (unlike his unaccompanied works) and seem
 intended for amateurs. A distinctive north German genre was the sonata for solo instrument with
 obbligato keyboard; early works for the viol survive by J.M. Leffloth and Johann Pfeiffer but the
 most penetrating and expressive examples are the three sonatas by J.S. Bach. Surviving evidence
 suggests that they were written late in his career at Leipzig, possibly for C.F. Abel. Bach arranged
 the G major sonata from a trio sonata for two flutes; the D major sonata concludes with a lively
 cadenza-like episode and like the St Matthew Passion calls for a seven-string viol; the G minor
 sonata is conceived in three movements in a grand concerted manner. Bach also used a pair of
 viols in the ripieno group in his Sixth Brandenburg Concerto, where they support and contrast with
 the two solo violas.
 There were three distinct German schools of viol making, emanating from Austria and south
 Germany, Saxony and central Germany, and north Germany and the Baltic. Of the Tyrolean school,
 viols survive by Busch, Hiltz and Kögel from the first half of the 17th century, some of which use a
 festoon outline. The most celebrated maker was Jacob Stainer, who modelled his viols on those
 of William Young. He generally built a traditional flat back and shoulders, although the influence of
 the Italian violin is equally apparent in his characteristically strongly contoured, carved table and,
 latterly, his use of f-holes. Hawkins praised Stainer's instruments for their ‘full and piercing tone’.
 In the Saxon area of central Germany, Hoffman was a leading maker, working in Leipzig. Viols of
 the north German and Baltic tradition demonstrate a strong influence from English makers and
 used bent fronts in two, three, four, five or seven pieces until about 1710. Joachim Tielke was
 Germany's most renowned viol maker, securing commissions for his highly prized instruments
 from the nobility and royalty. About 50 of his viols survive; all of them are basses. As a gifted and
 creative craftsman, Tielke developed the Anglo-German model he inherited. In about 1683 he
 largely forsook the traditional flat back and began to carve a solid gently arched back without bent
 shoulders; his viols from that date thus became heavier than their English and French
 counterparts, and he also favoured a thicker two-piece front. Until 1685 he maintained the north
 German tradition of carving rosettes in the belly of his viols but after that date they only occur on
 his most extravagantly ornamented instruments. By 1696 he had settled for a neck of 30·5 cm
 although three sizes of bass viol are found. Tielke is particularly renowned for his consummate
 powers of decoration. All his extant viols have carved heads (most commonly women's or lions'
 heads). Vine leaves and blossoms are his favoured form of motif; they appear in relief on the
 sides and back of the pegbox and in white (ivory) and black (ebony) inlay on the fingerboard and
 tailpiece. Tielke also worked with tortoiseshell and, in his most elaborate designs, silver and
 gold.
 At the same time as the bass viol was losing popularity in France, it enjoyed a final flowering at
 the court of Frederick the Great in Berlin, where there had been a strong tradition of viol playing
 since the time of Brade and Rowe. The court viol player Ludwig Christian Hesse (1716–72),
 described by Hiller as ‘incontestably the greatest viol player in our time in Europe’, inspired
 sonatas, trios and concertos in the remarkably virtuosic ‘Berlin’ style from composers such as
 J.G. Graun, C.P.E. Bach, Christoph Schaffrath and J.G. Janitsch. Many of the sonatas (a number of
 which have obbligato keyboard) are technically highly demanding. The most unusual form was
 the concerto, of which at least eight were written by J.G. Graun (two of which are for more than one
 instrument). In these works the viol comments on the orchestral tuttis using rich double stops and
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                      20/29
14.3.2011                                           Viol in Oxford Music Online
 chains of 3rds, a notable feature of this late style. Concertos by Johann Pfeiffer, Telemann (both
 for solo viol and multiple instruments) and Tartini also survive. Hesse arranged 72 French operas
 (including works by Rameau) for performance by Prince Friedrich Wilhelm and himself on two
 viols (sometimes with other instruments) and at least a further three by C.H. Graun. Interest in the
 viol in Berlin finally faded when Friedrich Wilhelm switched his allegiance to the cello in the early
 1770s.
 Further south, viol playing lingered on. Burney reported that Elector Maximilian Joseph III of
 Bavaria played the viol until his death in 1777 adding that ‘next to Abel, [he] was the best
 performer on the viol da gamba I have ever heard’. The Austrian baryton virtuoso Andreas Lidl
 also played the viol; Burney commended his playing for its ‘exquisite taste and expression’. Both
 Lidl and Franz Xaver Hammer wrote some highly virtuosic duos in an early Classical style for
 bass viol accompanied by the cello. Lidl also left six sonatas for violin, bass viol and cello. Joseph
 Fiala served the Archbishop of Salzburg as a viol player and oboist between 1778 and 1785; on
 his return to Germany in 1790 he performed on the viol before King Friedrich Wilhelm II in Prague,
 Breslau and Berlin. His extant compositions include a trio for viol, violin and cello. Simon Truska
 (1743–1809), who played, composed music for and built viols, is listed in 1796 among the
 important musicians in Prague. Dictionary articles around the turn of the century affirm the viol's
 demise; Gerber declared that ‘if you wanted a viola da gamba, you would have to dig up a
 stringless, worm-eaten example from some court music room’ (Gerb erNL).
Lucy Robinson
 From the mid-1870s the pursuit of resurrecting the viol was taken up predominantly by cellists
 curious about the ancestry of their instrument (the viol was then considered to be the precursor of
 the cello). The distinguished cellists Auguste Tolbecque and Paul de Wit acquired bass viols and
 stimulated interest by playing them in public. At first they played Tartini, Boccherini and
 Mendelssohn but they soon focussed their attention on the riches of the bass viol literature.
 Tolbeque performed one of Rameau's Pièces de claveçin en concerts in April 1880 with Saint-
 Saëns and the flautist Paul Taffanel; the reviewer in Le ménestrel observed that the performance
 would have been improved had Saint-Saëns played a harpsichord instead of the piano. In 1889
 the Musical Times reported that a Société des Instruments Anciens had been formed in Brussels
 by Louis van Waefelghem, Louis Diémer, Jules Delsart (bass viol) and Laurent Grillet ‘for the
 study and practice of instruments once in general favour but now almost unknown to our concert
 rooms, such as the clavicembalo, the viola da gamba, the viol d'amore … members of this body
 have already given historical concerts with much success’. This society disbanded within a
 decade, but was followed in 1901 by the Société des Instruments Anciens Casadesus, formed by
 Henri Casadesus with encouragement from Saint-Saëns, in which Henri's sister-in-law Lucette
 played the viol (see CASADESUS (2)).
 Most performers on the bass viol in the late 19th century and first half of the 20th played the viol
 like a cello, with an endpin, a cello-like thin and rounded neck and fingerboard, a cello bow and
 no frets. In addition the viol was fitted with a thick, cello-like bass bar and soundpost, and heavily
 reinforced with thick linings to support its unnatural set-up. Arnold Dolmetsch was intuitively
 aware that the viol was being misunderstood, despite his initial scanty knowledge of the
 instrument and its music. In the 1890s, after considerable research into music and instruments
 of the 16th to 18th centuries, he began to give concerts on original instruments including viols.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                    21/29
14.3.2011                                       Viol in Oxford Music Online
 The Times reported in 1892 how ‘Mr Dolmetsch brought forth several interesting concerted works
 for the viols – among them a beautiful “Dovehouse Pavan” by Alfonso Ferrabosco … Miss
 Dolmetsch displayed her remarkable skill on a viola da gamba in a long chaconne by Marin
 Marais, a composer whose revival is entirely due to Mr Dolmetsch’. These concerts won the
 recognition of the Bloomsbury circle, and Bernard Shaw speculated prophetically:
          "If we went back to old viols … I suppose we should have to begin to make them
          again; and I wonder what would be the result of that … if our fiddle-makers were
          to attempt to revive them, they would probably aim at the sort of ‘power’ of tone
          produced by those violins which ingenious street-players make out of empty
          Australian mutton tins and odd legs of stools. "
 In 1938, the year before Dolmetsch's death, Percy Scholes wrote that the viol was played by ‘a
 small (but growing) body of devoted students’. Many of these were in fact pupils of Dolmetsch, but
 Paul Grümmer's Viola da Gamb a-Schule (Leipzig, 1928) shows that a parallel revival was taking
 place in Germany, pioneered by the scholar Max Seiffert and the instrument maker Peter Harlan.
 Grümmer encouraged his pupil, the young Swiss cellist August Wenzinger, to nurture his interest
 in the bass viol, and in 1933 Wenzinger was one of the founders of the Schola Cantorum
 Basiliensis (the first institution for the research, performance and teaching of early music), where
 he taught the viol. Viol playing was uncommon in America until after World War II. However, in
 1929 the American Society of Ancient Musicians was founded in Philadelphia by Ben and Flora
 Stad, who were inspired by the playing of Casadesus with whom they had both studied in Paris in
 the early 1920s. The Stads' group included three sizes of viol, and by the time Ben Stad died in
 1946 his ensemble's concerts, recordings and festivals had brought the viol's sound to many
 East Coast Americans. The viol made slow but sure progress in the 1950s. It was not without
 provocation that Vaughan Williams wrote to Michael Kennedy on 9 May 1957:
          "With regard to that aria in the Matthew P. about bearing the Cross. I was told
          that at the first performance under Mendelssohn this was the hit of the evening –
          apparently they used to encore things they liked at those early performances. I
          have an idea that I will put it in my next performance. But it will have to be
          rearranged for three cellos. I will not have a viola da gamba inside the building."
 The viol's postwar renaissance is marked by three distinctive styles of playing: English, German
 and Netherlandish. The English school stems from Dolmetsch and has been closely associated
 with the performance of English consort music. In 1962 Francis and June Baines founded the
 Jaye Consort of Viols (named after the 17th-century English maker Henry Jaye, whose
 instruments they primarily used). Their distinctive playing style, which exploits the viol's natural
 resonance to the full, has similarities with the use that English choirs (particularly that of King's
 College, Cambridge) make of their highly resonant chapels. Furthermore both groups of
 musicians present their musical points in a sweet, relaxed and undriven manner, which gives the
 feeling of floating. The viol consort Fretwork, founded in 1985 (perhaps the most vibrant group of
 their time) has adopted a more rhythmically defined, rhetorical and conversational style. Besides
 recording most of the classic English consort music from Byrd to Purcell, Fretwork has
 broadened the viol's repertory by commissioning works from a wide range of contemporary
 composers, including George Benjamin (Upon Silence, 1990), Tan Dun (A Sinking Love, 1995),
 Barry Guy (Buzz, 1994), Thea Musgrave (Wild Winter, 1993) and Peter Sculthorpe (Djlile, 1995).
 Laurence Dreyfus's consort Phantasm and the Rose Consort have also received critical acclaim.
 The German school of playing was originally centred on the work of Wenzinger in Basle. Although
 his style was derived from the same primary sources as the English school, his manner of
 playing might be seen as its antithesis. It is true that Wenzinger's repertory focussed more on
 18th-century French and German solo music, but his performance was characterized by an
 intense, rhythmically animated manner, driving forward to the cadence in long sustained melodic
 lines. Wenzinger's playing style has been disseminated all over the world by his many pupils. His
 influence on American playing is particularly significant; as early as 1953 he spent a term
 lecturing and teaching at Harvard and in the 1970s he made frequent visits to the Oberlin summer
 school. The Netherlands school of viol playing is the youngest of the three and has its origins in
 the playing of the Belgian Wieland Kuijken. His intense, yet restrained style with exquisite
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                   22/29
14.3.2011                                          Viol in Oxford Music Online
 sensitivity to the smallest nuance lends itself to the performance of Marais, yet he is a player of
 catholic tastes whose performances of Ortiz, Simpson, Bach and Abel are no less satisfying.
 Many of the leading viol players of the late 20th century studied with Kuijken – Jordi Savall,
 Christophe Coin, Laurence Dreyfus, Sarah Cunningham and Susanne Heinrich – and his
 approach has greatly influenced European playing. Jordi Savall has recorded much of the solo
 viol repertory and has been a highly influential teacher at Basle; his Italian pupil Paolo Pandolfo
 has delighted audiences with his fresh, wildly inventive, improvisatory approach, not least as
 regards viola bastarda music.
 The American John Hsu is a player of distinction who has developed his own independent style.
 Hsu is particularly solicitous to the influence that Baroque gesture had on contemporary
 performing practice; this has led him to develop an intensely subtle bowing technique which
 moulds the melodic line into a series of gestures, which he expounds in his Handb ook of French
 Baroque Viol Technique (E1981). Alison Crum's Play the Viol (B1989) primarily addresses the
 amateur market. In 1998 Paolo Biordi and Vittorio Ghielmi published a more advanced and
 comprehensive tutor entitled Methodo completo e progressivo per viola da gamb a. Since World
 War II interest in the viol has also been fostered in England by the Viola da Gamba Society
 (founded in 1948) and in the USA by the Viola da Gamba Society of America (1963), both of which
 publish journals with scholarly articles as well as notices of current activities. German-speaking
 countries are served by the Viola da Gamba Mitteilungen of Switzerland, which keeps players
 informed of concerts and has short features concerning the viol. By the late 1970s interest in viol
 playing had spread throughout the English-speaking world, Europe and Japan. Universities and
 music colleges purchased consorts of viols; adults took up the instrument as amateurs; and
 children were introduced to it without first having developed a modern violin or cello technique. In
 1991 Marais became a household name in France after the success of the film Tous les Matins
 du Monde, loosely based on the lives of Sainte-Colombe and his pupil.
 In the late 20th century many excellent instruments have been built based on classical models by
 makers such as Jane Julier, Dietrich Kessler and David Rubio in Britain, François Bodart in
 Belgium, Pierre Jacquier and Guy de Ra in France, Pilman Muthesius and Ossenbrunner in
 Germany, and Paul Reichlin in Switzerland. Fine copies of Baroque bows are made by Boumann
 (Netherlands), Landwehr (Germany), Fausto Cangelosi (Italy), Patigny (Belgium), Hans Reiners
 (Germany) and Luis Emilio Rodriguez (Netherlands). The viol's unusual sound has inspired
 works from many contemporary composers, including Peter Maxwell Davies, Peter Dickinson and
 David Loeb, in addition to those mentioned above.
Lucy Robinson
Bibliography
PraetoriusSM
PraetoriusTI
VirdungMG
  H. Judenkünig: Ain schone kunstliche Underweisung (Vienna, 1523); ed. H. Mönkemeyer as Die Tablatur, x
   (Hofheim am Taunus, 1970)
M. Agricola: Musica instrumentalis deudsch (Wittenberg, 1529/R, enlarged 5/1545; Eng. trans., ed. W.
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                     23/29
14.3.2011                                               Viol in Oxford Music Online
   Hettrick, 1994)
H. Gerle: Musica teusch (Nuremberg, 1532, enlarged 3/1546/R as Musica und Tablatur)
  G.M. Lanfranco: Scintille di musica (Brescia, 1533/R; Eng. trans. in B. Lee: Giovanni Maria Lanfranco's
   ‘Scintille di musica’ and its Relation to 16th-Century Music Theory (diss., Cornell U., 1961)
  S. di Ganassi dal Fontego: Regola rubertina (Venice, 1542/R); ed. W. Eggers (Kassel, 1974); Eng. trans. in
   JVdGSA, xviii (1981), 13–66
S. di Ganassi dal Fontego: Lettione seconda (Venice, 1543/R); ed. W. Eggers (Kassel, 1974)
D. Ortiz: Trattado de glosas (Rome, 1553); ed. M. Schneider (Berlin, 1913, 3/1961)
P. Jambe de Fer: Epitome musical (Lyons, 1556); repr. in F. Lesure: AnnM, vi (1958–63), 341–86
R. Rognoni: Passaggi per potersi essercitare (Venice, 1592) [lost, MS copy by F. Chrysander, US-SFsc]
T. Robinson: The Schoole of Musicke (London, 1603); ed. D. Lumsden (Paris, 1973)
  A. Banchieri: Conclusioni nel suono dell'organo, op.20 (Bologna, 1609/R, 2/1626 as Armoniche conclusioni
   nel suono dell'organo; Eng. trans., 1982)
J. Playford: A Breefe Introduction to the Skill of Musick (London, 1654) [many later edns]
  C. Simpson: The Division-violist (London, 1659, 2/1667/R as Chelys: minuritionum artificio exornata/The
   Division-Viol, 3/1712)
E. Loulié: Méthode pour apprendre à jouer la violle (MS, F-Pn, c1700) [transcr. in Cohen (1966)]
  H. Le Blanc: Défense de la basse de viole contre les entreprises du violon et les prétentions du violoncel
   (Amsterdam, 1740/R)
  M. Corrette: Méthode pour apprendre facilement à jouer du pardessus de viole à 5 et à 6 cordes (Paris,
   1748; Eng. trans., 1990)
  P.-L. d'Aquin de Château-Lyon: Lettres sur les hommes célèbres sous le règne de Louis XV (Paris, 1752,
   2/1753/R as Siècle littéraire de Louis XV)
C.R. Brijon: Méthode nouvelle et facile pour apprendre à jouer du par-dessus de viole(Lyons, 1766)
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                         24/29
14.3.2011                                              Viol in Oxford Music Online
 B: General
  BrownI
BurneyH
  E. van der Straeten: The History of the Violoncello, the Viol da Gamba, their Precursors and Collateral
   Instruments (London, 1915/R)
G.R. Hayes: Musical Instruments and their Music, 1500–1750, ii (London, 1930/R)
A. Baines: ‘Fifteenth-Century Instruments in Tinctoris's De inventione et usu musicae’, GSJ, iii (1950), 19–25
  T. Dart: ‘The Fretted Instruments, III: the Viols’, Musical Instruments Through the Ages, ed. A. Baines
   (Harmondsw orth, 1961, 2/1966/R), 184
  N. Dolmetsch: The Viola da Gamba: its Origin and History, its Technique and Musical Resources (London,
   1962, 2/1968)
W. Bachmann: Die Anfänge des Streichinstrumentenspiels (Leipzig, 1964, 2/1966; Eng. trans., 1969)
D.D. Boyden: The History of Violin Playing from its Origins to 1761 (London, 1965/R)
  C. Dolmetsch: ‘The Pardessus de Viol or Chanterelle’, The Strad, lxxvi (1965), 99–103; repr. in JVdGSA, iii
   (1966), 56–9
  A. Baines: Victoria and Albert Museum: Catalogue of Musical Instruments, ii: Non-Keyboard Instruments
   (London, 1968)
M. Remnant: ‘The Use of Frets on Rebecs and Mediaeval Fiddles’, GSJ, xxi (1968), 146–51
  D.D. Boyden: Catalogue of the Hill Collection of Musical Instruments in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
   (London, 1969)
  D. Kämper: Studien zur instrumentalen Ensemblemusik des 16. Jahrhunderts in Italien, AnMc, no.10 (1970)
   [w hole vol.]
J.A. Griffin: ‘Diego Ortiz's Principles of Ornamentation for the Viol’, JVdGSA, x (1973), 88–95
D. Abbot and E. Segerman: ‘Strings in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries’, GSJ, xxvii (1974), 48–73
J. Caldw ell: ‘Antique Viols and Related Instruments from the Caldw ell Collection’, JVdGSA, xi (1974), 60–89
M. Cyr: ‘The Viol in Baroque Paintings and Draw ings’, JVdGSA, xi (1974), 5–16
G.J. Kinney: ‘Fray Juan Bermudo's Methods of Measuring Frets’, JVdGSA, xi (1974), 90–101
M. Bram: ‘An Interview w ith August Wenzinger’, JVdGSA, xii (1975), 78–83
M. Cyr: ‘Solo Music for the Treble Viol’, JVdGSA, xii (1975), 5–13
S. Marcuse: A Survey of Musical Instruments (New ton Abbot and New York, 1975)
  R.D. Leppert: ‘Viols in Seventeenth-Century Flemish Paintings: the Iconography of Music Indoors and Out’,
   JVdGSA, xv (1978), 5–40
T. Pratt: ‘The Playing Technique of the dessus and pardessus de viole’, Chelys, viii (1978–9), 51–8
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                             25/29
14.3.2011                                              Viol in Oxford Music Online
  P. Tourin: Viol List: a Comprehensive Catalogue of Historical Viole da Gamba in Public and Private
   Collections (Duxbury, MA, 1979)
  H.M. Brow n: ‘Notes (and Transposing Notes) on the Viol in the Early Sixteenth Century’, Music in Medieval
   and Early Modern Europe, ed. I. Fenlon (Cambridge, 1981), 61–78
J. Rutledge: ‘Tow ards a History of the Viol in the 19th Century’, EMc, xii (1984), 328–36
  K. Coates: Geometry, Proportion and the Art of Lutherie: a Study of the Use and Aesthetic Significance of
   Geometry and Numerical Proportion in the Design of European Bowed and Plucked String Instruments in
   the Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Oxford, 1985, 3/1991)
  I. Woodfield: ‘The First Earl of Sandw ich, a Performance of William Law es in Spain and the Origins of the
    Pardessus de Viole’, Chelys, xiv (1985), 40–44
K. Moens: ‘Authenticiteitsproblemen bij oude strijkinstrumenten’, Musica antiqua, iii (1986), 80–87, 105–11
J.M. Meixell: ‘The American Society of Instruments’, JVdGSA, xxv (1988), 6–28
T. Craw ford: ‘Constantijn Huygens and the “Engelsche Viool”’, Chelys, xviii (1989), 41–60
C.H. Ågren: ‘The Use of Higher Positions on the Treble Viol’, Chelys, xix (1990), 44–54
A. Viles: ‘New Grove Index for Viol Players’, JVdGSA, xxvii (1990), 55–75
  A Viola da Gamba Miscellany: Utrecht 1991 [incl. T. Stronks: ‘A Viola da Gamba Bibliography’, 141–62, and I.
   Woodfield: ‘The Basel gross Geigen: an Early German Viol?’, 1–14]
  P. Holman: ‘“An Addicion of Wyer Stringes Beside the Ordenary Stringes”: the Origin of the Baryton’,
   Companion to Contemporary Musical Thought, ed. J. Paynter and others (London, 1992), 1098–115
  F.-P. Goy: ‘Seventeenth-Century Viol Pieces in Settings for Plucked Strings (c1625–c1700)’, Chelys, xxii
   (1993), 30–43
A. Ashbee: ‘The Society's Indexes: a Way Forw ard’, Chelys, xxiii (1994), 73–9
F.-P. Goy: ‘The Norw egian Viol Tablatures’, Chelys, xxiii (1994), 55–72
  M. Smith: ‘The Cello Bow Held the Viol-Way: once Common, but now almost Forgotten’, Chelys, xxiv (1995),
   47–61
  J. Davidoff: Twentieth-Century Compositions for the Viol with and without Instruments or Voice, Published
   and Unpublished (Albany, CA, 2000)
 C: England
  MeyerECM
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                           26/29
14.3.2011                                               Viol in Oxford Music Online
  T. Dart and R. Donington: ‘The Origin of the In Nomine’, ML, xxx (1949), 101–06
W. Coates: ‘English Tw o-Part Viol Music, 1590–1640’, ML, xxxiii (1952), 141–50
W.L. Woodfill: Musicians in English Society from Elizabeth to Charles I (Princeton, NJ, 1953/R)
P. Evans: ‘Seventeenth-Century Chamber Music Manuscripts at Durham’, ML, xxxvi (1955), 205–23
T. Dart: ‘Ornament Signs in Jacobean Music for Lute and Viol’, GSJ, xiv (1961), 30–33
P. Brett: ‘The English Consort Song, 1570–1625’, PRMA, lxxxviii (1961–2), 73–88
M. Pallis: ‘The Instrumentation of English Viol Consort Music’, Chelys, i (1969), 27–35
M. Caudle: ‘The English Repertory for Violin, Bass Viol and Continuo’, Chelys, vi (1975–6), 69–75
  P. Doe: ‘The Emergence of the In Nomine: Some Notes and Queries on the Work of Tudor Musicians’, Modern
   Musical Scholarship: Oxford 1977, 79–92
J.T. Johnson: ‘Violin versus Viol in English Fantasia-Suites’, JVdGSA, xv (1978), 88–101
  P. Olds: ‘The Decline of the Viol in Seventeenth-Century England: some Observations’, JVdGSA, xvii (1980),
   60–69
I. Harw ood: ‘A Case of Double Standards? Instrumental Pitch in England c1600’,EMc, ix (1981), 470–81
D. Pinto: ‘The Fantasy Manner: the Seventeenth-Century Context’, Chelys, x (1981), 17–28
A. Ashbee: ‘A Not Unapt Scholar: Bullstrode Whitelocke (1605–1675)’, Chelys, xi (1982), 24–31
  B. Bellingham: ‘The Musical Circle of Anthony Wood in Oxford during the Commonw ealth and Restoration’,
   JVdGSA, xix (1982), 6–70
  I. Graham-Jones: ‘Some Random Thoughts on Pitch in English Viol Consort Music in the Seventeenth-Century’,
    Chelys, xi (1982), 20–23
G. Dodd: ‘Grounds for Putting Simpson into Practice’, JVdGSA, xx (1983), 60–67
  D. Kessler: ‘Viol Construction in 17th-Century England: an Alternative Way of Making Fronts’, EMc, x (1982),
   340–45; xi (1983), 145–6
R. Prior: ‘Jew ish Musicians at the Tudor Court’, MQ, lxix (1983), 253–65
J.R. Catch: ‘Praetorius and English Viol Pitches’, Chelys, xv (1986), 26–32
  R. Charteris: ‘English Music in the Library of Moritz Landgrave of Hessen-Kassel in 1613’, Chelys, xv (1986),
   33–7
M. Remnant: English Bowed Instruments from Anglo-Saxon to Tudor Times (Oxford, 1986)
J. Wess: ‘Musica Transalpina, Parody, and the Emerging Jacobean Viol Fantasia’, Chelys, xv (1986), 3–25
  R. Charteris: ‘New Information About Some of the Consort Music Manuscripts in Archbishop Marsh's Library,
   Dublin’, The Consort, no.43 (1987), 38–9
  I. Payne: ‘Instrumental Music at Trinity College, Cambridge, c.1594–c.1615: Archival and Biographical
    Evidence’, ML, lxviii (1987), 128–40
  I. Payne: ‘British Library Add. MSS 30826–8: a Set of Part-Books from Trinity College, Cambridge?’, Chelys,
    xvii (1988), 3–15
E. Segerman: ‘On Praetorius and English Viol Pitches’, Chelys, xvii (1988), 24–7
  I. Payne: ‘The Provision of Teaching on Viols at Some English Cathedral Churches, c.1594–c.1645’, Chelys,
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                            27/29
14.3.2011                                               Viol in Oxford Music Online
   xix (1990), 3–15
P. Willetts: ‘John Barnard's Collections of Viol and Vocal Music’, Chelys, xx (1991), 28–42
  D. Bertenshaw : The Influence of the Late 16th-Century Italian Polyphonic Madrigal on the English Viol
   Consort c1600–45 (diss., U. of Leicester, 1992)
  R. Charteris: ‘A Rediscovered Manuscript Source w ith some Previously Unknow n Works by John Jenkins,
   William Law es and Benjamin Rogers’, Chelys, xxii (1993), 3–29
P. Holman: Four and Twenty Fiddlers: the Violin at the English Court 1540–1690 (Oxford, 1993, 2/1995)
  R. Thompson: ‘A Further Look at the Consort Music Manuscripts in Archbishop Marsh's Library, Dublin’,
   Chelys, xxiv (1995), 3–18
  A. Ashbee and P. Holman, ed.: John Jenkins and his Time: Studies in English Consort Music (Oxford,
   1996)
  I. Payne: The Almain and Other Measures in England 1549–1675: their History and Choreography
    (Aldershot, 1997)
  J. Wainw right: Musical Patronage in Seventeenth-Century England: Christopher, First Baron Hatton
   (Aldershot, 1997)
A. Ashbee and others: A Biographical Dictionary of English Court Musicians, 1485–1714 (Aldershot, 1998)
  A. Ashbee and L. Hulse: William Lawes (1602–1645): Essays on his Life, Times and Work (Aldershot,
   1998)
 D: Italy
  H.M. Brow n: Sixteenth-Century Instrumentation: the Music for the Florentine Intermedii, MSD, xxx (1973)
H.M. Brow n and E.E. Low insky, eds.: Eustachio Romano: Musica duorum, Rome, 1521, MRM, vi (1975)
  P. Allsop: ‘The Role of the Stringed Bass as a Continuo Instrument in Italian Seventeenth-Century Instrumental
   Music’, Chelys, viii (1978–9), 31–7
M. Edw ards: ‘Venetian Viols of the 16th Century’, GSJ, xxxiii (1980), 74–91
W.F. Prizer: ‘Isabella d'Este and Lorenzo da Pavia, Master Instrument-Maker’, EMH, ii (1982), 87–127
M.D. Banks: ‘North Italian Viols at the Shrine to Music Museum’, JVdGSA, xxi (1984), 7–27
  H.M. Brow n and K.M. Spencer: ‘How Alfonso della Viola Tuned his Viols and How he Transposed’, EMc, xiv
   (1986), 520–33
  P. Ferrari: ‘La liuteria veneziana del Cinquecento e la viola da gamba di Antonio Ciciliano del Museo Civico di
   Bologna’, Flauto dolce, xvii – xviii (1987–8), 49–53
H.M. Brow n: ‘The Trecento Fiddle and its Bridges’, EMc, xvii (1989), 307–29
G.M. Ongaro: ‘New Documents on a Sixteenth-Century Venetian Viol Maker’, JVdGSA, xxvii (1990), 22–8
 E: France
  BenoitMC
F. Lesure: ‘La facture instrumentale à Paris au seizième siècle’,GSJ, vii (1954), 11–52
  F. Lesure: ‘Le traité des instruments de musique de Pierre Trichet’, AnnM, iii (1955), 283–387; iv (1956), 175–
   248; also pubd separately (Neuilly-sur-Seine, 1957; Eng. trans., 1973)
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri…                                                                              28/29
14.3.2011                                                Viol in Oxford Music Online
  F. Lesure: ‘Un querelle sur le jeu de viole en 1688: Jean Rousseau contre Demachy’, RdM, xlv–xlvi (1960),
   181–99
  Y. Gérard: ‘Notes sur la fabrication de la viole de gambe et la manière d'en jouer, d'après une
   correspondance inédite de J.B. Forqueray au Prince Frédéric-Guillaume de Prusse’, RMFC, ii (1961–2),
   165–71
A. Cohen: ‘A Study of Instrumental Ensemble Practice in 17th-Century France’, GSJ, xv (1962), 3–17
A. Cohen: ‘An Eighteenth-Century Treatise on the Viol by Etienne Loulié’, JVdGSA, iii (1966), 17–23
G.J. Kinney: ‘Problems of Melodic Ornamentation in French Viol Music’, JVdGSA, v (1968), 34–50
S. Milliot: Documents inédits sur les luthiers parisiens du XVIIIe siècle (Paris, 1970)
H. Bol: La basse de viole du temps de Marin Marais et d'Antoine Forqueray (Bilthoven, 1973)
M. Cyr: ‘Traditions of Solo Viol Playing in France and the Music of Morel’, JVdGSA, x (1973), 81–7
  G.J. Kinney: ‘Writings on the Viol by DuBuisson, DeMachy, Roland Marais, and Etienne Loulié’, JVdGSA, xiii
   (1976), 17–55
R.A. Green: ‘Jean Rousseau and Ornamentation in French Viol Music’, JVdGSA, xiv (1977), 4–41
  W. Hancock: ‘The Frequency and Positioning of Ornaments in French Viol Music (1685–9)’,Chelys, viii (1978–
  9), 38–50
  A. Rose: ‘Music for the dessus and pardessus de violes, Published in France, ca.1650–1770’, JVdGSA, xvi
   (1979), 40–46
J.A. Sadie: The Bass Viol in French Baroque Chamber Music (Ann Arbor, 1980)
L. Robinson: The Forquerays and the French Viol Tradition (diss., U. of Cambridge, 1981)
M. Sicard: ‘The French Viol School Before 1650’, JVdGSA, xviii (1981), 76–93
 F: Germany
  A. Einstein: Zur deutschen Literatur für Viola da Gamba im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert (Leipzig, 1905/R); Eng.
   trans. in JVdGSA, xxix (1992), 27–64
G. Hellw ig: Joachim Tielke: ein Hamburger Lauten- und Violenmacher der Barockzeit (Frankfurt,1980)
G.J. Kinney: ‘Telemann's Use of the Viol as a Solo or Concertante Instrument’, JVdGSA, xvii (1980), 5–27
L. Dreyfuss: ‘Concluding Remarks’, Bach Drei Sonaten für Viola da Gamba und Cembalo (London, 1985)
J.A. Sadie: ‘Handel: in Pursuit of the Viol’, Chelys, xiv (1985), 3–24
K. Polk: ‘Instrumental Music in Urban Centres of Renaissance Germany’, EMH, vii (1988), 159–86
  K. Polk: ‘Vedel und Geige/Fiddle and Viol: German String Traditions in the 15th Century’,JAMS, xlii (1989),
   504–46
K. Polk: German Instrumental Music of the Late Middle Ages (Cambridge, 1992)
M. O'Loghlin: ‘Ludw ig Christian Hesse and the Berlin Virtuoso Style’, JVdGSA, xxxv (1998), 35–73
…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/29435?pri… 29/29