Lutes Lutes
Origin of the Lute
The Lute is a chordophone. The precursor of the lute is the Middle Eastern
oud (or ud), which was introduced to Spain by the Moors in the early 700’s.
In Arabic, al ud means the wood. It is not hard to see that the Arabic
al ud was Anglicized into lute.
There are a few major differences in these two instruments. The styles
of the peg-boxes differ. The lute peg box is straight, while the oud peg
box has a gentle curve. They are both at nearly right angles to the neck.
The two instruments differ in the number of strings. The lute has 15 strings
while the Oud has 11. The strings are set in courses of two each. In the
lute the first course, the highest pitched, has only one string. While
in the oud, the last course, the lowest pitched, has only one string.
The number of rosette sound holes carved in the soundboards differs. The
Lute has one while the oud has three. Other differences are minor.
The lute under went many functional and stylistic changes as it developed.
It originally had four or fewer courses of strings and was played with
a plectrum, or pick. In the 15th century an additional course of strings
became common. Over the next hundred or more years the full 8 courses,
or 15 strings, became standard. As the instrument gained in popularity
and the music changed, the plectrums were discarded and the instrument
was played by plucking with the fingers.
The 1500-1600’s was the golden age for the lute. Its mass appeal
resulted in copious amounts of music being composed for the lute. Lute
players were in demand and well paid. As with all golden ages this one
came to an end and by the 1800's the lute was no longer in fashion.
Our Lute
The Lute Body is made with stave construction. The alternating light
and dark rosewood of the body is a beautiful visual contrast to the light
spruce soundboard and the dark rosewood neck. They have four fixed wooden
frets on the soundboard and eight movable nylon frets on the neck. There
is one intricately carved rosette sound hole in the light spruce soundboard.
There are 15 strings in 8 courses. The peg box is at an acute angle to
the neck. Each Lute is shipped in a vinyl hard sided case with cloth interior.
DulcimerShofar also offers replacement strings and Learn To Play The Lute: Lute
Lessons for the Beginner by DeGroodt.
Tuning the Lute
All stringed instruments are shipped de-tuned. This removes the tension
on the neck to lessen the chances of accidental breakage during shipping.
Do not tune the lute higher than G above middle C, the bridge can be
pulled off the soundboard. Please be careful. Use peg dope for smoother
action.
Lute String Set
| Course |
String # |
Note |
Diameter |
Material |
| 1 |
1 |
g’ |
0.019” |
Monofilament |
| 2 |
2 |
d’ |
0.022” |
Monofilament |
| 2 |
3 |
d’ |
0.022” |
Monofilament |
| 3 |
4 |
a |
0.027” |
Monofilament |
| 3 |
5 |
a |
0.027” |
Monofilament |
| 4 |
6 |
f |
0.019” |
Silver Plated Wound |
| 4 |
7 |
f |
0.019” |
Silver Plated Wound |
| 5 |
8 |
c |
0.024” |
Monofilament |
| 5 |
9 |
c |
0.026” |
Silver Plated Wound |
| 6 |
10 |
g |
0.027” |
Monofilament |
| 6 |
11 |
G |
0.031” |
Silver Plated Wound |
| 7 |
12 |
f |
0.029” |
Monofilament |
| 7 |
13 |
F |
0.035” |
Silver Plated Wound |
| 8 |
14 |
d |
0.031” |
Monofilament |
| 8 |
15 |
D |
0.040” |
Silver Plated Wound |
How to play the Lute
DulcimerShofar offers replacement strings and Learn To Play The Lute: Lute
Lessons for the Beginner by DeGroodt. The book covers the parts of the
lute, holding, fingering techniques, exercises, care and more. You may
also want to visit our links pages for teachers in your area and lute
web pages.
- Why did I break strings when I tried
to tune my lute?
- Why won't my lute hold a tune?
Why did I break strings when I tried
to tune my lute?
If you broke a string you are going to the wrong octave and may pull
the bridge off the soundboard. Use a piano to identify the octave. Nothing
is tuned above G above middle C.
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Lutes have a very thin soundboard and take more time to stabilize than
a guitar. It takes about a month of constant tuning for your lute to
stabilize.
method
of tuning stretches the soundboard in a very even manner. As you turn
the tuning peg gently push inward to tighten the peg. The pegs are tapered
and will hold more firmly as you press inward. Use a piano or electronic
tuner as a reference for tuning.
Bridge pins are directly beneath the tuning pins. These
bridge pins are loose in their holes. They may need to be adjusted so
there is ample lift to the string on the sharpening lever for a clear
tone. Push or tap bridge pins for more string lift. The sharpening levers
are mounted below the bridge pins. Sharpening levers may be adjusted
for fine-tuning after the soundboard achieves stability. Raising or
lowering the sharpening levers makes the key sharp (i.e. C becomes C-Sharp).