Hochschularbeit
Josef Rath: | Examination, conservation, restauration and reconstruction of the oldest known Viennese double bass made by Nikolaus Leidolff, 1693 (KHM Wien, Sammlung alter Musikinstrumente, SAM 909) | Zurück |
Sprache: | Original - Übersetzung | |
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Zusammenfassung: | This double bass, made by Nikolaus Leidolff, is nowadays known as the oldest of this type. At the moment the bass is exhibited by a museum, but has probably been played before for almost three centuries. During the years it was repaired quite often in a pragmatic and amateurish manner in order to meet the changing demands of each period. Consequently, the theoretical part of the thesis presents the current discussion, whether the instru¬ment is to be seen as a basic commodity or an artefact. A large part of the work was dedicated to the examination of the instrument and its historical context. Also the hypothetical possibility of the playability and the consequences thereof were discussed. In the practical part of the work the instrument was cleaned from the accumulated rosin dust. Vulnerable parts were consolidated and cracks were splinted. For opening and closing the corpus in an accurately fitting way a special construction for support was engineered. Furthermore, a new double bass based on the examination of the Leidolff instrument, was reconst¬ructed. |
Schlagworte: | Viennese double bass, Violone, Nikolaus Leidolff, Anton Losschmidt, crack splitting, playability, string tension, bridge pressure |
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