Chitarra battente

Chitarra battente

Chitarra battente
Classification Strings
Music of Italy
Genres: Classical (Opera) - Pop - Rock (Hardcore - New Wave - Progressive rock) - Disco - House - Dance - Folk - Hip hop - Jazz
History and Timeline
Awards Italian Music Awards
Charts Federation of the Italian Music Industry
Festivals Sanremo Music Festival - Umbria Jazz Festival - Ravello Festival - Festival dei Due Mondi - Festivalbar
Media Music media in Italy
National anthem Il Canto degli Italiani
Regional scenes
Aosta Valley - Abruzzo - Basilicata - Calabria - Campania - Emilia-Romagna - Florence - Friuli-Venezia Giulia - Genoa - Latium - Liguria - Lombardy - Marche - Milan - Molise - Naples - Piedmont - Puglia - Rome - Sardinia - Sicily - Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol - Tuscany - Umbria - Veneto - Venice
Related topics
Opera houses - Music conservatories - Terminology

The chitarra battente (Italian: lit. "beating guitar") also known as "chitarra italiana" is a musical instrument, a chordophone of the lute family. At a casual glance, it is similar to the everyday classical guitar, but larger and typically strung with four steel strings. Nowadays it is typical of folk music mainly in Calabria, Puglia, Basilicata and Campania, as well as in other areas of southern Italy; in previous centuries was common in most of central and southern Italy.

History

The people of the area consider it a folk instrument, though it may have non-folk origins as an import from elsewhere centuries ago. Musicologists refer to the "historical" as well as the "folk" chitarra battente; the latter is the one folk musicians in southern Italy mean when they refer to the instrument. There are versions of the historical 17th instrument in museums, but the commonly played folk instrument comes in three sizes: small, medium, large. The medium and large instruments are the most popular; the small instrument is a toy and has traditionally been used to train children to play (much as quarter- and half-sized violins are used).

Locals refer to the instrument, simply, as the "guitar," using the term “French guitar” for what is general called elsewhere “guitar,” meaning the classical guitar. That designation of “French” is almost certainly wrong, since all reliable sources claim a Spanish origin for the modern six-string six-course classical guitar. (A “course” is a string or strings played as a single unit. A mandolin, for example, has eight strings, but they are arranged in close-spaced pairs, and each pair is fingered and plucked simultaneously, as if ithe pair were a single string -- thus, it is an eight-string, four-course instrument.) The chitarra battente, then, would be a four-string, four-course instrument. There are also versions of the chitarra battente that are 10-string, 5-course, meaning that the ten strings are grouped into five close-spaced pairs.

There is great variation in the size of the bouts (the rounded “hourglass” curves of the body of the instrument), kinds of wood, shape of the back, decorations, number of frets, etc. The strings are tuned in what is called a “re-entrant” system; that is, unlike a modern classical guitar, the progression from the bottom string to the top string does not simply go up in pitch, progressively. Here, in the four-string instrument, the third string (from the bottom) is lower than the second. Thus, a typical tuning of the four-string chitarra battente, bass to treble, is A-D-B-E, where the third string, the B, is lower than the second string, the D.

The instrument is played without a plectrum, and the fingers achieve a wide of effects through plucking, strumming, beating the strings or the sound board, etc. The chitarra battente is typically used to accompany songs and dancing and is not used as a solo instrument. The most important center of production is in Bisignano in the province of Cosenza.

Sources

Tucci, Roberta and Antonello Ricci. (1985). "The Chitarra Battente in Calabria". The Galpin Society Journal (vol. 38, Apr. 1985): 78-105.

External links