Cawton Aston

Cawton Aston (active 1693 – 1733) was an English builder of spinets.

He was the seventh and last apprentice of instrument builder John Player (1636 - 1707), and the only one to set up his own business.[1] In 1730 he was living at the Prince’s Arms in New Queen Street in London.[2]

Two spinets signed by Aston are currently known; the first is dated 1726 and has the range GG-g΄΄΄ (five octaves). The case is decorated with inlay. The natural keys are covered in bone, and the sharps are made of a “sandwich” of ivory and ebony,[3] sometimes referred to as “skunktail sharps” because of their appearance. The instrument was restored by Arnold Dolmetsch in 1898; Colonial Williamsburg purchased it in 1960.[4]

The second instrument was built in 1733 and also has the range GG-g΄΄΄. The keyboard has ivory-covered naturals[5] and skunktail sharps, just as on the 1726 spinet. Many parts, such as the bridge, nut, and stand are replacements; the soundboard rose is probably not original.[6] The instrument has been in a private collection in England for approximately thirty years.

A spinet built c.1700 whose lowest key is marked “C.A.” has been attributed to Aston; this instrument is currently housed in the Finchcocks Musical Museum. It has the range GG/BB-d΄΄΄ (4½ octaves), with a broken octave. This compass is very common in spinets made between 1690 and 1710.[7] The natural keys are covered with ebony, while the sharps are solid ivory.[8] Overall the instrument is similar to those made by John Player.[9]

Mole[10] states that

Judging by the stylishness of the spinet by Cawton Aston dated 1726 at Colonial Williamsburg, Cawton Aston seems to have been a craftsman of great skill, and a firm constituted by him and by [Thomas] Barton would have been a significant competitor to the [Stephen] Keene firm in the period 1709 to 1712.

Boalch mentions a spinet signed by Cawton Aston and Thomas Barton, dated 1709, that once belonged to Edwin M. Ripin.[11] Boalch believed it to be in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;[12] however, this instrument is not currently in that collection.[13]

Discography

Notes

  1. Boalch, D. (1995). Makers of the Harpsichord and Clavichord 1440-1840 (Third ed.). Clarendon Press. p. 8.
  2. Boalch (1995), p. 8
  3. Boalch (1995), p. 224
  4. Boalch (1995), p. 224
  5. Boalch (1995), p. 225
  6. Boalch (1995), p. 225
  7. Mole, G., The English Spinet with Particular Reference to the Schools of Keene and Hitchcock, p.285 (Doctoral dissertation, University of Edinburgh, 2009) Retrieved 7/22/14 from http://hdl.handle.net/1842/3274
  8. Boalch (1995), p. 225
  9. Boalch (1995), p. 225
  10. Mole (2009), p.100
  11. Boalch (1995), p. 225
  12. Boalch (1995), p. 225
  13. Mole (2009), p.100

References

External Links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, July 28, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.