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Leonardo Da Vinci's wacky piano is heard for the first time, after 500 years

Leopoldina
@leopoldina
11 years ago
280 posts

NG_Vinciwide4-20131118132723799848-620x349.jpg

Take a bow: The viola organista's strings are played in the same way as a cello.Photo: Tomasz Wiech/AFP

A bizarre instrument combining a piano and cello has finally been played to an audience more than 500 years after it was dreamt up Leonardo da Vinci.

Da Vinci, the Italian Renaissance genius who painted the Mona Lisa, invented the viola organista - which looks like a baby grand piano but never built it, experts say.

The viola organista has now come to life, thanks to a Polish concert pianist with a flair for instrument-making and the patience and passion to interpret da Vincis plans.

Full of steel strings and spinning wheels, Slawomir Zubrzyckis creation is a musical and mechanical work of art.

This instrument has the characteristics of three we know: the harpsichord, the organ and the viola da gamba, Zubrzycki said as he debuted the instrument at the Academy of Music in the southern Polish city of Krakow.

[ Link to a video, I can't figure it out how to put it here *blushes* ]

The instruments exterior is painted in a rich midnight blue, adorned with golden swirls painted on the side. The inside of its lid is a deep raspberry inscribed with a Latin quote in gold leaf by 12th-century German nun, mystic and philosopher, Saint Hildegard.

Holy prophets and scholars immersed in the sea of arts both human and divine, dreamt up a multitude of instruments to delight the soul, it says.

The flat bed of its interior is lined with golden spruce. Sixty-one gleaming steel strings run across it, similar to the inside of a baby grand.

Each is connected to the keyboard, complete with smaller black keys for sharp and flat notes. But unlike a piano, it has no hammered dulcimers. Instead, there are four spinning wheels wrapped in horse-tail hair, like violin bows.

To turn them, Zubrzycki pumps a pedal below the keyboard connected to a crankshaft. As he tinkles the keys, they press the strings down onto the wheels, emitting rich, sonorous tones reminiscent of a cello, an organ and even an accordion.

The effect is a sound that da Vinci dreamt of, but never heard; there are no historical records suggesting he or anyone else of his time built the instrument he designed.

A sketch and notes in da Vincis characteristic inverted script is found in his Codex Atlanticus, a 12-volume collection of his manuscripts and designs for everything from weaponry to flight.

I have no idea what Leonardo da Vinci might think of the instrument Ive made, but Id hope hed be pleased, said Zubrzycki, who spend three years and 5000 hours bringing da Vincis creation to life.

AFP, with Nick Galvin

[ Source ]






updated by @leopoldina: 04 Jun 2017 07:30:58AM
Tatiana Dokuchic
@tatiana-dokuchic
11 years ago
1,919 posts

Interesting! Thanks! Here's the video :)




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Proprietress of Tatiana's Tea Room ~ Owner of the Provence Coeur Estate ~ Webmistress of this site
Lady Leena Fandango
@lady-leena-fandango
11 years ago
358 posts

This is really amazing, thanks for sharing it ... the sound of it is so unique :)

Ekaterina Vorontsova-Dashkova
@ekaterina-vorontsova-dashkova
11 years ago
300 posts

Wow, the sounds really are very "bizarre"! But in a good way. :P

Thank you for sharing this video, Tat. And thanks for posting this, Leopoldine. :-)

Leopoldina
@leopoldina
11 years ago
280 posts

oh thanks! I had a hard time trying to add it to the post :p

Ekaterina Petrovna Shuvalova
@countess-shuvalova
11 years ago
209 posts

This is really interesting! <3

Lady Bluebird of Orkney
@lady-bluebird-of-orkney
11 years ago
81 posts

Quite wonderful!