eller: iron ball (Default)
eller ([personal profile] eller) wrote2022-06-15 02:08 pm
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Monochord

For anyone who thought the Scheitholt looked a bit too complicated... This is a monochord, the simplest imaginable zither. Dad built that a few years ago.

Monochord-kl

I didn't even know about its existence because it was in Dad's collection of homemade musical instruments. (He said it was stored "right next to his selfmade xylophone", which is an instrument I don't touch. Ever.) Maybe, at some point, we should make a proper inventary within the family, considering I own some instruments that surprised Dad, and clearly, he didn't always inform me about his crafting projects... LOL. (Granted, we own a sh*tload of questionable instruments, most of which aren't considered instruments by civilized people in the first place, so, it's hard to keep track...)
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (alto clef)

[personal profile] yhlee 2022-06-15 03:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Yesssssss, this is awesome. And hey, the Mongolian "horse-headed fiddle" (morin khuur [Wikipedia]) only has two strings, so here's to minimalist folk instruments! :D

Honestly I would love to see your family's collection of instruments someday, just out of musical interest. XD
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (alto clef)

[personal profile] yhlee 2022-06-15 04:12 pm (UTC)(link)
The only people I've ever known who owned more than one piano were private piano instructors who had multiple pianos at their home studios for their students to practice at! :D I find it hilarious that after I bought ONE digital piano (easier to keep in tune!), I kept getting ads for MORE PIANOS as if I were some kind of piano hoarder. XD Someday I might upgrade to one of the fancy digital pianos that lets you change the "instrument" (e.g. from a Yamaha sound to a Bösendorfer or whatever) but for the moment my basic instrument serves my needs.

I was something of an instrument hoarder when I was younger, before the flood decimated my collection...classical guitar, a couple ocarinas, multiple harmonicas, soprano recorder (that survived), alto recorder (that didn't), viola, panpipes (unfortunately a crucial pipe was cracked and unplayable and I never found out if a repair was possible), mandolin...the only thing stopping me from resuming my INSTRUMENT HOARDING WAYS is the knowledge that my husband will complain. XD
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (alto clef)

[personal profile] yhlee 2022-06-15 04:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I love that. I once had an argument with my husband as to whether people can compose without knowing music notation - the answer is obviously OF COURSE THEY CAN MUSIC PREDATES NOTATION but for some reason he thought you had to know music notation to compose?! (Counterexample: HANS ZIMMER. Only one of the most successful living film composers...) :D :D

My parents refused to let me learn percussion and I still have regrets - it would have been so helpful in later writing percussion lines for my compositions. I just wing it. XD
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (alto clef)

[personal profile] yhlee 2022-06-15 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep! I actually have a book on Korean musicology and Korean music notation looks WILDLY different, ditto Chinese notation for the guqin (probably others).

Here's an example of Korean notation for a piece of ritual music, from Lee Hye-ku's Esasays on Korean Traditional Music, trans. Robert C. Provine:



And an example of guqin notation from Standards of the Guqin 4th ed., Juni L. Yeung and the Toronto Guqin Society:



:D
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (alto clef)

[personal profile] yhlee 2022-06-15 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I can't either - I'm guessing you "only" need to know a limited set of Chinese characters (= hanja in the Korean example) but the guqin textbook has like a dozen pages of required characters and their meanings that you just have to memorize - of course you have to do the same with Italian terminology in classical Western music anyway. XD I would not be surprised if the Korean notation was at least somewhat based on the Chinese example, but I don't actually know that for sure.
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (alto clef)

[personal profile] yhlee 2022-06-15 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Also the cost. A new one goes from like $300 for a beginner instrument on up (and up and up, I'm sure). But yeah, those people are so deadly serious about the guqin I would be terrified to try.

I also discovered that for some reason, if you search "chord zither" on eBay, along with a bunch of German chord zithers, you also get a ton of hits for...the Korean gayageum - which is a zither, but it's much more similar to a koto or guzheng or guqin.