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The Guitar

The vihuela and guitar existed simultaneously until the seventeenth century, when the popularity of the guitar superseded the vihuela.
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Lute, Wood with traces of paint, Roman/Byzantine
Roman/Byzantine
200–500
Mandora, Boxwood, rosewood, ebony, Italian
Italian
ca. 1420
Madonna and Child with Saints, Girolamo dai Libri  Italian, Tempera and oil on canvas
Girolamo dai Libri
ca. 1520
At the Lapin Agile, Pablo Picasso  Spanish, Oil on canvas
Pablo Picasso
1905
Guitar, Matteo Sellas  German, active Italy, Spruce, bone, parchment, snakewood, ivory, Italian
Matteo Sellas
ca. 1630–50
Guitar, Giacomo (Jacob) Ertel  German, Spruce, ebony, fruitwood, bone, ivory, mother-of-pearl, parchment, Italian
Giacomo (Jacob) Ertel
late 17th century
Guitar, Christian Frederick Martin  American, Wood, maple, spruce, abalone, ebony, metal, brass, ivory, American
Christian Frederick Martin
George Wachsteter
ca. 1838
Guitar, Jean-Baptiste Voboam  French, Spruce, tortoiseshell, mother-of-pearl, ivory, ebony, French
Jean-Baptiste Voboam
1697
Mezzetin, Antoine Watteau  French, Oil on canvas
Antoine Watteau
ca. 1718–20
Guitar, Joseph de Frías  Spanish, Spruce, rosewood, cedar, ebony, mother-of-pearl, Spanish
Joseph de Frías
ca. 1780
Guitar, Benito Sanchez de Aguilera  Spanish, Spruce or fir top, cypress back and ribs, mahogany neck, rosewood fingerboard and frets, ebony nut, gut strings, Spanish
Benito Sanchez de Aguilera
1797
Lyre Guitar, Joseph Pons (probably a son of César Pons) French, Mahogany, spruce, ebony, brass, nickel-silver, gilding, French
Joseph Pons
ca. 1805
Harp Lute, Edward Light  British, Wood, lacquered and gilded, British
Edward Light
ca. 1815
Harpo-lyre, André Augustin Chevrier  French, Spruce, walnut, ormolu, French
André Augustin Chevrier
ca. 1830
Guitar, Johann Anton Stauffer  Austrian, Spruce, maple, Austrian
Johann Anton Stauffer
ca. 1835–40
Guitar, Manuel Ramírez  Spanish, Spruce, rosewood, cedar, ebony, ivory or bone, Spanish
Manuel Ramírez
Santos Hernández
1912
Archtop Guitar, James D'Aquisto  American, Spruce, maple, ebony, American
James D'Aquisto
1993
Guitar, Hermann Hauser  German, Spruce, rosewood, mahogany, bone or ivory, ebony, German
Hermann Hauser
1937
Cuatro Puertorriqueño, Luis Ángel Colón  American, Wood (yagumo & guaraguao), metal, wire, Native American (Puerto Rican)
Luis Ángel Colón
2002

The beginnings of the European guitar are unknown. Scholars disagree as to whether the guitar, like the lute, was introduced to medieval Europe from the Middle East, or if it was indigenous to Europe. It is impossible to establish the history of the guitar before the Renaissance, but there are some much earlier plucked-string instruments that are related to later guitars either in physical form or playing technique. One of the earliest of these is a long-necked lute, either Roman or Byzantine, from Egypt. The lute has a waisted soundbox (or body) like a guitar and survives from the third to sixth century ().

During the medieval and Renaissance periods, a wide variety of plucked stringed instruments can be found in both literature and art. They include the citole, cittern, vihuela, mandore, gittern, and, of course, the lute and its variants. During the Renaissance, the guitar’s closest contemporary was the vihuela. The vihuela is a larger instrument than the guitar, with six or seven courses of strings and tuned like a lute. It is sometimes pictured with sharply cut waists, like on a violin (), and sometimes with rounded corners like a guitar (25.2.26). The vihuela and guitar existed simultaneously until the seventeenth century, when the popularity of the guitar superseded the vihuela.

The first instruments that modern audiences would recognize as guitars were built in the fifteenth century. At that time, the guitar was much smaller than its modern counterpart, with four double courses of gut strings (occasionally the top string was single). The guitar also had tied gut frets, friction tuning pegs, a decorative rose, a bridge set near the bottom of the instrument, and sometimes a rounded rather than a flat back. Its courses of double strings were tuned in the intervals of fourth, major third, fourth (for example, g’/g-c’/c’-e’/e’-a’), often with the lowest course in octave rather than unison doubling.

The four-course guitar enjoyed a rich repertory in the sixteenth century that included dances, fantasias, chansons, and other secular genres. The instrument was widely played in France, Italy, England, and throughout the Iberian Peninsula. Four-string guitar repertory includes works by the Spanish composers Alonso Mudarra (ca. 1510–1580), Miguel de Fuenllana (died after 1568), and Juan Vasquez (ca. 1510–ca. 1560); the Italian composer Melchiore de Barberiis (published 1549) and lutenist Alberto da Ripa (ca. 1500–1551); the French composer Guillaume de Morlaye (published 1550); and the printers Adrian Le Roy (ca. 1520–1598) and Pierre Phalèse (ca. 1510–1573).

The Baroque Guitar
The Baroque guitar is similar in shape and body to earlier guitars, but is typified by five double courses of strings (which appeared as early as the late fifteenth century). From about 1600 until the mid-eighteenth century, its popularity supplanted both the four-course guitar and the six- or seven-course vihuela. The five-course baroque guitar was a bit larger than the earlier model, averaging approximately 92 centimeters long, with string lengths of 63–70 centimeters. Guitars used by players were probably relatively plain, perhaps typified by many Spanish guitars of the period. Many decorative guitars survive, including those by the Sellas family of Venice and Bologna and by Jean-Baptiste Voboam in Paris (); ().

The Baroque guitar had a rich repertory of solos and accompanied songs. Some of the finest seventeenth-century composers for solo guitar were Francesco Corbetta (ca. 1615–1681), who worked for both Louis XIV of France and Charles II of England; Angelo Michele Bartolotti (first half of the 17th century–after 1669); and Giovanni Battista Granata (died after 1684). Vocal works appeared with guitar accompaniment by such well-known monody composers as Giulio Caccini (ca. 1545–1618), Emilio de’ Cavalieri (ca. 1550–1602), Jacopo Peri (1561–1633), and Claudio Monteverdi (1567–1643). A characteristic Italian guitar notation called alfabeto, a letter system representing strummed block chords, was utilized for many solos and accompaniments, although tablature continued to be used until the mid-eighteenth century, when staff notation replaced it. Guitarists were also expected to improvise continuo accompaniments from figured and unfigured bass lines.

The repertory of the Baroque guitar required a mixture of techniques, including strummed or rasgueado chords, punteado (the characteristic pizzicato lute technique), and the ringing melodic passage-work called campanelas. Five-course guitars featured a variety of tunings; one typical tuning was a/a-d’/d’-g/g-b/b-e’. The third course is the lowest, a system called “re-entrant” tuning, so that two fingers could more easily combine the low fifth and third courses with higher courses in scale passages. Also, without true bass strings, the instrument has a higher, brighter sound than the modern guitar.

The five-course guitar was a Spanish favorite, but spread to Italy and then to France, England, Germany, and the Low Countries in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.


Contributors

Jayson Kerr Dobney
Department of Musical Instruments, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Wendy Powers
Independent Scholar

September 2007


Further Reading

Turnbull, Harvey. The Guitar from the Renaissance to the Present Day. New York: Scribner's, 1974.

Turnbull, Harvey, et al. "Guitar." In The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: Macmillan, 2001.

Tyler, James. The Early Guitar. London: Oxford University Press, 1980.

Tyler, James, and Paul Sparks. The Guitar and Its Music: From the Renaissance to the Classical Era. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.


Citation

View Citations

Dobney, Jayson Kerr, and Wendy Powers. “The Guitar.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/guit/hd_guit.htm (September 2007)