Traditional French musical instruments, known as instruments traditionnels in French, are musical instruments used in the traditional folk music of France. They comprise a range of string, wind, and percussion instruments.
Percussion instruments
editString instruments
edit- Cetera — a cittern of 4 to 8 double strings that is of Tuscan origin and dates back to the Renaissance, is the most iconic Corsican traditional instrument. Its most prominent exponent is Roland Ferrandi (also a lutenist).
- Cythara — a lute
- Epinette des Vosges — a traditional plucked-string instrument of the zither family from the Vosges region in eastern France[1]
- Mandulina — a Corsican mandolin
- Mandore — a musical instrument, a small member of the lute family, teardrop shaped, with four to six courses of gut strings and pitched in the treble range.
- Tambourin à cordes — a box zither from southern France
- Ukulele — a small, guitar-like instrument from French Polynesia
Bowed
edit- Basse de Flandre — a simple large stringed fiddle (a musical bow) made with a long stick from French Flanders in Hauts-de-France.
- Bobre — a bowed instrument from Réunion
- Vielle à roue — a mechanical string instrument that produces sound by a hand-crank-turned, rosined wheel rubbing against the strings.
Wind instruments
editFlutes
editFrench flutes are called flûte. There are many traditional flutes.
- Pu toka — a French Polynesian conch
- Pu'akau — a French Polynesian flute
- Pūʻili — a French Polynesian bamboo flute
- Vivo — a French Polynesian nose flute
Reed Instruments
edit- Bombarde (music) — a contemporary conical-bore double-reed instrument (shawm) from Brittany
- Cialamedda (also cialamella/cialambella) — a Corsican reed instrument, more recently with a wooden box body
- Graïle (graile) — a vertical wooden oboe (shawm) from Occitania
- Pirula — a Corsican reed recorder
Bagpipes
edit- Binioù kozh — a Breton bagpipe
- Bodega — an Occitan bagpipe
- Boha — a bagpipe from Landes of Gascony in Nouvelle-Aquitaine
- Bousine — a small, droneless bagpipe from Normandy[2]
- Cabrette — a bagpipe from Auvergne in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
- Caramusa — a Corsican bagpipe made of wood, leather and reed
- Chabrette — a bagpipe from Limousin in Nouvelle-Aquitaine
- Cornemuse du Centre — a bagpipe from Central France
- Loure — an ancient bagpipe from Normandy
Horns
editOther instruments
edit- Boîte à musique — an automatic musical instrument in a box that produces musical notes by using a set of pins placed on a revolving cylinder or disc to pluck the tuned teeth (or lamellae) of a steel comb.
- Orgue de barbarie (also orgue à manivelle) — a mechanical musical instrument from the Alsace region of Grand Est consisting of bellows and one or more ranks of pipes housed in a case, usually of wood, and often highly decorated.[3]
- Orgue de danse — a mechanical organ from Paris, Île-de-France designed to be used in dance halls or ballrooms.
- Orgue de rue — an automatic mechanical pneumatic organ from Paris, Île-de-France designed to be mobile enough to play its music in the street.
- Limonaire — a pneumatic musical organ from Paris, Île-de-France covering the wind and percussive sections of an orchestra.[4][5][6]
- Pyrophone — a musical instrument in which notes are sounded by explosions, or similar forms of rapid combustion, rapid heating, or the like, such as burners in cylindrical glass tubes, creating light and sound.
- Ralé-poussé — a Réunionnaise accordion
- Riberbula — a jaw harp used by the Corsican people
- Serinette — a mechanical musical instrument from the Lorraine region of Grand Est
- Urganettu — a Corsican diatonic accordion
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Méthode d'épinette par Christophe Toussaint. Édition princeps 2004. 2ème édition 2007.
- ^ Les architectes odinistes des cathédrales. Les chanoinesses et les évêques odinistes dans les diocèses saxons-normands, Fascicules de I à VII, de Maurice Erwin Guignard, à Bonneval & Chartres.
- ^ Ord-Hume, Arthur W. J. G. (1978). Barrel Organ: The Story of the Mechanical Organ and Its Repair. London: Allen & Unwin. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-04-789005-5.
- ^ Stadler, Andrea (January 2006). "Limonaire Frères Paris, 1839 — 1936" (PDF). Carousel Organ (26).
- ^ "Les frères LIMONAIRE".
- ^ "La petite musique des orgues Odin". 13 May 2015.