Thanks Frank! I look forward to reading more when you get around to it. Very
interesting.

Rob

-----Original Message-----
From: Frank Nordberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 02 March 2005 23:20
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: waldzither



Rob MacKillop wrote:
> I've just this last couple of days had the fortune to be invited to 
> the second Waldzithersymposium to be held in Thuringia In October. 
> I'll playing James Oswald's ''Divertimentis for the Guittar'' (1759) 
> and some other Scottish pieces from Bremner and elsewhere. However, I 
> know very little about the Waldzither - can anyone enlighten me so 
> that I can appear intelligent and informed when I get there? ;-)

Waldzither is really a generic term for a number of 19th and 20th century
German citterns.

It is however usually used for the 9 string 5 course (with a single stringed
5th course) Th�ringer Waldzither or the similar "B�hm" 
Waldzither with English Guittar style tuners.

My Meinel & Herold Waldzither has a scale length of 46 cm and I think that's
typical for tenor Waldzithers. The most common tuning is
(bottom-to-top) C-G-C-E-G.

If you want to learn more I strongly recommend these two sites:
http://www.waldzither.de/
and
http://www.studia-instrumentorum.de/MUSEUM/zistern.htm
Unfortunately they're both in German.

I'm planning to write some info pages in English about them myself, but so
far all I have is this:
http://www.mandolin-player.com/instruments/waldzither/index.html
Not very much I'm afraid.



Frank Nordberg
http://www.musicaviva.com
http://www.tablatvre.com
http://www.mandolin-player.com



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