18.3.2011 inOxfordMusicOnline Oxford Music Online

Grove Music Online Shawm

articleurl:http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/43658 Shawm [scalmuse, shalm, shalmie, schalmuse] (fromLat. calamus :‘’;Fr. chalemelle ,chalemie , chelemele ;Ger. Schalmei , Schalmey ;It. cialamella , ciaramella , piffaro ;Lat. celimela ,gingrina , tibia ;Sp. chirimía , xirimía ).

Awoodwindinstrument,usuallywithadoublereed.Theterm‘shawm’hasdevelopedmorethan onemeaning;sinceHornbostelandSachs(‘SystematikderMusikinstrumente’,1914)ithasbeen usedasagenerictermdenotingbothsinglereedanddoublereed,butin organologicalliteratureitisappliedforthesakeofprecisiontodoublereedinstrumentsonly, manyofwhosenamesarelinguisticallyrelatedto‘shawm’(e.g.theArab zamr ,theTurkish zūrnā , thePersian surnāy ,theChinese ,theJavanese saruni andtheHindu sahanai /sanayi ).This articleisconcernedwithEuropeantypes(fornonEuropeantypes, see , §I, 1 ),primarilywith theshawmasthedoublereedinstrumentextensivelyusedinEuropeanartmusicfromthe12th centurytothe17thandreappearingintheearlymusicrevivalofthe20th.Itwasmadeinmany differentsizes.

ThelargersizesofEuropeanshawmalsobecameknownas‘bombarde’or‘bumbard’(fromLat. bombus ,‘drone,buzz’;It. bombardo ,Ger. Pumhart or ),atermderivingfromamedieval artillerypiece.ThedistinctionalreadypresentinGermaninthemiddleofthe14thcentury between‘schalmigenundbumbart’(Strassburg,1322)didnotoccurinEnglishoftheperiod, whereallsizeswereusuallycalled‘shawm’or‘hoboy’indiscriminately.Infacttherearesome indicationsthatthe Pommer hadanindependenttypeofconstructionusedonlyforinstrumentsin thelowerregisters.Duringthe15thcenturytheterm‘hautbois’(fromFr.,literally‘highwood’)was alsoappliedtothehigherinstrument,althoughitwastransferredinthelate17thcenturytothe newlydevelopedoboe;ananalogoustermforloweroneswas‘grosbois’.Englishalsohadthe term‘wayghte’or‘waitspipe’(stillusedfortheEnglishshawmbyJamesTalbot,MS c1695, GB- Och Mus.1187),namedafterthecitywatchman’sdutyofsoundingthehours.Inlatemedieval GermanyandtheLowCountriestheterm wassometimesusedfortheshawm bothwithandwithoutawindcap.Fordiscussionofwithwindcaps, see WIND-CAP INSTRUMENTS, §2 .

Asnooriginalpre16thcenturyinstrumentshavebeenpreserved,itisnecessarytoresort(with duecaution)tomodernfolksurvivalsandtoiconographicalevidenceforcluesastotheearlyform andhistoryoftheshawm.Eventhefewlaterinstrumentsthathavesurvivedaredifficulttodate andtoclassifyinaccordancewiththediversityoforiginalterminologywhosemeaningisnot alwaysclear.Itisdifficulttoreconstructplayingpracticesfromthemeagrewrittendocumentation, andmisleadingconceptshavebecomeentrenchedfromattemptstoreintroducetheshawm consortby20thcenturyearlymusicgroups.Athoroughhistoryoftheshawmandofshawm playinghasnotyetbeenwritten.

1. General description.

Shawmsweremadeofvarioushardwoods,oftenmaple.Theyhaveaconicalexpandinginto abellandareusuallymadeinonepiece,exceptthelargerinstrumentswhichconsistofseveral sectionsfittedtogether.Theygenerallyhavelittleexternalornamentationandarecylindricalor slightlytaperedinoutline.Internally,theboreisconicalforsomefourfifthsofitslength.The

…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 1/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline instrumentshavesevenfingerholesatthefront;inthelargerinstrumentsthelowestholeis closedbyakeywhichoperatesinsideaprotective,slideonwoodenbarrel(Fr. fontanelle ) perforatedbysmallholes,arrangedinornamentalpatterns,toletthesoundthrough.Belowthe lowestfingerholesthereareseveralventholestocorrecttheeffectoftheacousticallyoverlong bellsection(whichisnecessaryfortonalstability),andinsomeoriginalinstrumentstomakethe productionofdiatonicallydescendingextensionnotespossiblebyclosingthem.

Asaruletheseinstruments,apartfromthelowestones,were playedwithapirouette(Fr.,also Rosette ,Engl.‘fliew’);althoughonly afeworiginalpirouetteshavebeenpreserved,Mersenne( Harmonie universelle ,1636–7)andTalbotbothgaveprecisedescriptionsof theirnature.Theywereusuallymadeofturnedwoodinacupshape Diagramofthetopofashawm: withaflatorslightlyconcavetop( fig.1 ).Thedoublereedwasplaced (a)thestaple,… onastaple(aconicalbrasstube),whichinturnwasfittedintothe pirouettesoastoleavetheupperpartofthereedclear.Thelowerpartofthestapleiswoundwith threadandfittedintotheneckoftheshawm.Theplayer’slipscouldrestagainstthetopofthe pirouette,supportingtheagainstfatigueandallowingthereedtovibratefreelyinside themouth,orthereedcouldbesubjecttodirectlipcontrolthusallowingvariablesound production.Themanydepictionsofamusicalensembleinwhichoneshawmplayerisresting illustratesthestrainplacedonthelipsinperformance(seefig.8below).Thereedswereprobably shorterandsomewhatbroaderthanthoseofmoderndoublereedinstruments,althoughwitha wideropening.However,suchdetailsaswhethertheywereboundtoasleeveorconstructedona dummyarenotknown.

Thefewearlyaccountsofthesoundoftheshawmsuggestthatitwasextremelyloudand powerful.Asearlyas1350KonradvonMegenburgsaidthatthe‘bombina’issocalledbecause‘it buzzeswithagreatblastordinofsound’.In1588Arbeau( Orchésographie ,f.23v–24) commentedthat‘the“haulbois”greatlyresemble,andtheymakeaverypleasing consonance,whenthelargeonesplayintheloweroctave…withthelittle“haulbois”playingin theupperoctave’.Consequently,hecontinued,theyare‘goodformakingaloudnoise,suchasis neededforvillagefeastsandlargegatherings’.Praetorius( Syntagmamusicum ,ii,2/1619) suggestedthattheLatinterm‘Gingrina’forthetrebleinstrumentrefersto‘thesounditmakes, likeagoose’(fromLat. gingrire :‘cackling’).In1636Mersennewroteofshawmsthat‘theymake theloudestandthefiercestsoundofalltheinstruments,withtheexceptionofthetrumpet’. Dependingonthereedandthemannerofplaying,theinstrumentcouldproduceanopenand brilliantsound,whichaccountsforthepopularityoftheshawmovermanycenturies.

2. The shawm family.

TheworksofVirdung( Musicagetutscht ,1511)andMartinAgricola( Musicainstrumentalis deudsch ,1529),whichcontaindrawingsofshawms,mentiononlytwosizes:a Schalmey ,anda Bombardt pitcheda5thlower.Tinctoris( Deinventioneetusumusicae ,iii, c1483),however,had alreadyrecognizedthreesizesofthe tibia or celimela ,describingthemas suprema , tenor or bombardam and contratenor ,termspreviouslyusedinalistofaconsignmentofinstruments sentfromBrugestotheBurgundiancourtin1423.Table1[notavailableonline]showsthe shawmfamilyofthe16thand17thcenturiesasdescribedbyPraetoriusin1619( fig.2 )and illustratedbysurvivinginstruments,forexampleincollectionsin(Musikinstrumenten Museum)and(NationalMuseum)andinSalamancaCathedral.Asinmanywindfamilies, shawmswerebuiltatintervalsofa5thfromeachother,whichcanleadtoproblemsofintonation inensembleplaying.Praetoriusthereforesuggestedadditionalinstrumentsinaseriesof alternating5thsand4ths.Itisimportanttonote,however,thatnormallyonlytwoorthree membersofthefamilywereplayedtogetheratanyonetime,andnotthewholefamily,aswas sometimespractisedinthe20thcenturyrevivalinshawmplaying.

TABLE1

TABLE1:Namesandapproximatesizesof16thand17thcenturyshawms German Modern Compass Length (Praetorius) terminology

garkleinDiscant hightreble ?a′–e‴ 50cm …kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 2/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline Schalmeye

DiscantSchalmey treble d′ –b″ 65cm (soprano) AltPommer alto g–d″ (1key) 75cm TenorPommer tenor c–g′ (1key) 110cm BassetPommer G/A/B/c–f′ /g′ (4keys) 130cm BassPommer bass C/D/E/F–c′ (4keys) 180cm GrossBassPommer greatbass 290cm F′ /G′ /A′ /B ′–f(4keys)

The garkleinDiscantSchalmeye ismentionedonlybyPraetorius,presumablybecauseofthe problemscausedbybothitsshortlengthanditsimpracticaldiatonicdispositiona5thabovethe treble;thereisarare16thcenturyexampleintheKunsthistorischesMuseum,Vienna.Thetreble shawm( DiscantSchalmey )isthemaindescantinstrumentofthefamily.Theseventhhole, placedonthesidetoaccommodatethelittlefinger,isduplicatedleftandrighttoallowtheplayer tochoosewhichhandishelduppermost;theunusedholeispluggedwithwax.Withallfinger holescoveredthetrebleshawmsounds d′.ThetopnotegivenbyPraetoriusis b′′andby Mersenne d′′′( dessushautbois );thedifferencemayresultfromadifferentreed,modeofplaying andperhapsfromtheabsenceofapirouette.Fingeringislikethatoftherecorderor, exceptfortheabsenceofathumbhole,sinceheretheoctavebreakiscontrolledbythelips,air pressureandthereedalone.Theinstrument'sbestdiatonicscaleisGmajor,whichnonetheless involvescrossfingeringfor g′, g′′, c′′and d′′.HencePraetorius’srecommendationthatwhentreble shawmsareusedthemusicshouldbetransposedfromthecustomaryCorFintoG( f′isinany eventdifficulttoproduceaccuratelyonshawmswith d′asthelowestnote).

Thealtoshawmandallinstrumentsbelowitwereknownbytheterm‘bombarde’(Ger. Pommer , Pumhart ).Insteadofthetreble'sduplicatedholeforthelittlefinger,thealtohasabrasskeyto coverthehole,protectedbya fontanelle .Itstoneismellowerthanthatofthetrebleshawm,a resultofdifferentprinciplesofconstructionwhichindicatethatitwasoriginallyanindependent instrument.Thereisstillsomeuncertaintyaboutthesignificanceofnumerousrepresentationsof shawmsfromthelate14thcenturytothemiddleofthe15th,depictingthefinalsectionfromthe endoftheflaretothebellascylindrical(cfDuffin,1997–8).AsanextantinstrumentinBerlin shows,thealtoshawmcouldsometimesbefittedwithadditionalkeystoextenditsrange,as wasusualforthedeeperinstruments,thebasset,bassandgreatbassshawm.Herethelittle fingercontrolstwokeysatthefrontoftheinstrument,andtheremainingtwokeysareattheback, operatedbythethumb(withacoveringprotectingthelongerkeysextendingbelowthe fontanelle ). ThelowerinstrumentswereplayedwithanSshapedcrook;thereisnoevidenceofapirouette. Becauseoftheirgreatlengthandweightthelowestshawmswereplayedwiththebellrestingon theground.Theirtoneismorepowerfulthanthatofanyotherwoodwindinstrumentinthesame register,andconsequentlybassshawmscontinuedinuselaterthantheothermembersofthe familytoreinforcethebassregister(see§3below).

InadditionPraetoriusmentioneda BassetPommer in ccalleda‘Nicolo’andprovidedwithonly oneextensionkey,asasupplementtothedescribedfamily.Incontradictiontothis,hisillustration showsaninstrumentthathadthreeextensionkeysandathumbholeandthatwasplayedwitha windcap.Itwasprobablyaninstrumentwithacylindricalbore,akindofstraightbass. SuchaninstrumentwasdescribedinaninventoryoftheHofkapelleinKasselin1613:‘along straightBassetofthe’.Otherscholarshavesuggestedthisinstrumentcouldbeakind of SCHREYERPFEIFE or HAUTBOIS DE POITOU (seeKinsky,1925,andWeberandVanderMeer,1972). InthiscontextitisstrikingthatPraetorius’sillustrationofthe DiskantSchalmey andthe Basset oderTenorPommer showsthepossibilitythatwindcapscouldbeusedontheseinstruments. Usingawindcapwouldnotpermitoverblowing,andwouldthuslimitthecompassofthe instrumenttoa9th( see WIND-CAP INSTRUMENTS ).

IncontrasttoPraetorius'sgreatvarietyofsizes,Mersenneknewonlythreedifferentsizesof‘haut bois’;the dessus (lowestnote c′),the taille ( g)andthe basse ( C);eachwitharangeoftwo octaves.However,thereareindicationsthatuptothemiddleofthe17thcenturytherewasanother Frenchsize,the hautecontre ,betweenthe dessus andthe taille .ThecommentsmadebyJames Talbot(op.cit.)onshawmsandtheirconstructionprovidesomeinterestingdetails.Inwritingon the‘hautbois’hedistinguishedbetweenthe‘EnglishorWaits’instrument(withtreble c′– b′′and tenor f–f′′,thatis,respectivelyatonelowerthanPraetorius’s DiscantSchalmey and AltPommer ),

…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 3/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline andthenew‘Frenchhautbois’.Healsomentioneda‘Schalmey’(see§4below).

3. History.

ShawmswereprobablyofancientoriginandreachedfromtheIslamicEastduringthe9th tothe12thcenturiesatthelatest.Medievalsourcespresentproblems:noinstrumentssurvive, andillustrationsareseldomunambiguous.TermssuchastheLatin tibia or musa andthe German pfeifen canbeusedforverydifferentkindsofwindinstruments.Althoughshawmsare illustratedinmanuscriptsdatingfromthelate12thcentury,clearerdepictionsarefoundinearly 14thcenturysources(e.g.the CantigasdeSantaMaria ofAlfonsoelSabio, E-E T.j.1,b.I.2,andthe ManessischeLiederhandschrift , D-HEu Pal.germ.848).Suchinstrumentswereusuallysmall, similarinappearancetomanyoftheshawm'sorientalcounterparts(e.g.thePersian sornā and NorthAfrican ghay ṭa).Themedievaluseoftheshawmincourtlyandcivicmusicaccompaniedby drumandtrumpets(e.g.inthecityofSienain1252anensembleofthreetrumpets, cialamella anddrumisdocumented)reflectsaTurcoArabpracticeperhapsadoptedduringextensive tradingcontactsorinthe.Theextenttowhichtheshawmitselffollowedanoriental modelisimpossibletojudge,butitseemslikelythatsuchnonorientalfeaturesasthemissing thumbholeandthespecificmaterialandconstructionofthedoublereedmayhaveoriginsinthe Westerntechnologyassociatedwiththe BAGPIPE .

In14thcenturyillustrationslongershawmsbegantobeportrayed, andthebombardewasfirstdescribedinliterarysourcesas accompanyingthehigher chalemie (e.g.JeanLeFèvre's Respitdela mort ,1386,mentions‘musezetchallemellezetgrossezbombardez nouvellez’).Becauseofthegreaterlengthofthisinstrumentakey wasadded;thisisclearlyshowninillustrationsbytheearly15th century( fig.3 ).Thepitchofa5thbelowthetrebleshawmwasfirst specifiedbyAgricolainhisfingeringdiagrams(1529),butnodoubt ithadbeenstandardthroughoutthe15thcentury,whentheprincipal windinstrumentcombinationofthe haultmenestrels wasshawm Shawmwithpirouette,andkey underafontanelle:detail (forthetreblepart),bombarde(forthetenor)andbombardeor from… trumpet(orslidetrumpet;forthecontratenor).Anorderfor instrumentsbyPhiliptheGoodofBurgundy,fromBrugesin1423,illustratessuchanensemble, callingfortwo bombardesaclef ,one contre andtwo chalemies ,andatrumpettobeplayedwith them.Thepresenceofa contre intheorderconfirmsthefact,forwhichthereismuchother evidence,thatthecontratenorpartwasperformedonabombarde(in1406,forinstance,Niccolo d'AllemagnawashiredinFlorenceasaplayerof ceremellacontratenorem ).Thistypeof ensemble,playing‘loudmusic’( see ALTA (I)),accompaniedmajorceremonies,ledprocessions andplayedforthebassedanse.Theshawm'sfurtherversatilitymaybeseenfrommany illustrationsportrayingshawms(possiblya douçaine ,or‘styllshawm’asitiscalledinthecourt recordsatthebeginningofHenryVIII’sreign; see DOLZAINA )playedina‘soft’consortwithfiddle, and.Shawmplayerswerethereforecentralnotonlytocourtmusicbutparticularlyto medievaltownmusic(e.g.asplayedbytheGerman Stadtpfeifer ).

Thereisanindicationoftheinstrument'smusicalpotentialintwolate14thcenturysongsbythe MonkofSalzburg(‘Dasnachthorn’and‘Dastaghorn’; A-Wn 2856);themanuscriptprovides notationforasecondpartandcarriesthecommentthatthesimplecounterpointmaybeplayed onawindinstrument:‘DasIstderpumhartdarzu’.ChroniclingtheDukeofBurgundy'sweddingin 1468,DeLaMarche( Mémoires ,1562,p.369)relatedthatawasperformedby‘leshaulz menestriers’onthree‘schalmayes’(whichwouldhaveincludedbombardes)anda‘trompette saicqueboute’(orslidetrumpet).Theuseoftheshawmincomplexartmusicis confirmedbyTinctorisinhisstatementthatanycompositioncouldbeplayedontheinstrumentif itsholeswerecorrectlyplaced.

Thegrowingmusicalliteracyofwindmusiciansandtheirabilitytoarrangeandperformwritten polyphoniccompositionsisdemonstratedinatreatisewrittenfortheBerne Stadtpfeifer in1491 (Tütschemusica ,MS, CH-BEsu Hist.Helv.LI.76).AlthoughJeanCharlierdeGerson( De canticorumoriginaliratione ,before1426)statedthatinchurchtheorganwasonlyrarelyjoinedby shawms,thepracticeofshawmsplayingtogetherwithcornetsandis

…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 4/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline documented,forexample,inMantuaattheendofthe15thcentury(therepertoryperformedthere ispossiblythatpreservedincollectionssuchas F-Pn Rés.Vm 7.676,or I-Bc Q18).

InformationgivenbyMartinAgricola(1529)indicatesthatinthe15thcenturyshawmstransposed theirmusic‘allaalta’,i.e.a5thhigherthanwritten.Anechoofthispracticemaybepreservedin variousinstructionsfoundin16thcenturysourcesofshawmmusic,e.g.‘notateinclaveda sonare’,‘allaquartabassa’or‘alta’.Praetoriusalsodescribedthepragmatictranspositionof compositionswhentheyfellbelowthecompassoftheinstruments.

Duringthe16thcenturytheshawmfamilywasextendedbytheinventionoflargerinstruments, andthebombardebegantobereferredtoasthealtoshawm(thecontratenorandbassroles beingtakenbyalowerinstrument).Thefirstdocumentaryevidenceofshawmsinfivesizes comesfromtheNurembergwoodwindinstrumentmakerSigmundSchnitzertheelderin1539: besidesa grossenPumhart hementionsthe vagant , thenor , discant and klainpumhart ,which, exceptforthehightreble,canbeidentifiedwiththesizeslistedbyPraetorius.Asocalled‘bass pwmhart’mentionedinanAugsburgtownbandinventoryof1540hadonlyonekeyandmay(by laterstandards)havebeenhardlylargerthanabassetshawm.Butnodoubtthe‘dobbele bombaerde’whichthetownofGhentacquiredin1551wasarealbass,for‘tweebassetten’ arrivedwithit,completingtheensemblealreadyconsistingof‘tweebovensanghenendetwee teneurenscalmeye’.InEnglandoneoftheYorkwaitsaddeda‘BaseShalme’in1546.While therewasamovementduringthe16thcenturytowardsblendedensemblesofstrings,, trombonesandorgans,shawmsremainedpopularforceremonialmusicatcourtandintown bands.AFrenchcourtband(latercalled‘lesDouzeGrandsHautboisdel'Ecurieoumêmedela chambre’),institutedunderLouisXIII,isdocumentedashavingtwoshawmsandtwocornettson thetwotrebleparts(theirexactdispositionisnotrecorded),fouraltoshawmsforthe hautecontre and taille parts(perhapswithanintermediatesize,probablyinA),twotrombonesforthe basse taille andtwobassshawmsonthe basse ;allthemusicianscouldalsoplaythe.Partoftheir repertoryispreservedinthefirstvolumeofthePhilidorCollection( F-Pn Rés.F671and F-V 1163). InLondon,JamesIandhissuccessorshadasimilarbandwithatleastsixmusicians(‘Hoboies andSagbuttes’),butitsprecisecompositionisnotknown(see LafontaineKM ).Asimilarnumber isfoundincivicmusic:DenijsvanAlsloot'spaintingofanAntwerpreligiousprocessionin1616 showsasixpiecebandconsistingofshawm,cornett,twotenorshawms,tromboneandcurtal. ExamplesofthetypicalrepertoryofaSouthGerman Stadtpfeifer bandofthesecondhalfofthe 16thcenturyhavesurvivedinmanuscript( D-Rp MSA.R.775–777),consistingofmotets, etc.infourtosixpartsbyLassus,Striggio,AndreaGabrieliandothers.Aboutthattimethecurtal (or; see , §3 )wasoftenusedtoplaythebasspart,asforinstanceinthe collectionofJ.C.Pezel, Biciniavarioruminstrumentorum … cumappendicea2Bombardinis vulgoSchalmeyeneFagotto (Leipzig,1675).Asimilarcombinationwasfoundinthe‘oboe ensemble’ofthePrussianarmyfrom1646(atthelatest)tothe18thcentury,withtwoshawms, onealtoandabassdulcian.

Whilesuchshawmbandscontinuedinexistence,however,therewasaperceptibledisintegration oftheconsortduringthecourseofthe17thcenturywiththehigherinstrumentsbeingdeveloped intodifferenttypesandtheloweronesusedamongensemblesofotherinstruments.Praetorius's directionsfortheinstrumentationofcanzonasandmotets( Syntagmamusicum ,iii,1618)clearly showthereducedstatusoftheshawmconsortatthebeginningofthecentury,reflectingchanging aestheticexpectations.Praetorius–apartfromnotingtheuseofthebassandgreatbassshawm withotherdeepinstrumentsinchoirsoflowtessitura–mentionedtheshawmconsortonlybriefly, andcommentedontheproblemscreatedbyshawmsinconsortbeingatintervalsofa5thfrom oneanother.Herecommendedomittingthehighshawmsandplayingallthemusica4thlower, withthe Altpommer atthetop.J.H.Schein's‘HosiannademSohneDavid’( Opellanova ,1626) containsspiritedritornellosfor‘bombardi’,apparentlytwotenorsandonebassshawm.The mannerofplayingthetrebleshawmbegantochangetoo,notleastwhenthepirouettefellinto disuse,anditwasthepointofdepartureforthenewoboeasplayedattheFrenchcourt (see OBOE, §II, 2 ).

Althoughby1700evenmostprovincialwaitsinEnglandwerereplacingtheirshawmswiththe newand,shawmsremainedinuseinsomeplaceslongerthanelsewhere, particularlynorthoftheAlps,andespeciallythedeeper Pommer sizes.Theystillfeaturedin Stadtpfeiferei totheendofthe18thcentury.Goethewroteanaccount(in DichtungundWahrheit , 1811)oftheanachronisticprocessionoftheNuremberg Stadtpfeifer with Schalmei and Pommer inthesecondhalfofthe18thcentury,onitswaytothePfeifergericht,anannualconfirmationof …kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 5/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline tradingprivileges.Twoinstrumentsusedthen,madebyJacobDennerandeitherJohann ChristophDennerorasuccessor,arepreservedintheFrankfurtHistorischesMuseum,andthere isanexampleoftheirmusicinFries’streatise(1752).Praetoriushadalreadyrecommendedthe doublingofbasslinesanoctavelowerwith‘SubBassgeigen,OctavPosaun,DoppelFagotten undgargrossenBassPommern’; Basspommern wereusedinGermanyuntiltheendofthe18th centurytoreinforcethebassregister(anexampleisthe‘SchallmeyenBass’intheMarienkirche, Halle,usedbyW.F.Bach).Notsurprisingly,therefore,arelativelylargenumberoflowshawms areextant,andsomeofalatedateofmanufacture(forinstance,instrumentsmadebyI.G.Strehli afterthemid18thcentury).

TheshawmsusedinProtestantareasofSwitzerlandbetweenabout1750and1810area specialcase.Theywereofratherunusualstructure,foruseinanensembleoftrebleandtenor withbassoontoaccompanythepsalmsindivineservice,andprefiguredthe (see HAUTBOIS D’ÉGLISE ).

Fromtheendofthe19thcenturycopiesofearlyshawmswereoccasionallybuilttocompletethe collectionsofsomemuseums(bymakerssuchasWilhelmHeckelortheworkshopofVictor CharlesMahillon).Towardsthemiddleofthe20thcenturymoreinterestinthemakingand playingofhistoricalinstrumentsarose.ProminentmakersandperformersincludeRainerWeber, whomadehisfirstinstrumentsinHamburgin1947beforemovingtoBayerbach,Bavariain1960, andthebassoonplayerOttoSteinkopf,whoworkedattheBerlinInstrumentCollectionofthe InstitutfürMusikforschungbeforemovingtoCelletoworkwiththefirmofHermannMoeck.Early attemptsatmakingreproductionshawmswereorientatedtowardstheneedsofamateurgroupsandtheirexperienceswithrecorderplaying,whichresultedincompromisesof construction(withadditionalkeywork,plasticreeds,etc.)andperformance,particularlyinthe simultaneoususeofallmembersofthefamily.Greaterinterestinhistoricalevidenceafterthe 1970sledtosomemakersandplayersbecomingauthoritativespecialistsintheseinstruments.

4. The ‘deutsche Schalmey’.

Paralleltothegradualdevelopmentoftheoboeduringthesecondhalfofthe17thcentury,a distincttypeofoboeexisted;sinceA.C.Baineswroteaboutit(1957)ithasbeendescribedasthe deutscheSchalmey .Thistermisalsotobefoundincontemporarysources,forinstancethe Naumburginventoryofinstrumentsof1720,andwasobviouslyusedatthetimetodistinguishit fromtheFrenchoboe,andperhapstoindicateitscomparativelyhighpitch.Inmusicalsources fromGermanyandtheHabsburgterritoriesthetermemployedisusually piffaro ,forinstancein musicmanuscriptsfromKremsier(nowKroměříž).Bainessuggestedthatthe deutsche Schalmey mightberegardedas‘aGermanattemptataquickanswertothenewFrenchoboe’;a morerecentinterpretationisthatthe Schalmey mayrepresentasurvivaloftheearliestformofthe prototypicaloboedevelopedin,onethatfoundamusicalnicheintheGermanspeaking area,especiallyinmilitary HautboistenBanden beginninginthe1640s.The Schalmey andoboe seemtohavecoexistedratherthanbeingincompetition,tojudgebythefactthatmany instrumentmakerssuchasRichardHakainAmsterdamandChristianSchlegelinBaslemade bothtypes.The Schalmey demandedalessspecializedembouchurethantheoboe.Agreatmany compositionsspecifytwoorthree pifferi .

Talbotremarkedthattheinstrumenthedescribedasa‘(Saxon)Schameye’was‘usedMuchin GermanArmy.SweeterthanHautbois[i.e.shawm].Severalsizes&pitches.’Theinstrumentwas madeintwosections;itwasslenderbycomparisonwiththeshawmandtheoboeandhad considerablythinnerwalls,anarrowandoftenroughlyturnedbore,andsmallerfingerholes.Two sizes,trebleandtenor,weremadeandeachwasprovidedwitha fontanelle ,althoughonlyinthe tenorsdidthiscoverakey:onthetrebleinstrumentsitwasnonfunctional,asitcoveredtwoor moreventholes(Talbotsaysthatthey‘wouldaddaNoteifstopd’).Therangeofthetrebleisgiven byTalbotas c′– c″′,andthetenora5thlower;chromatictonesdependonthekindofreedand mannerofplaying.Theinstrumentscouldeitherhaveapirouetteor(liketheshawmatthisdate) beblownwithoutone.

Afeatureofthe deutscheSchalmey intendedforoutdooruse(which17thcenturymakersin Amsterdamcalledthe veltSchelmey )isthepresenceofdevicesfittedtothebellintowhichthe reedsandsometimesthepirouettecouldbekeptforeaseoftransport;theseappearbothin …kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 6/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline pictorialrecordsandonsurvivinginstruments.A Schalmey madebyChristianSchlegel( c1667– 1746)intheBasleHistorischesMuseumhasalooselyfittedwoodenpinwiththickenedends fittedinthecupandextendingintothebore;dependingonitsposition,itcouldfunctionasa drone.

Atthebeginningofthe18thcenturythe Schalmey disappeared.Flemingsaidin1726thatasit was‘difficulttoblow,andstrucktheearunpleasantlyinthehigherregister’ithadbeenreplaced almosteverywherebythe‘Frenchhautbois’.Eisel(1738)didnotdescribeitatall,sayingmerely thatitbelongedtotheoutdatedgroupof‘rusticinstruments’.However,itremainedinuseinrural areasforsometimelonger:itwasdescribeddisparaginglyasa‘boorishSchalmey’byJ.C. Weigel( MusicalischesTheatrum , c1720).

5. Other versions of the European shawm.

VariousattemptshavebeenmadetorevivetheconceptoftheshawminGermany.Fromthelate 19thcenturyuntilthe1930sseveralGermanfirmsmadesimpleoboesinahighregister(with onetosixkeys),whichwerecalled deutscheSchalmey .AsimilarFrenchinstrument,calledthe musette ,begantobedevelopedinthe1830s( see MUSETTE (2) ).The TRISTAN SCHALMEI , combiningcharacteristicsoftheshawmandthemusette,wasdesignedbyWilhelmHeckelin 1904foraperformanceofRichardWagner’s TristanundIsolde .Theterm Schalmei wasalso usedforatypeoffreereedinstrumentworkedwithpistonvalves,alsocalled MARTINSTROMPETE afteritsinventorMaxBernhardtMartinofMarkneukirchen.

InCataloniaandRoussilloninparticularWesternshawmshaveneverrelinquishedtheirplacein civicmusic.Thescoresofthe18thcenturyCatalanvillancicossometimescontainpartsfortreble andtenor xirimías (nowknownsimplyas tiple (treble)and tenora ,andmodernizedwithcomplete keyworkindifferentlayouts),theprincipalmelodistsinthepresentday sardana bandor cobla . The tiple isinF,a4thabovetheoboe,andhasacompassof d′to a″′.The tenora isinB witha compassof eto c′″.Eachhasapirouette( tudel )andabroadtriangularreed.Thedynamicrange, from piano to fortissimo ,exceedsthatofanyotherexistingwoodwindinstruments(seeBesseler, 1949,andBaines,1952;forillustration, see [notavailableonline],fig. e,and Spain ,fig.).

TheSpanish (or pito )andtheCatalan ,smallershawmlikeinstruments,were apparentlydevelopedindependentlyandinaruralcontext.SuchshawmsweretakentoAmerica fromtheearly16thcenturyonwardsandarestillplayedthere.Thedemandforthe dulzaina in CastileandLeónledtothemanufactureofvariousmodelswithkeywork,andinthelastdecades ofthe20thcenturytherehasbeenarevivalinmakingandplayingtheseinstruments(music examplesareinLedesma).Bandsofplayersarenowacommonfeatureoftownandvillage fiestas .

TheBreton bombarde ( see [notavailableonline],fig. d)andsouthItalian ciaramella or piffaro ( see [notavailableonline],fig.),thoughtheybearformershawmnamesandmaybeclassifiedfor convenienceastraditionalshawms,belongmorestrictlytotheclassofseparatechantersplayed withbagpipeaccompaniment,likethe17thcentury HAUTBOIS DE POITOU (firstmentionedin1635 byMersenne, Harmonicorumlibri ,xii)whichcouldbeplayedwithawindcapandwas accompaniedbya cornemusedePoitou .Aconsortofthree hautboisdePoitou andone cornemuse wasbroughttoParisaround1600whenpastoralartsbecamefashionablethere.The groupcontinuedtoperformatVersaillesbeyondthereignofLouisXIVandappearstohave playedina‘MenuetpourleshautboisdePoitevins’inthe‘Balletdesnations’withwhichLully endedhismusicfor Lebourgeoisgentilhomme (1670);itretaineditsidentityformanyyears,even afterwindcapinstrumentsingeneralfellintodisuse.Itislastrecordedinadocumentof1733.

Avarietyofthetrueshawm–theWendish tarakava –survivedinHungary(asthe tárogató )andin WendishpartsofGermanyuntilthe19thcentury.InHungariantheterm TÁROGATÓ occursasearly asthe16thcenturyforreedinstrumentsingeneral,andinanarrowersensefortheshawm adoptedfromtheTurks;anewtype,butintheformofa,wasdevelopedbyV.J.Schundaat thebeginningofthe19thcentury.Stillplayedtoday(especiallyontheislandofKrk)isthe sopila of theCroatianlittoral;itisusedintwosizes,playedtogetherlargelyinconsecutive6thsand7ths (descriptionandmusicexamplesinBrömse,1937).

…kb.nl/subscriber/article/…/43658?pri… 7/10 18.3.2011 ShawminOxfordMusicOnline TwoinstrumentsofsoutheastEurope–the pipiza ,stillplayedbysomeshepherdsinmainland Greece,andthelarger zurla oftheMacedonianGypsies–arecharacterizedbyathumbhole placedloweronthepipethanthehighestfingerhole,andbyalooselipdiscandsoftreed,and arethusrelatedtoTurkishshawms.InTurkeythe davul and (drumandshawm)ensemble istraditionallyusedfordancing,festivalsandcircumcisionceremonies;theplayersofthe zurna practisethecontinuousbreathingtechnique,whichmayalsohavebeenusedinplayingthe Europeanshawm.

Seealso BASSANELLI ;DULCIAN (I); DOLZAINA ;RAUSCHPFEIFE .

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