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Irish bouzouki

 
Irish Bouzouki

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Irish bouzouki



 
 
The Irish bouzouki (colloquially, the "zouk") is a derivative of the Greek
Greece

Greece , officially the Hellenic Republic , is a country in southeastern Europe, situated on the southern end of the Balkans. It has borders with Albania, Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to the north, and Turkey to the east....
 bouzouki
Bouzouki

The bouzouki is the mainstay of modern Greek music. It is a stringed instrument with a pear-shaped body and a very long neck. The bouzouki is a member of the 'long neck lute' family and is similar to a mandolin....
.

The bouzouki, in the newer tetraxordo (four course/eight string) Greek version, was introduced into Irish Traditional Music in the late 1960s, by Johnny Moynihan
Johnny Moynihan

Johnny Moynihan is a folk singer based in Dublin, Ireland. A gifted musician, he is responsible for introducing the bouzouki and the Irish bouzouki into Irish music in the mid 1960s....
, of the popular folk group Sweeney's Men, and popularised by Andy Irvine
Andy Irvine (musician)

Andrew Kennedy 'Andy' Irvine is a folk musician, singer, and songwriter, and a founding member of the popular band Planxty. He is an accomplished player of the mandolin, bouzouki, mandola and Bouzouki....
 and Dónal Lunny
Dónal Lunny

D?nal Lunny is an Ireland folk musician. Lunny has been at the cutting edge of the evolution of Irish music for more than thirty-five years and is generally regarded as having been central to the renaissance of traditional Irish music in that time period....
 in the group Planxty. In a separate but parallel development Alec Finn, later with the Galway-based traditional group De Dannan
De Dannan

De Dannan was an Ireland folk music group. They were formed by Frankie Gavin , Alec Finn , Johnny "Ringo" McDonagh and Charlie Piggott as a result of sessions in Hughes's Pub in Spiddal, County Galway, subsequently inviting Dolores Keane to join the band....
, obtained a trixordo (three course/six string) Greek bouzouki on his own.






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The Irish bouzouki (colloquially, the "zouk") is a derivative of the Greek
Greece

Greece , officially the Hellenic Republic , is a country in southeastern Europe, situated on the southern end of the Balkans. It has borders with Albania, Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to the north, and Turkey to the east....
 bouzouki
Bouzouki

The bouzouki is the mainstay of modern Greek music. It is a stringed instrument with a pear-shaped body and a very long neck. The bouzouki is a member of the 'long neck lute' family and is similar to a mandolin....
.

The bouzouki, in the newer tetraxordo (four course/eight string) Greek version, was introduced into Irish Traditional Music in the late 1960s, by Johnny Moynihan
Johnny Moynihan

Johnny Moynihan is a folk singer based in Dublin, Ireland. A gifted musician, he is responsible for introducing the bouzouki and the Irish bouzouki into Irish music in the mid 1960s....
, of the popular folk group Sweeney's Men, and popularised by Andy Irvine
Andy Irvine (musician)

Andrew Kennedy 'Andy' Irvine is a folk musician, singer, and songwriter, and a founding member of the popular band Planxty. He is an accomplished player of the mandolin, bouzouki, mandola and Bouzouki....
 and Dónal Lunny
Dónal Lunny

D?nal Lunny is an Ireland folk musician. Lunny has been at the cutting edge of the evolution of Irish music for more than thirty-five years and is generally regarded as having been central to the renaissance of traditional Irish music in that time period....
 in the group Planxty. In a separate but parallel development Alec Finn, later with the Galway-based traditional group De Dannan
De Dannan

De Dannan was an Ireland folk music group. They were formed by Frankie Gavin , Alec Finn , Johnny "Ringo" McDonagh and Charlie Piggott as a result of sessions in Hughes's Pub in Spiddal, County Galway, subsequently inviting Dolores Keane to join the band....
, obtained a trixordo (three course/six string) Greek bouzouki on his own. Irish bouzouki players tend to use the instrument less for virtuoso melodic work and more for chordal and contrapuntal accompaniment for tunes played on other instruments, such as the flute or fiddle; in response, many or most players changed the octave strings in the two bass courses to unison pairs in order to enhance the bass response of the instrument.

Within a few years of the bouzouki's initial introduction a design built specifically for Irish traditional music was developed. The body was widened and in most cases a flat back with straight sides replaced the round, stave-built back of the Greek bouzouki, or, in the case of English builder Peter Abnett, who was the first instrument maker to build a uniquely "Irish" bouzouki - for Dónal Lunny in 1970 - a hybrid design with a 3-piece dished back and straight sides. All of the initial Irish bouzoukis had flat tops, but within a few years some builders began experimenting with carved, arched tops taking their cue from American archtop guitars and mandolins.

Hardly anyone uses the Greek bouzouki for Irish music today; Alec Finn and Mick Conneely are the only professionals of any consequence who use them. Scots mandolin player Kevin MacLeod uses a "tetraxordo" Greek bouzouki in octave mandolin tuning G2D3A3E4, mainly for melodic work.

The tuning G2D3A3D4, first pioneered by Johnny Moynihan on the mandolin (an octave higher at G3D4A4E5) and then adapted to the Greek bouzouki, was picked up by Irvine and Lunny and quickly became the next thing to a standard tuning for the Irish bouzouki. Although some players employ mandolin tuning, pitched down an octave as G2D3A3E4, they are very much in the minority, and an even smaller group use A2D3A3D4. A few players use octave pairing on the two bass courses. Ironically, the Irish tunings are closer to the D3A3D4 tuning of the original Greek trixordo bouzouki than is the guitar-like tuning C3F3A3D4 used on the modern Greek tetraxordo, and lend themselves particularly well to a modal harmonic approach for Irish traditional music. The Irish bouzouki has become fully integrated into the tradition over the past forty years, usually (although not always) playing accompaniment (mostly a mix of two note intervals, basslines, and bits of countermelody) rather than the melody.

Amongst some luthiers and musicians the Irish bouzouki is considered to be part of the mandolin family, the other instruments of which include the mandolin, mandola (called "tenor mandola" in Europe), octave mandolin ("octave mandola" in Europe), and mandocello. But for others this family of instruments, modeled on and tuned like the violin, viola, tenor violin and violoncello, is really part of another tradition from which the Greek bouzouki, and its progeny the Irish bouzouki, are separate. At any rate, since the genesis of the Irish bouzouki in the late 1960s, many luthiers have incorporated aspects of mandolin construction, particularly when building archtop Irish bouzoukis, so for most it is moot point.

The octave mandolin is usually regarded as having a shorter scale length than the Irish bouzouki, in the vicinity of 20 to 23 inches (50 and 58.4cm), whilst the scale length of the Irish bouzouki most often ranges from 23 to 25 inches (58.4 and 63.5cm), although some instruments have scales as long as 26 or even 27 inches (66 to 68.7cm). These longer-scaled instruments are generally acknowledged to possess greater volume, sustain, and tonal richness but some players find the stretches involved in fingering too difficult and so prefer the shorter scales.

The name "cittern
Cittern

The cittern or cither is a stringed instrument of the guitar family dating from the Renaissance. With its flat back, it was much simpler, and therefore cheaper, to construct than the lute, in addition to which it was easier to play and, being smaller and less delicate, far more portable....
" is sometimes applied to a similar instrument of five courses (ten strings), typically having a scale length between 20 and 22 inches (500mm and 550mm), but they are often called "10 string bouzoukis", particularly when having a longer scale length. The fifth course is usually either a lowest bass course tuned to C2 or D2 on an instrument with a long scale, or a highest treble course tuned to G4 or A4 on a shorter one.

However, for some builders and players, the terms "bouzouki", "cittern", and "octave mandolin" are synonymous. Others, such as Stefan Sobell, who originated the "cittern" term for his instruments derived from crossing an archtop Martin guitar with a Portuguese guitarra
Portuguese guitar

The Portuguese guitar or Portuguese guitarra is a plucked string instrument with twelve steel strings, strung in six courses comprising of two strings each....
, apply the name of "cittern" to all shorter scaled instruments, irrespective of whether these have four or five courses, and the name of "bouzouki" to all longer scaled instruments.

In recent years the Irish bouzouki has been found in the hands of many musicians not affiliated with Irish traditional music. Bluegrass and Roots musician Tim O'Brien has become well known for his use of the instrument in his uniquely American music, and others include Steve Earle and Patty Larkin. Roots musician uses the bouzouki in several tunings including "Open G" (G2D3G3D4) for bottleneck slide. His recording with Celtic musician Roger Landes explores the possibilities for Irish bouzoukis in duet. Irish bouzoukis can also be heard in the contemporary acoustic music of Fernwood.

See also

  • Bouzouki
    Bouzouki

    The bouzouki is the mainstay of modern Greek music. It is a stringed instrument with a pear-shaped body and a very long neck. The bouzouki is a member of the 'long neck lute' family and is similar to a mandolin....


External links

  • major exponent of the Irish bouzouki in the US.
  • international gathering devoted to the Irish bouzouki.
  • , Roots musician.
  • , ground-breaking duo bouzouki recording by Roger Landes & Chipper Thompson.
  • , a world-renowned Irish and Celtic musician
  • of Furnace Mountain in Berryville, VA
  • contemporary acoustic music.


Further reading

— An instructional guide — A comprehensive chord dictionary. — A comprehensive chord dictionary. — A DVD instructional guide — A chord book featuring 20 pages of popular chords. — A DVD instructional guide in two volumes with short sections by 6 master players, each on a separate topic.