Spanish Guitar
The history of the classical guitar and its repertoire span over four
centuries, including its ancestor the baroque guitar. The popularity of
the classical guitar has been sustained over the years by many great players,
arrangers, and composers. A very short list might include Gaspar Sanz (1640-1710),
Fernando Sor (1778-1839), Mauro Giuliani (1781-1829), Francisco Tarrega
(1852-1909), Andres Segovia (1893-1987), Julian Bream and John Williams
(1941).
By using the fingers to pluck instead of a plectrum or bow, the performer
can play polyphonic music. It is common to encounter classical guitar music
that sustains two, three, or four musical lines or voices.
Using the right hand fingers to pluck the strings requires more space
between the strings over the sound hole which in turn necessitates a fingerboard
that is slightly wider than other guitars. Classical guitarists hold the
instrument by raising the left leg (with a footstool), placing the guitar
on that leg and holding the guitar in place with the right arm. Alternatively
the left foot can be placed on the floor and a small support placed between
the left leg and the guitar. Either of these positions support the guitar
in a way that gives the player greater mobility and access to the strings
and the fingerboard. The right hand is a classical guitarist's voice similar
to that of a string player's bow. By using a combination of flesh and fingernail
to pluck the strings, a classical guitarist is able to generate a wide
variety of sounds.
The classical guitar's most characteristic physical feature is the use
of nylon strings (which have, largely, supplanted the use of gut strings),
although since the mid 1990s carbon fiber or composite treble strings have
gained popularity for their nylon-like sound and significantly better reliability.
Nylon strings give the classical guitar a unique, varied and rich color
palette. The size and shape of the classical guitar have been nearly standard
for over 100 years. The finest guitars are built with a solid Western red
cedar or spruce top, solid rosewood back and sides, traditionally a Spanish
cedar or more recently a mahogany neck and an ebony fingerboard. |