This thesis examines the English virginal -a rectangular plucked keyboard instrument - of which there are twenty-two surviving examples ranging in date from c. 1580 - 1684. It also examines other English plucked keyboard instruments from documentary and iconographical sources where there are no known surviving examples (particularly relevant to the period from 1500 to the late sixteenth century), plus the two surviving harpsichords of the period (by Lodewyk Tbeewes, dated 1579, and Johannes Hasard, dated 1622), and the early spinets which became increasingly popular following the Restoration, eventually replacing the virginal as the major domestic plucked keyboard instrument by 1688. The research concentrates on the design concepts,...
The harpsichords and virginals made by the Flemish families of Ruckers and Couchet in Antwerp at th...
This thesis aims to establish three things: the relevance of mechanical musical instruments, specifi...
At the Edinburgh University Collection of Historical Instruments (EUCHMI) there are two virginals w...
This project involved an examination of the relative popularity of various harpsichords and related ...
English keyboard music reached an unsurpassed level of sophistication in the late sixteenth and earl...
This extended review article revisits current understanding of the The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, My...
The focus of the article is centered on the problems of performing ornaments in English virginal mu...
This study aims to identify and describe the musical instruments which were played at the court of H...
One of the most fascinating keyboard instruments which precedes the pianoforte is the harpsichord. ...
The view that the lute exercised an important influence on the formation of French harpsichord style...
English Organ Music in the Seventeenth Century: a Reappraisal English keyboard music of the middl...
The guittar, now commonly known as the ‘English guittar’, is a small plucked instrument which was wi...
This book provides the first scholarly history of the viola d’amore, a popular bowed string instrume...
The guittar, now commonly known as the ‘English guittar’, is a small plucked instrument which was wi...
This paper explores keyboard technology in music from the Baroque era to today. Central focus is on ...
The harpsichords and virginals made by the Flemish families of Ruckers and Couchet in Antwerp at th...
This thesis aims to establish three things: the relevance of mechanical musical instruments, specifi...
At the Edinburgh University Collection of Historical Instruments (EUCHMI) there are two virginals w...
This project involved an examination of the relative popularity of various harpsichords and related ...
English keyboard music reached an unsurpassed level of sophistication in the late sixteenth and earl...
This extended review article revisits current understanding of the The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, My...
The focus of the article is centered on the problems of performing ornaments in English virginal mu...
This study aims to identify and describe the musical instruments which were played at the court of H...
One of the most fascinating keyboard instruments which precedes the pianoforte is the harpsichord. ...
The view that the lute exercised an important influence on the formation of French harpsichord style...
English Organ Music in the Seventeenth Century: a Reappraisal English keyboard music of the middl...
The guittar, now commonly known as the ‘English guittar’, is a small plucked instrument which was wi...
This book provides the first scholarly history of the viola d’amore, a popular bowed string instrume...
The guittar, now commonly known as the ‘English guittar’, is a small plucked instrument which was wi...
This paper explores keyboard technology in music from the Baroque era to today. Central focus is on ...
The harpsichords and virginals made by the Flemish families of Ruckers and Couchet in Antwerp at th...
This thesis aims to establish three things: the relevance of mechanical musical instruments, specifi...
At the Edinburgh University Collection of Historical Instruments (EUCHMI) there are two virginals w...