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What is a viol like?
Instruments of the Viola da Gamba family, often
called viols, are made in very many shapes and sizes.
The most common sizes of viols are the treble, which is about
the size of a violin, the bass, which is about the size of
a cello, and the tenor which is between the two. There are
also larger and smaller viols. Some have a shape which resembles
a violin, others have plainer corners or a much fancier outline.
They are always held on the knees or between the legs and
are usually played with a bow (which is held underhand). Most
viols have C-shaped soundholes and a flat back. Strings are
usually made of gut, like the frets which are tied around
the neck and are partly responsible for viols' sound quality.
The rich, clear sound of viols means they blend well with
each other and with other instruments or voices. Most viols
have six strings, but some have more and others fewer. Many
tunings have been used but by far the most common has the
following intervals between adjacent strings: 4th - 4th -
3rd - 4th - 4th, with the top string tuned to d, a or g.
What sort of music is played on viols?
The earliest viols commonly played vocal music
but composers soon provided instrumental pieces in the current
styles such as fantasies, variations and dances including
pavans and gilliards. Among the many composers who have written
for viols are Taverner, Tye, Byrd, Dowland, Gibbons, Jenkins,
Lawes, Locke, Purcell, Couperin, Marias, J.S.Bach and C.F.Abel.
When and where have viols been used?
Viols developed in Italy and Spain in the late
fifteenth century, slightly before the violin family. Within
50 years they were well established in many countries and
by the end of the sixteenth century they had been heard as
far from their origin as South America, Africa and Japan.
Viols were especially popular in England up to the middle
of the seventeenth century, and in France and Germany around
the beginning of the eighteenth century. During the nineteenth
century they fell out of general use but never completely
disappeared. Repeated attempts to revive interest in them
finally succeeded in the twentieth century. They are now once
more widely appreciated dy both professional and amateur players.
Societies for people with an interest in viols exist in many
European countries and in the USA, Japan and Australia. The
viola da Gamba Society of Great Britian was the first such
society to be established - we have supported viols and their
players for over 50 years.

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