Re: Civil War Mandolin??
Hello all.
Mandolins were documented in America before the American Revolution, according to one site/cite I turned up, but it was the concert tour of "the Spanish Students" c 1878 (i.e.post Civil War) that really got the fad going.
While this group apparently actually played bandurrias, and not mandolins, many of the "knock off" groups, and they were legion, used the mandolin, and there are Spanish as well as Italian mandolin traditions.
The Spanish Students were reinactors of sorts, dressing in "costumes" of the middle ages, or something inspired by such (the original "farbs"?) and the "Estudiantina" is still a musical genre in Spain (and Mexico).
So the instrument is not limited to only Italian, or only recent immigrant, traditions, but was still very rare in the American scene PRIOR TO 1878.
The earliest American method book for the mandolin that I have run across is:
"Ryan's True Mandoline Instructor" for the "Spanish and Italian Mandoline."
published by John Church Co. of Cincinnati, New York, and Chicago, in 1885
And of course the instrument was the bowl-back or "tater bug" refered to, and not any flat instrument (a 20th century development).
Late 19th century instruments are quite common on the "vintage" market, and this type is (usually) the instrument of choice for classical players.
Also the early style of playing would not be the one familiar to modern "Bluegrass" musicianeers either, but more the manner used in the mandolin orchestras or by classical players.
And the intrument did use wire strings,not gut.
It would be nice if some of the folks interested in playing the mandolin in the first half of the 1860s would keep their eyes open for any period references; I haven't run into any myself, but they might be out there!
David Swarens
Hello all.
Mandolins were documented in America before the American Revolution, according to one site/cite I turned up, but it was the concert tour of "the Spanish Students" c 1878 (i.e.post Civil War) that really got the fad going.
While this group apparently actually played bandurrias, and not mandolins, many of the "knock off" groups, and they were legion, used the mandolin, and there are Spanish as well as Italian mandolin traditions.
The Spanish Students were reinactors of sorts, dressing in "costumes" of the middle ages, or something inspired by such (the original "farbs"?) and the "Estudiantina" is still a musical genre in Spain (and Mexico).
So the instrument is not limited to only Italian, or only recent immigrant, traditions, but was still very rare in the American scene PRIOR TO 1878.
The earliest American method book for the mandolin that I have run across is:
"Ryan's True Mandoline Instructor" for the "Spanish and Italian Mandoline."
published by John Church Co. of Cincinnati, New York, and Chicago, in 1885
And of course the instrument was the bowl-back or "tater bug" refered to, and not any flat instrument (a 20th century development).
Late 19th century instruments are quite common on the "vintage" market, and this type is (usually) the instrument of choice for classical players.
Also the early style of playing would not be the one familiar to modern "Bluegrass" musicianeers either, but more the manner used in the mandolin orchestras or by classical players.
And the intrument did use wire strings,not gut.
It would be nice if some of the folks interested in playing the mandolin in the first half of the 1860s would keep their eyes open for any period references; I haven't run into any myself, but they might be out there!
David Swarens
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