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Hydraulic musical automata in Italian villas and other ingenia 1400-2000


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Abstract

"In the past few years, a considerable re-awakening of interest has been noted in the hydraulic musical automata which, from the Late Renaissance onwards, were installed in the gardens of several noble families, first in Italy and subsequently in other European countries. The present volume aims at documenting the development of such automata, together with other kinds of ingenia, in Italy, setting them in their European context and investigating both mechanisms and their symbolism. The volume may be deemed ideally divided into two parts. The first, comprising ten chapters, deals with water organs (including the musical compositions with which they were provided) and several automata of Heronian design, such as the Fountain of the Owl, the androids of the Farnese court, the hydraulic imitation of the explosion of the Catherine Wheel, and the one illustrating the myth of Faun and the nymph Echo. The various systems for producing the pressurised air needed for their operation are also analysed from a technical and scientific point of view, and we shall see that shortly afterwards they were also adopted in industry, for forges and melting furnaces. The seven last chapters of the volume, on the other hand, deal with ingenia of various kinds which, unlike the water organs, were not always hydraulically activated or had programmable functions. This is the case of fountains and statues provided with curious acoustic effects, as well as sounding automatisms activated by thermal energy (such as, for example, sunlight), or by counter-weights. To these are added those that once figured in the Roman museum of Athanasius Kircher, those constructed for the Imperial Court of Peking (including an ingenious harpsichord-organ-viol invented by Kircher), several reconstructions of Vulcan's forge and the creation of various sounding monsters, once very fashionable. The volume closes with Michele Todini's famous "Galleria armonica" and with a special type of hydraulis made in Naples in the Late Renaissance"--Back cover.

Contents

Technical evolution of the 'aeolian chamber' for water organs and metalworking -- Hydro-aeolian blowers: early proposals for a quantitative theory and technical data -- Villa d'Este, Tivoli: the prototype of late-Renaissance European water organs -- Automata evolution, before and after Villa d'Este -- The new water organ at the Villa d'Este, Tivoli, 1999-2003 -- Hero's heritage: the 'Fountain of the Owl' and other automata for the Este family -- The organo ad acqua in the Pontifical Quirinal Gardens, 1596-2013 -- The statue che suonano at Villa Aldobrandini, Frascati: Mount Parnassus, Cyclops, and Centaur -- The myth of Faun and the nymph Echo: a mid-18th century revival at Villa Pamphilj, Rome -- The androids of the Farnese court and other ingenia devised by Jean Baillou, alias Giovanni Baillioni -- The Giardino matematico: new proposals for fontane armoniche and statues based on ingenious acoustical effects -- Harpsichords and organs activated by sunlight: an attempt at a 4th class of musical automata -- Magia artificialis in Kircher's museum -- Vulcan's forge -- On some non-hydraulic musical automata: from Italy to China and Japan c1580-1780 -- Michele Todini's Galleria armonica, Rome 1650-1868 -- Giambattista Della Porta's 'singing' hydraulis according to Fabio Colonnna's Herone riformato. With other expressive devices for the organ, c1560-1860.

Publisher

  • Publication

    Roma: Gangemi Editore International, [2019]


Is about

  • Subject

  • Period

    1400-2000


Type

  • Language


Classification

  • ISBN

    • 9788849238136
    • 8849238134

Annotations / title notes

  • Notes

    "Musical Instrument History"--Cover.


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