Talk:Octave mandolin
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- I am a member of a mandolin orchestra and an octave mandolinist. I have seen many octave mandolins and Irish bouzoukis, and there are distinct differences. The octave mandolin typically has a much shorter scale, with pairs of strings that are the same (usually GDAE, but of course the musician can change that), leading to a soft, full sound, just right for the mandolin orchestra. The bouzouki, on the other hand, has a long scale, and the two lower sets of strings are usually an octave apart. The long scale leads to the pairs of strings touching each other when they vibrate, creating a unique zingy sound which the octave mandolin can't reproduce. The bodies of the two instruments often look much alike, but musically they are not interchangeable. —Anne Delong (talk) 19:00, 28 January 2013 (UTC)
Terminology
[edit]Removed text:
A mandola is something different and an octave mandola is on the octave of a mandola, tuned a fifth below a mandolin.
This may sound logical, but it's unsupported and I think false.
The whole section needs a refactor. Andrewa (talk) 10:25, 5 December 2007 (UTC)
- While it's true that technically an "octave mandola" should be an octave below a mandola, there is already a term for that instrument: the mandocello, so to call it an octave mandola is just confusing; besides, that sentence is confusing, because you can't tell which of the two instruments is supposed to be a fifth below a mandolin. —Anne Delong (talk) 16:18, 29 January 2013 (UTC)
- Here's s source for the differences between this family of instruments:
- How to Tell Mandolins, Citterns, Mandolas, Bouzoukis, etc. Apart Copyright 1994 Dan Beimborn
- —Anne Delong (talk) 20:22, 28 January 2013 (UTC)
- Here's an article from respected Frets magazine which indicates that the Gibson company invented the octave mandolin, which they called an octave mandola at first, and that they made a point of differentiating it from the ordinary mandola tuned CGDA. The Mandolin's Heyday Frets, March 1979
- I found a link to a 1930 Gibson company catalogue showing the tuning of the mandola as CGDA.
- [1]
- —Anne Delong (talk) 21:20, 28 January 2013 (UTC)
History and construction
[edit]I've just removed almost half the article and feel more than a little bad about it. However, I felt they were far too inaccurate and I just don't have the time to rewrite them right now. If somebody else wants to do the job, here are some facts:
History
[edit]The octave mandolin (or whatever you like to call it is not a "modern invention like the Irish bouxouki". The (GDAE-tuned) mandola was the common instrument for the third part of European mandolin quartets at least as early as 1900, probably a bit earlier. At about the same time in USA Elias Howe included the "octave mandolin" in his range of Howe-Orme archtop mandos and guitars.
Construction
[edit]The instrument should be compared to the other instruments in the mandolin family, not to the Irish cittern and Irish bouzouki.
Frank Nordberg (talk) 01:01, 4 January 2011 (UTC)
Merge with Irish bouzouki?
[edit]This page says that they are the same instrument, though the Irish bouzouki page doesn't; and it's pretty much true, as the essential difference is scale length of the two instruments. Should the pages be merged with a different section for Irish bouzouki? Thoughts? Dan Cottrell (talk) 22:43, 19 April 2012 (UTC)