- The
archicembalo /ɑːrkiˈtʃɛmbəloʊ/ (or arcicembalo, /ɑːrtʃiˈtʃɛmbəloʊ/) was a
musical instrument described by
Nicola Vicentino in 1555. This was a harpsichord...
- Unbowed,
Vicentino continued his experiments, and went on to
build the
archicembalo,
which could play the
music he
described in his publications. Only one...
- been paramount, for his
competence on
Nicola Vicentino's
microtonal archicembalo was
actively do****ented
throughout his career.
Luzzaschi is
widely remembered...
-
could include split keys and
multiple manuals; one such solution, the
archicembalo, was
mentioned by
Nicola Vicentino in 1555. However,
Werckmeister realised...
-
piano Orphica Akkordolia Benju Bulbul tarang Clavicymbalum Harpsichord Archicembalo Lautenwerck Spinet Virginal Shahi baaja Taishōgoto
Xenorphica Nyckelharpa...
- to make a
dominant seventh. This
difference cannot be made in 12-ET.
Archicembalo,
alternate keyboard instrument with 36 keys per
octave that was sometimes...
-
enharmonic keyboard was the
archicembalo built by
Nicola Vicentino, an
Italian Renaissance composer and
music theorist. The
archicembalo had 36 keys per octave...
-
sometimes has keys that can play
microtones when a "shift" key is pressed.
Archicembalo,
instrument with
alternate keyboard with 36 keys
Electronic keyboard...
- instrument, as
demonstrated on
several albums by E.
Power Biggs. The
archicembalo,
built in the 16th century, had an
unusual keyboard layout, designed...
-
intervals and
built a
keyboard with 36 keys to the
octave known as the
archicembalo.
While theoretically an
interpretation of
ancient Gr**** tetrachordal...