10.- Difficulties of the subject.- Athenaeus’s incorrect account about the Hydraulic Organ—General names.— Magadis.— Sambuca.— Buxus.— Wind instruments.— Syrinx, or Pandean Pipe.— Pandura.— The Double Reed or Hautboy principle.— The Bassoon and Comet, or Como Inglese.— The Gingras.— The Bombos. —Roman Haut-boy-player.— Second principle: the Single Beed Clarionet.— The Shawm, or Chalumeau.— A Pythian game of Apollo and the Python.— Pythauli.— Chorauli.— The Box for Reeds.— Many materials for Pipes, and their names from countries and from special purposes.— Length of Arabian Pipes proverbial.— Egyptian Pipes many notes.— The Bombyx.— Third principle : the Pipe blown at the end.— The old English Flute and the Flageolet.— The Organ Diapason.— The Egyptian Pipe and Greek Monaulos and Kalamaulos.— Fourth principle : the present Flute.— The Photinx and Plagiaulos.— Egyptian Flute.— Phrygian and Berecynthian Pipes with homs at the end.— Elymos.— Scytalia.— Competitions of Pipers.— The muzzles round their mouths.— Bagpipe.— Fifth principle : the free Reed or Harmonium principle derived from China.— Sixth principle : Trumpets and Horns— Egyptian, Assyrian, Greek, Etruscan, and Roman.
11.-Instruments of Percussion.—The Egyptian Sistrum.—Drum.— Dulcimers. — Timbrels or Tambourines. — Three kinds of Cymbals. — Oxubaphoi. — Lekidoi. — Acetabula. — Krotala. — Krembala or Castanets.
13- Why the Hydraulic Organ was an enigma to lookers-on.— Invented in the third century B.C.— Athenaeus’s error as to the date.— Heron first describes it.— Vitruvius and his commentators.— The light touch of the Organ.— Burney and Hawkins give up the attempt to understand the Hydraulic Organ.— The supposed difficulties explained.— An application of the power of water no longer in use.— Why the water was supposed to be boiling.— A condensing syringe used for bellows.— Heron’s description translated.— Vitruvius paraphrased.— Organs of 8 stops in use b.C.— Use of hollow vessels to reproduce tone in theatres.— Competitions of organists and their medals.— Two Latin idioms.— Verses to represent organ pipes.— Antiquity of the Pneumatic Organ.— Ancient bellows.— Organs on the Obelisk of Theodosius.—Julian’s epigram, and other notices.
The
Story of the Harp
THE VIOLIN.
ITS FAMOUS MAKERS AND THEIR IMITATOR
PDF collection
THE OXFORD HISTORY OF MUSIC
INTRODUCTORY VOLUME
THE POLYPHONIC PERIOD. Part I METHOD OF MUSICAL ART, 330-1330
VOL. I. THE POLYPHONIC PERIOD.
VOL II. METHOD OF MUSICAL ART, 1330-1600
VOL. III. THE MUSIC OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
VOL. IV. THE AGE OF BACH & HANDEL
VOL. V. THE VIENNESE PERIOD
VOL VII. SYMPHONY AND DRAMA
THE AMERICAN HISTORY AND ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MUSIC
VOL- 1. MUSICAL DICTIONARY
VOL- 2. MUSICAL BIOGRAPHIES. PART ONE
VOL- 3. MUSICAL BIOGRAPHIES. PART TWO
VOL. 4. HISTORY OF AMERICAN MUSIC
VOL. 5. HISTORY OF FOREIGN MUSIC
VOL. 6. OPERAS. PART ONE
VOL. 7. OPERAS. PART TWO
VOL. 8. ORATORIOS AND MASSES
VOL. 9. THEORY OF MUSIC
VOL. 10. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
VOL. 11. ESSENTIALS OF MUSIC. PART ONE
VOL. 12. ESSENTIALS OF MUSIC. PART TWO
THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE GREAT COMPOSERS
Beethoven Mozart Haydn Bach Handel Gluck Mendelssohn Chopin Schubert Liszt Rossini Schumann Donizetti Meyerbeer Wagner
THE HEART OF MUSIC _- THE STORY OF THE VIOLIN
THE STORY OF THE ORGAN MUSIC
David's Harp in Song and Story
THE STORY OF ORATORIO
THE STORY OF CHAMBER MUSIC
MUSIC IN THE HISTORY OF THE WESTERN CHURCH