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Tablature By: Stephen Ouellette Music History I Dr. Cordell Tablature is a 700 year old notation style that uses “letters, numbers or other signs as an alternative to conventional staff notation.” (Dart) This is a practice that started in Western Europe music around the time of the 14th century. It was originally designed for keyboard instruments and the earliest known example of it was for organ or the clavichord, it’s unclear which one it was developed for first. This practice was later adopted for instruments such as the lute and the guitar. It is used primarily for part instruments whereas staff notation is used for single-lined instruments. The use of tablature is extremely important in the history of music notation. In fact most of the surviving German organ music is written in the, appropriately named, old German organ tablature. This term is used even though the earliest source of all, the 14th-century Robertsbridge Codex, is of unknown origin and has features of 14th-century Italian mensural notation, as well as some French content and the manuscript its self comes from the English Abbey. (Bent) (Dart) The music in the Robertsbridge Codex is most likely written for organ, but some scholars suggest that it is for the clavichord. (Dart) The music we have from different countries during this period all reflect their own nationality but they all consist of a top line that is notated in full mensural notation and other voices are notated in alphabetical notation. Alphabetical notation is a type of tablature where the letter of the pitches is written out instead of being notated on a staff. The original keyboard tablature did not contain rhythmic values, these would not be found until later and they were notated above the staffs. The mensural notation system for the melodic voice was written on a five line staff. The lower parts were then written below the melodic notes; their position in respect to the melodic notes determined when they were to be played. Between the years 1473 and 1570 how keyboard tablature was written underwent changes and improvements. The first big change during the period was that the melodic line was written on 6, 7, or 8 lined staffs. Another change was in the marking of accidentals, a downward stem indicated a sharp or flat as appropriate. A stem that had a loop added to it indicated an ornament, either a shake or a mordent. Beginning in about the year 1570 the old German organ tablature was superseded by a new style of keyboard tablature where, like in the old style, the lower voices were notated in alphabetical notation, but in the new style the upper voice was also notated with letters. This new style of tablature also included a uniform system of rhythm signs borrowed from the Italian lute notation. In lute tablature the rhythmic values are doubled. It is believed that this change in tablature notation was due in large part to the cost and difficulty of printing the upper line in mensural notation. (Bent) Though the use of tablature was mostly a German tradition there are some examples from French keyboard music. The only other major tradition to use tablature was Spain. The tablature from Spain is a little bit different from that of other kinds found from this period. There are three main types of keyboard tablature and they were usually a system where the keys of the keyboard were numbered. The white notes of one octave were usually numbered 1-7 and accidentals beyond that octave were marked with diacritical marks. (Bent) The rhythm was then marked above the music, only the fastest moving parts of the music were notated however. Another method was that all keys of the organ were marked 1-42 and the player simply read those numbers. The other method was to label just the white notes of the keyboard 1-23 and all the black notes were considered accidentals and were labeled with a diacritical mark, either a sharp or a flat respectively. It is believed that these numerical systems were set up so that musicians who were unskilled at typesetting could print their music at home. The process for printing mensural notation at that time was still in its infancy, so music still required the use of founts. (Dart) The founts for printing music were expensive and were very difficult to set up for organ music. The method of printing this numerical tablature was simpler and less expensive. Probably one of the greatest uses of tablature is in the writing for string instruments such as the lute, vihuela, and later the guitar. The real pioneer of these tablatures were those being written for the lute as this was the predominate plucked stringed instrument of the time. The different styles of lute tablature can be divided into the countries where they originated from. These countries are Germany, Italy, Spain, and France. During the 16th century the lute had 6 strings and 7 frets, usually turned G–c–f–a–d′g′ or A–d–g–b–e′–a′; in general, France and England used the G tuning, Italy, Spain and Germany the A tuning. (Dart) As the lute would continue to develop there would be the addition of strings called diapasons, these were the strings off of the fingerboard to add bass notes where needed. Also the lute began to have a 7th string on the fingerboard and anywhere up to 12 frets. As you can see there is the possibility of almost 100 different choices of notes on the lute so there was a need for a very clear and easy to understand notation method. The lute also had to be capable of playing polyphonic parts so the notation had to be able to group many notes together Probably the oldest of these tablature methods was again that of German origins, though it does appear that all of the methods developed at the same time. (Dart) This style of writing was very cumbersome and was most likely written for a 5 course, or string, lute with 5 frets. The open courses are numbered 1 to 5, with 1 corresponding to the bottom course, and each intersection of fret and course is denoted by a letter of the alphabet running across the fingerboard from bottom course to top. The lute of course would have 25 possible notes so the In order to provide the 25 symbols required, the common abbreviations for ‘et’ and ‘con’ were added to the 23 letters of the German alphabet; for higher frets the alphabet was repeated either in doubled letters or in letters with a dash above them (aa or ā, bb or b̄ etc.). (Dart) When a sixth string was added the system faltered as it was nearly impossible to include symbols for the new range. A new system was developed which used different symbols than the original. The rhythms in this system were written above the staff. The music was also almost always barred regularly. The next system was much more logical than that of the Germans, it was the system composed by the Italians. The reason this system was easier to understand was because it had a visual representation of the fingerboard. Each course was represented by a horizontal line; the top line corresponded with the bottom string of lute. Numbers were then written on the lines, a 0 represented an open string and a 1 represented the first fret and so on. The double digit numbers of 10, 11, and 12 were represented with the symbols of x, ẋ and ẍ, since the two separate digits maybe become confusing. Like in the German style of tablature rhythm was shown above the music. Originally the rhythmic values were repeated for each individual beat, or division thereof. Later a more popular style would emerge where the previous rhythmic value would be implied until replaced by one of greater or lesser value. The diapasons were shown above the staff in between the top line and the rhythm. The country of Spain did not usually play the lute they had an instrument called the vihuela, it was tuned and played like the lute but was shaped and strung differently. (Dart) Spanish tablature closely reflected that of the Italian style. The difference was that the staff was inverted so that the top line represented the highest string instead of the lowest. The most famous and most widely used lute tablature came from the French. Like in the Spanish style the top line of the staff represented the highest course of the lute. The frets were however lettered instead of numbered, the open strings being labeled “a” or “A” the first fret then being “b” and so on. Letters were placed above the lines in which they referred to or on the line such as in the Spanish style. Rhythms were written above the staff like in the other styles of tablature. The diapasons were represented by letters or figures underneath the lines of music. The guitars of this time were using tablature as well but it was not of very great importance to the development of tablature as it was always just a borrowed style of the aforementioned plucked string tablatures. The beauty of tablature was that once a way of tuning the instrument was established the tablature still meant the same thing. This proved extremely useful in allowing unskilled musicians in being able to play instruments without a great background in theory. The use of tablature is still in widely accepted especially among popular guitar music today. French tablature can still be found in guitar music that is a translation from the lute music of the 15th and 16th century. Though the use of tablature for keyboard instruments is rarely found anymore due to its complexity. Bibliography Bent, Ian D. Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.navigatoredinboro.passhe.edu/subscriber/article/grove/music/20114pg8 (accessed Decemeber 9, 2009). Dart, Thruston. Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online. http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.navigatoredinboro.passhe.edu/subscriber/article/grove/music/27338 (accessed December 9, 2009). Lloyd, Norman. "THe Golden Encyclopedia of Music." 582. New York, New York: Golden Press , 1968.