| |
In the course of historical research relating to Dionisio
Aguado and his tripod, I have come across information which
begs to question our accepted ideas about Francisco Torres.
These ideas can be summarized as follows in the words of Harvey
Turnbull (ex: The Guitar; from the Renaissance to the present
day [London, 1974], p.77):
| |
...His [Torres'] most important contribution
was the extension of the fan-strutting system, but he
also established the vibrating length of the strings at
a constant 65 cm. and increased the size of the body.
Since the time of Torres it has also become a standard
practice to make the fingerboard at least 5 cm. wide at
the nut. The fingerboards of early nineteenth-century
guitars were quite narrow, as were those of five-course
guitars, in spite of the double strings, which might seem
to guarantee adequate width...it was not until the second
half of the 19th century that larger guitars appeared...
|
|
The
question of scale length can be settled as follows: In his
very first guitar method, the Escuela de Guitarra of
1825 (copy: Chicago, Newberry Library), Dionisio Aguado states
that he prefers guitars which have a scale length of 27 pulgadas
(Paragraph 232, p. 27).
In
trying to determine the precise measurement of the Pulgada
in 1825, I have found, with the help of Dr. Heck, a copy of
J.H. Alexander's Universal Dictionary of Weights and Measures,
Ancient and Modern (New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1867. Copy
in the General Library, Ohio State University.) It appears
that prior to the introduction of the metric system to Spain
in 1840, there were three different units of measurement in
use in Spain which were called "Pulgada". However, Alexander
states, the Castilian Pulgada was used for legal purposes
throughout the country. Since Aguado lived in Madrid, the
administrative and political capital, it seems safe to assume
that this is the unit of measurement he is referring to. The
Castilian Pulgada was equal to .9132 of an American inch,
which makes Aguado's scale length equal to 24.66 in., or 627
mm. Further: in the second edition of the same book, translated
into French by Francois de Fossa and published in Paris in
the following year, 1826, the translator states in
reference to this same paragraph, that 27 Pulgadas are equal
to 623mm. (Copy in the Library of Congress and in the private
collection of Dr. Brian Jeffery.) The discrepancy of 4mm can
be explained in several ways, but it matters not: both measurements
are still smaller than Torres' 650mm.
However,
in the very next paragraph in the Escuela, (#233) Aguado
states: "En las guitarras de mas tiro que el referido,
las cuerdas, por buenas que sean, se rompen antes de subir
a su debido tono, y por lo mismo, hay necesidad de mantenerlas
bajas con perjuicio de la brillantez." (In guitars of
a longer scale length than that to which I refer, the strings,
however good that they may be, will break prior to reaching
their proper pitch, and for that same [reason] there is a
necessity of maintaining them lower [lower tension!] with
a corresponding decrease in brilliancy.)
 Which
means in plain language, that in 1825, according to Aguado's
testimony, there were guitars in existence, the scale length
of which was longer than his own 627mm. Since the difference
between 650mm and 627mm, amount to no more than 3.5%, it does
not require any super-human powers of deduction to accept
the notion that these larger guitars could not have been much
different than the 650mm scale length we always associate
with Torres. (More on scale length below.)
The
question of the Torres profile does not lend itself to easy
bibliographical analysis. There is no question that the guitar,
which is depicted in Aguado's hands in his Nuevo Metodo
of 1843 (right illustration) is indeed narrow bodied. The
fact that this picture comes to us from a book which was published
a good ten to fifteen years before the emergence of Torres
as a known luthier, tends to underline the marked difference
between its profile and the familiar wide profile of Torres.
However, we should not forget that this etching is NOT a photograph.
How much artistic license has been taken with it can be seen
by anyone who bothers to examine the fretting design. Up to
the octave the spaces do get somewhat smaller, although not
in semitones, but further on, the spaces get larger! Aguado
was not exactly happy with the graphic work done for him for
this book, and he actually says so! (Footnote to paragraph
#63.)
|
|
|
Courtesy of Guitar Review 39
|
But
we do know that narrow-bodied guitars did exist. The examples
of Panormo and Lacote are only too well known. Curiously enough,
when Aguado invented his famous Tripod and first publicized
it in his Nouvelle Methode de Guitare, Op of 1835,
he used as a trade mark a graphic design of a guitar mounted
on a Tripod (left illustration) which appeared on the title
page of Nouvelle Methode, and on every single publication
by Aguado until his death in 1849.
There
is no question that with slight variations, this profile is
practically identical to the profile we have come to associate
with the name Torres.
The
question of the strutting can best be resolved by a physical
examination of the guitar in question. I do not recall coming
across any information on such examination done to guitars
left behind by Aguado, if any. At any rate, the book Guitars...,
by Tom and Mary-Anne Evans, gives precise details of several
guitars which date from the late 18th century. One of these,
the 1783 Benedit six-course guitar, had a scale length of
656mm, (!), and a limited form of fan strutting. The guitar
had been used as a single strung instrument, with no structural
changes. No measurement is given of the width of the fingerboard,
but it is not hard to imagine that the fingerboard width required
to accommodate twelve strings in six courses, could not be
any different than the width we are all accustomed to. The
other significant instrument described by the Evanses, is
the Pages six-course guitar of 1792. This instrument also
had a scale length of 655mm, (!) and already employed an advanced
system of fan strutting using the same number of struts as
Torres. In the words of the Evanses: "Spanish guitars of the
late 18th century prove that Torres did not conjure the modern
guitar out of this air: his work was, rather, the culmination
of a long process of development." (Tom and Mary-Anne Evans,
Guitars: Music, History, Construction and Players from
the Renaissance to Rock [London, 1977] p. 44) In other
words, the genius of Torres does not lie in the invention
of any new devices or designs. There was nothing revolutionary
about him. He simply made a better guitar, by using the best
ideas he could garner from his predecessors.
| |
Matanya Ophee
Boston, Massachusetts |
|
|