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Claviola

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
a claviola

TheClaviola is amusical instrument that was designed in the 1960s byHohner technician and designerErnst Zacharias (inventor of thePianet andClavinet). The instrument was produced for a few months in the late 1990s before being discontinued.[1]

Similar to amelodica (which is still in production), but worn like anaccordion and played like abagpipe, the claviola has a set ofpiano keys on the right side that range 2½ octaves. The left side is a set of pipes that range in length depending on the corresponding pitch.

In combination with the pipes, the claviola uses reeds blown from the "wrong" side compared to reeds in most Western free-reed instruments, resulting in a much mellower, less reedy tone, and pitch dependent on the pipe length. The player can use his or her left hand to shade or cover the pipe openings, to bend notes or add vibrato.[2][3]

The Hohner Claviola is best known for its use by the bandOne Ring Zero and the jazz/folk musicianMisha Alperin (Moscow Art Trio). Other musicians who use the Hohner Claviola includeJohn Medeski,Rob Burger,Michael Hearst, andJohn Spiers.

The name "Claviola" was also used by the German firm ofLudwig Hupfeld for one type of their self-playing pianos which were made from 1904 until about 1930.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Re: claviola".harp-l.org. Retrieved2022-06-09.
  2. ^Missin, Pat."CLAVIOLA". RetrievedNovember 3, 2014.
  3. ^"One Ring Zero – Claviola".One Ring Zero. Archived fromthe original on March 3, 2016.
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