Carillon
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A carillon (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell, Template:IPAc-en Template:RespellTemplate:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref>) is a pitched percussion instrument that is played with a keyboard and consists of at least 23 bells. The bells are cast in bronze, hung in fixed suspension, and tuned in chromatic order so that they can be sounded harmoniously together. They are struck with clappers connected to a keyboard of wooden batons played with the hands and pedals played with the feet. Often housed in bell towers, carillons are usually owned by churches, universities, or municipalities. They can include an automatic system through which the time is announced and simple tunes are played throughout the day.
Carillons come in many designs, weights, sizes, and sounds. They are among the world's heaviest instruments, and the heaviest carillon weighs over Template:Convert. Most weigh between Template:Convert. To be considered a carillon, a minimum of 23 bells are needed; otherwise, it is called a chime. Standard-sized instruments have about 50, and the world's largest has 77 bells. The appearance of a carillon depends on the number and weight of the bells and the tower in which it is housed. They may be found in towers which are free-standing or connected to a building. The bells of a carillon may be directly exposed to the elements or hidden inside the structure of their tower.
The origins of the carillon can be traced to the Low Countries—present-day Belgium, the Netherlands, and the French Netherlands—in the 16th century. The modern carillon was invented in 1644 when Jacob van Eyck and the Hemony brothers cast the first tuned carillon. The instrument experienced a peak until the late-18th century, a decline during the French Revolution, a revival in the late 19th century, a second decline during the First and Second World Wars, and a second revival thereafter. UNESCO has designated 56 belfries in Belgium and France as a World Heritage Site and recognized the carillon culture of Belgium as an intangible cultural heritage.
According to counts by various registries, there are about 700 carillons worldwide. Most are in and around the Low Countries, though nearly 200 have been constructed in North America. Almost all extant carillons were constructed in the 20th century. Additionally, there are about 500 "non-traditional" carillons, which due to some component of its action being electrified or computerized, most registries do not consider to be carillons. A plurality are located in the United States, and most of the others in Western Europe. A few "traveling" or "mobile" carillons are fixed to a frame that enables them to be transported.
Etymology and terminologyEdit
The word carillon is a loanword from French dating to the late 18th century. It is derived from Old French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (an alteration of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) Template:Gloss. The word {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} originates from Latin {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss; from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss.Template:Sfnm It is often stated that carillon may have referred originally to a set of four forestrike bells whose melodies announced the time signal of public hour bells,Template:Sfn but this is not confirmed by archival sources. There is convincing evidence that the term referred initially to the medieval custom of chiming on sets of four church bells by pulling the clappers by means of ropes.Template:Sfn In German, as well as using the French term, a carillon is sometimes called a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Literal translation).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This should not be confused with the identically named glockenspiel, which itself is sometimes called a carillon in French.Template:Sfn Dutch speakers use the word {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which has an uncertain etymology.Template:Sfn
A musician who plays the carillon is commonly called a carillonneur (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell, Template:IPAc-en Template:RespellTemplate:Sfn), also loaned from French. It and carillon were adopted by English speakers after the introduction of the instrument to British troops following the War of the Spanish Succession in the 18th century.Template:Sfn Though the word carillonneur literally refers to carillon players that are men, the French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to denote women is not used in English. Another common term is carillonist, which some players of the carillon have wished to replace carillonneur because of the former's gender inclusivity, simple spelling, and unambiguous pronunciation.Template:Sfnm In 2018, the World Carillon Federation adopted carillonist as the preferred term for its communications.Template:Sfn
CharacteristicsEdit
ConstructionEdit
The carillon is a keyboard instrument. Though it shares similarities with other instruments in this category, such as the organ or pedal piano, its playing console is unique.Template:Sfn Playing is done with the hands on a manual keyboard composed of rounded, wooden batons. The manual has short chromatic keys (i.e. "black keys") raised above the diatonic keys ("white keys") and arranged like a piano; however, they are spaced far apart, and the chromatic keys are raised above the rest, about Template:Convert.Template:Sfn To operate, the keys are depressed with a closed fist.Template:Sfn The lowest 1.5 to 2.5 octaves of the manual are connected to a pedal keyboard played with the feet. The connection is direct, meaning that when a pedal is pressed, its corresponding key on the manual is pulled down with it.Template:Sfn Since the mid-20th century, there have been two competing keyboard design standards for a carillon's console: the North American standard and the North European standard. They differ over several design elements, such as whether the outer pedals curve toward the center or the specific distance a key is depressed.Template:Sfnm In 2006, the World Carillon Federation developed the WCF Keyboard 2006,Template:Sfn which is a compromise between the two standards. The organization recommends that its keyboard standard be used as a guideline when constructing new carillons or renovating existing keyboards.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Each key is connected to a transmission system via a wire, usually made of stainless steel. When a particular key is depressed, it pulls on the wire which, after interacting with other wires and pulleys, causes a clapper to swing towards the inner wall of the key's corresponding bell. At rest, these clappers are about Template:Convert away from the bell wall.Template:Sfn Small bells are fitted with springs to pull their clappers back immediately after the stroke, so that the bell is not sounded more than once with each keystroke. This is not necessary for large bells, which have sufficiently heavy clappers.Template:Sfn Immediately above each key is a wire adjuster called a turnbuckle. These allow the performer to adjust the length of the wire, which often changes with temperature fluctuations.Template:Sfn
The carillon's cast bronze, cup-shaped bells are housed at the top of a tower in a structure typically made of steel or wooden beams. The arrangement of the bells depends on the space, height and construction of the tower, and the number and size of bells. When the heaviest bells are especially large, they are usually placed below the playing cabin to achieve a better tonal distribution.Template:Sfn The bells themselves do not move during operation, only the clappers.Template:Sfnm With some instruments, the heaviest bells may be outfitted with a mechanism enabling them to swing.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Mechanization with clock and playing drumEdit
Carillons may also feature an automatic mechanism by which simple tunes or the Westminster Quarters are played on the lower bells.Template:Sfn The mechanism on European carillons is often a playing drum, which is a large metal cylinder connected to a clock mechanism.Template:Sfn Metal pegs are screwed onto the outside of the drum. When the clock mechanism sets the drum in motion, the pegs catch onto levers, connected to hammers that rest just a short distance from the outside of the bell. The hammers are briefly raised, and then fall onto the bell as the peg continues to rotate away from the lever.Template:Sfn The pegs are arranged such that simple tunes can be programmed to play at specific quarter hours.Template:Sfn In North America, automatic playing drum systems are not common; instead, carillons may have pneumatic systems which ring the instrument.Template:Sfn
SoundEdit
Carillons produce sound by striking stationary bells, categorizing them as percussion idiophones in the Hornbostel–Sachs classification of musical instruments (111.242.222 – sets of bells with internal strikers).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Carillon bells are made of bell bronze, a specialized copper–tin alloy used for its above-average rigidity and resonance.Template:Sfnm A bell's profile (shape) and weight determine its note and the quality of its tone. Therefore, apart from changes in its profile, such as chipping or corrosion, a bell will never lose its original sound.Template:Sfn It produces a sound with overtones, also known as partial tones, which are not necessarily harmonically related.Template:Sfn To produce a pleasing, harmonically related series of tones, the bell's profile must be carefully adjusted. Bellfounders typically focus on five principal tones when tuning, most notably the minor third overtone called the tierce, which gives rise to the unique sound of carillons and has been the subject of further research, such as the major third bell.Template:Sfn Since the casting process does not reliably produce perfectly tuned bells, they are cast slightly thicker and metal is shaved off with a lathe.Template:Sfn On older European carillons, bells were tuned with each other by using the meantone temperament tuning system. Modern carillons, particularly those in North America, are tuned to equal temperament.Template:Sfn
{{#invoke:Listen|main}}
The carillon has a dynamic range similar to a piano, if not more versatile. Through variation of touch, performers can express many volumes. The larger the bell, the larger its dynamic range. Bigger bells will also sound naturally louder than smaller, higher-pitched bells.Template:Sfn
Along with pipe organs, carillons are among the world's heaviest musical instruments. Most carillons weigh (counting only the weight of the bells) between Template:Convert, with extremes ranging from very light Template:Convert instruments to the world's heaviest at over Template:Convert—the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Carillon of the Riverside Church in New York City, US.Template:Sfn Its bourdon, or largest bell, is the largest tuned bell ever cast for a carillon. It sounds a full octave below most other bourdons.Template:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The entire ensemble of fixed and swinging bells, clappers, and steel framework weighs more than Template:Convert.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref>
RangeEdit
A carillon's range is determined by the number of bells it has. The number of bells usually depends on funds available for the creation of the instrument: more money allows more bells to be cast, especially the larger, more costly ones. It is generally accepted that a carillon must have a minimum of 23 bells, or else it is called a chime.Template:Sfnm There is no standard pitch range for the carillon,Template:Sfn so several subcategories are used to categorize them:
- Carillons with 23 to 27 bells and 35 to 39 bells are classified as two-octave and three-octave carillons, respectively. Players of these instruments often use music written specifically for the limited ranges.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- A "concert" or "standard" carillon typically has 45 to 50 bells, or a range of about four octaves.Template:Sfn
- Carillons with more than 50 bells are often referred to as "great" or "grand" carillons.<ref>For example:
- Template:Cite magazine
- Template:Cite press release
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
- Template:Cite news</ref>
- Carillons of 15 to 22 bells which were built before 1940 may be classified as "historical carillons" by the World Carillon Federation.Template:Sfn
The title of "world's largest carillon by number of bells" is shared between two instruments: the carillon of the Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian Church in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, US, and the carillon at the Template:Interlanguage link in Daejeon, South Korea; both have 77 bells.Template:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Since a carillon is seldom played in concert with other instruments, its bourdon may be any pitch—whichever is advantageous for the location and funds available;Template:Sfn to simplify the writing and playing of music, keyboards often have a C-compass. As a result, many carillons are transposing instruments, especially those that are small, have many bells, or were constructed on limited funds.Template:Sfn The transposition can be anywhere from down a perfect fourth to up an octave.Template:Sfn In North America, an increasing number of new carillons have been installed in concert pitch as a result of the desire to establish the carillon as a full-fledged concert instrument.Template:Sfn
Many carillons, according to a C-compass, are missing the lowest [[C-sharp (musical note)|CTemplate:Music]] and [[E-flat (musical note)|ETemplate:Music]] bells (equating to the second- and fourth-largest bells if they were included). The reason is often financial: by omitting these bells, the construction of a carillon can be reduced significantly, sometimes by 20 percent for large installations. Since the early 1900s, European installations will often reintroduce the ETemplate:Music bell, and instead of adding the CTemplate:Music bell, they will include a [[B-flat (musical note)|BTemplate:Music]] bell (which is a major second below the C-compass bell).Template:Sfn
HistoryEdit
OriginsEdit
The carillon originated from two earlier functions of bells: ringing bells to send messages and ringing bells to indicate the time of day.
Starting about the 9th century A.D., sets of bells called cymbala were hung from a horizontal rod in sets that were arranged by pitch.<ref name=MarcuseBell_chime>Template:Cite book</ref> These were hammer struck at first, and was depicted in medieval miniatures in sets of between 4 and 15 bells.<ref name=MarcuseBell_chime/> One miniature from the Cantigas de Santa Maria provides a picture of changing technology to wring the bells, a bell table with a mechanism to set wring bells from the inside, instead of using a hammer.<ref name=MarcuseBell_chime/>
- Refectory Bell, German, 13th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Cloister's Collection 2014.jpg
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- Roma, Bibl. Apostolica Vaticana, Pal. lat. 39, f. 44v sharpened cropped.jpg
Circa 1050, Germany. Handheld bell set in the Heidelberg Psalter.
- Kind David tuning harp while musicians play bells, detail from Glasgow University Library MS Hunter 229 (U.3.2), folio 21V.jpg
Circa 1170 A.D., England. Wracks of hammer struck bells, Hunterian Psalter
- Cantigas - Bell player.jpg
Circa 1280 A.D., Spain. Bell table in the Cantigas de Santa Maria.
- Clavichord, bells and psaltery by Perinetto da Benevento.jpg
Circa 1438, Italy. Bell set in the Cappella Caracciolo del Sole della chiesa di San Giovanni a Carbonara di Napoli
Bellringers attached ropes to the clappers of swinging bells and rung them while stationary in a technique called chiming. Chiming bells gave the ringer more control compared to swinging bells, and so was used to send messages to those within earshot. For example, sounding bells was often used to warn of a fire or impending attack. At celebratory events, a bellringer could gather ropes together to chime multiple bells in rhythmic patterns.Template:Sfn By the end of the 15th century, chimers are recorded to have used their technique to play music on bells. A 1478 chronicle recounts a man in Dunkirk having made a "great innovation in honor of God" by playing melodies on bells. Another recounts in 1482 a jester from Aalst playing bells in Antwerp with ropes and batons, the latter term suggesting the existence of a keyboard.Template:Sfn
In the 13th century, Europeans began to build "mechanized chimes."<ref name=MarcuseBell_chime/> In the 14th century, the newly developed escapement technology for mechanical clocks spread throughout European clock towers and gradually replaced the water clock.Template:Sfn Since the earliest clocks lacked faces, they announced the time by striking a bell a number of times corresponding to the hour. Eventually, these striking clocks were modified to make a warning signal just before the hour count to draw the attention of listeners to the upcoming announcement. This signal is called the forestrike (Template:Langx).Template:Sfnm Originally the forestrike consisted of striking one or two bells, and the systems slowly grew in complexity. By the middle of the 15th century, forestrikes, with three to seven bells, could play simple melodies.Template:Sfn
As late as 1510, these two functions were combined into one primitive carillon in the Oudenaarde Town Hall. One set of nine bells were connected to both a keyboard and to the clock's forestrike.Template:Sfnm The Low Countries—present day Belgium, the Netherlands, and the French Netherlands—were most interested in the potential of using bells to make music. In this region, bellfounding had reached an advanced stage relative to other regions in Europe.Template:Sfn A control was developed in the 14th century in Low Countries, technology which allowed large chimes in towers to controlled by the musician's footstep on a pedalboard (attached to "clockwork"), ringing the bells with a hammer on the outside of the bell.<ref name=MarcuseBell_chime/>
DevelopmentEdit
The new instrument developed in the favorable conditions in the Low Countries during the 17th century. Bellfounders found increased financial and technological support as the region traded by sea through ports.Template:Sfn Moreover, the political situation under Margaret of Austria and Holy Roman emperor Charles V brought relative wealth and power to cities.Template:Sfn Carillons quickly became a fashionable symbol of civic prestige. Cities and towns competed against one another to possess the largest, highest-quality instruments.Template:Sfn The demand was met by a successful industry of bellfounding families, notably the Waghevens and Vanden Gheyns.Template:Sfn Together, they produced over 50 carillons during the 16th and early 17th centuries.Template:Sfn By 1600, the primitive carillon had become an established feature of the region.Template:Sfn
A critical development for the modern carillon occurred in the 17th century, which involved a partnership between Pieter and François Hemony and Jacob van Eyck. The Hemony brothers were prominent bellfounders known for their precise tuning technique. Van Eyck was a renowned blind carillonneur of Utrecht, who was commissioned by several Dutch cities to maintain and make improvements to their clock chimes and carillons. He was particularly interested in the sounds of bells. In 1633, he developed the ability to isolate and describe a bell's five main overtones and discovered a bell's partial tones can be tuned harmoniously with each other by adjusting the bell's thickness.Template:Sfnm The Hemony brothers were commissioned in 1644 to cast 19 bells for Zutphen's Template:Ill with Van Eyck as their consultant. By tuning the bells with the advice from Van Eyck, they created the first carillon by the modern definition.Template:Sfn According to carillonneur John Gouwens, the quality of the bells was so impressive that Van Eyck recommended casting a full two octaves, or 23 bells. This range has been considered the standard minimum range for carillons ever since.Template:Sfn During the next 36 years, the Hemony brothers produced 51 carillons.Template:Sfnm Carillon culture experienced a peak around this time and until the late-18th century.Template:Sfn
DeclineEdit
The French Revolution had far-reaching consequences on the Low Countries and the carillon. France conquered and annexed the Austrian Netherlands in 1795 and the United Provinces in 1810. After publishing instructions for extracting copper from bell bronze, France sought to dismantle local carillons to reduce its copper shortage.Template:Sfn Carillon owners resisted by, for example, petitioning the new governments to declare their instruments as "culturally significant"Template:Sfn or by disconnecting the bells and burying them in secret.Template:Sfn During this period, there were as many as 110 carillons. About 50 of them were destroyed as a result of war, fire, and dismantling. The majority were melted down to produce cannons for the French Revolutionary Wars.Template:Sfn
Between 1750 and the end of the 19th century, interest in the carillon declined greatly. An increasing number of households had access to grandfather clocks and pocket watches, which eroded the carillon's monopoly on announcing the time.Template:Sfn As a musical instrument, the carillon lagged behind during the Romantic era, which featured music of a wandering, story-like nature. Many carillons were tuned using meantone temperament, which meant they were not suited for the chromaticism of the newer musical styles.Template:Sfnm The production of new musical works for the instrument essentially came to a standstill.Template:Sfn The standard skill level of carillonneurs had also dropped significantly, so much so that in 1895, the music publisher Schott frères issued Matthias Vanden Gheyn's 11 carillon preludes for piano with a foreword claiming "no carillonneur of our time knows how to play them on the carillon".Template:Sfn Also, with a reduced demand for new carillons, the tuning techniques developed by the Hemony brothers, but not Van Eyck's underlying theory, were forgotten. Subsequent carillons were generally inferior to earlier installations.Template:Sfn
RevivalEdit
In the early 1890s, an English change ringer and canon Arthur Simpson published a set of articles on bell tuning, where he argued bell founders had been complacent with their poor tuning methods and proposed solutions to the existing problems. John William Taylor, who had been trying to replicate the tuning techniques of the Hemony brothers and the Vanden Gheyns at his foundry, began working with Simpson. In 1904, they founded the first tuned bells in over a century.Template:Sfn The rediscovery initiated a revival of carillon building.Template:Sfn
In Mechelen, Belgium, Jef Denyn was a major figure in the carillon's revival as a musical instrument. In 1887, after his father had become completely blind, Denyn took over as the city carillonneur and was responsible for playing the carillon in the tower of St. Rumbold's Cathedral.Template:Sfn From the beginning of his career, Denyn advocated for better playability of the instrument. He further developed the tumbler rack system of transmission cables that his father had installed on the cathedral carillon. This allowed the player to have better control over dynamic variations, fast musical passages and tremolos. Tremolos offered a solution to a Romantic-era limitation of the carillon: its inability to expressively sustain the sound of individual notes.Template:Sfn
With his improving skills as a carillonneur and the upgraded cathedral carillon, Denyn's performances began attracting crowds of listeners. He established regular Monday night concerts at the suggestion of the city council.Template:Sfn On 1 August 1892, Denyn hosted the first carillon concert in history.Template:Sfn From this point forward, the instrument garnered a reputation as a concert instrument, rather than as an instrument tasked with providing background music.Template:Sfn
Impact of the World WarsEdit
Because of his concerts, Denyn met William Gorham Rice, an American state and federal government official from Albany, New York, US. Having traveled to The Hague and been exposed to the carillon, Rice was regularly touring the region to interview carillonneurs for his research. After Denyn's 18 August 1913 evening concert, he and Rice exchanged ideas about the societal and educational value of carillon performances for large audiences.Template:Sfn Rice's book Carillons of Belgium and Holland, the first in the English language written specifically about carillons,Template:Sfn was published in December 1914 and reprinted three times. The book painted an idealized picture of the region that resonated with the American public, particularly in light of the rape of Belgium.Template:Sfnm Its success motivated Rice to publish two more books in 1915 and 1925.Template:Sfn Rice became an authority on carillons in the United States; besides his books, he gave 35 lectures in several cities, published articles in magazines, spoke on radio programs, and presented exhibition material on the subject between 1912 and 1922.Template:Sfn In 1922, Rice garnered financial support from Herbert Hoover and John D. Rockefeller Jr. to establish a carillon school in Mechelen with Denyn as its first director. It was later named the Royal Carillon School "Jef Denyn".Template:Sfnm
Stephen Thorne of the Canadian military history magazine Legion writes that the Allied Powers of World War I and of World War II saw the destruction of carillons during the respective wars as a "brutal annihilation of a unique democratic music instrument".Template:Sfn The destruction was highly publicized among the allies of Belgium and the Netherlands. In the latter war, British investigators claimed Germany seized two thirds of all bells in Belgium and every bell in the Netherlands. Between 1938 and 1945, 175,000 bells were stolen and stored in Template:Ill (Template:Langx). Some 150,000 were sent to foundries and melted down for their copper.Template:Sfn Following the war, with the bells out of their towers, E. W. Van Heuven and other physicists could research the tonal qualities of bells in laboratory conditions and with modern electrical sound-analyzing equipment.Template:Sfn Percival Price, Dominion Carillonneur at the Peace Tower,Template:Sfn was tasked with repatriating as many surviving bells as possible. He also used the opportunity to publish similar research.Template:Sfn Every bellfounder could then learn how to cast the highest-quality bells, and the increase in new carillons was greater than ever.Template:Sfn
Movement in North AmericaEdit
Between 1922 and 1940, bellfounders installed 43 carillons in the United States and Canada. The flood of carillons onto the continent is attributed to Rice's widely popular books and persistent education in the United States. His romanticized depiction of the cultural instrument prompted wealthy donors to purchase carillons for their own civil and religious communities.Template:Sfn Price was appointed to play the carillon at the Metropolitan United Church in Toronto, Ontario, Canada (before working as Dominion Carillonneur); Mary Mesquita Dahlmer was appointed to play at Our Lady of Good Voyage Church in Gloucester, Massachusetts, US. Both were the first professional carillonneurs in their respective countries.Template:Sfn In 1936, The Guild of Carillonneurs in North America was founded at Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Following the deaths of Denyn in 1941 and Rice in 1945, North American carillonneurs, through their new organization, sought to develop their own authority on education and performance.Template:Sfn In the 1950s and 1960s, a distinct North American style of carillon music emerged at the University of Kansas. Led by Ronald Barnes, the university's carillonneur, he encouraged his peers to compose for the carillon and produced many of his own compositions.Template:Sfn
International recognitionEdit
In the 1970s, the idea for a global carillon organization took shape, and the Template:Ill was later formed as the central organization of carillon players and enthusiasts. It is a federation of the preexisting national or regional carillon associations that had been founded throughout the 20th century.Template:Sfn
In 1999, UNESCO designated 32 bell towers in Belgium as a World Heritage Site, in recognition of their architectural diversity and significance. The list was expanded in 2005 to include 23 in France, as well as the tower of Gembloux, Belgium.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2014, UNESCO recognized the carillon culture of Belgium as an intangible cultural heritage,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> stating that it "recognizes the creativity of carillonneurs and others who ensure that this cultural form remains relevant to today's local societies."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2008, the carillon was featured in the film Welcome to the Sticks, a box office success as the highest-grossing French film ever released in France Template:As of<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 2019, playing the carillon of St. Coleman's Cathedral in Cobh, Ireland, was recognized by the Irish government as key element of the country's living cultural heritage.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>
Usage and repertoireEdit
MusicEdit
The carillon repertoire skews heavily toward newer works in stark contrast to that of its relative the organ repertoire. Some 15 collections of carillon music written in the 17th and 18th centuries are known to exist.Template:Sfn Like with the pipe organ, early carillon performances consisted mostly of improvisations.Template:Sfn In the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras, keyboard music was not written for one instrument or another, but rather was written to be played on Template:Em keyboard instrument. For this reason, much of the carillon's repertoire in its early history was likely the same as that of the harpsichord, organ, and piano. One of the few surviving examples is the De Gruytters carillon book, dated 1746. The music is arranged for, rather than composed for, performance on the carillon and could easily be played on other keyboard instruments.Template:Sfn Baroque keyboard music is well suited for carillon transcription,Template:Sfn particularly the works of Bach, Corelli, Couperin, Handel, Mozart, and Vivaldi.Template:Sfn
The earliest known original compositions specifically for the carillon, and not simply any keyboard, are the 11 preludes of Matthias Vanden Gheyn. The structure of his works suggests he had been playing non-specific keyboard music on the carillon for many years and that he wanted to play music that is idiomatic to the instrument.Template:Sfn Technically challenging, his preludes have been the standard repertoire among carillonneurs since the early 1900s.Template:Sfn
Jef Denyn made many public statements about what music should be performed on the carillon, and he persuaded several composers of the time to write for it. Among those composers were his students, like Template:Interlanguage link, Léon Henry, and Template:Interlanguage link, and composers for other instruments, such as Jef van Hoof.Template:Sfn The carillon school began publishing carillon music in 1925.Template:Sfn Through his school, Denyn was the early proponent of the "Mechelen style"Template:Sfn of carillon music, which consists of virtuosic flourishes, tremolos, and other Baroque and Romantic elements.Template:Sfn
Ronald Barnes was the leading figure behind the North American style of carillon music, which developed in the 1950s and 1960s. He encouraged his University of Kansas peers to compose for the carillon, and he produced many of his own compositions.Template:Sfn Barnes' campaign was most successful with Roy Hamlin Johnson, a piano professor who introduced a whole category of music exclusively native to the carillon featuring the octatonic scale.Template:Sfn Many of Johnson's works are acknowledged as masterpieces.Template:Sfn Barnes produced 56 original compositions and hundreds of arrangements to expand the available repertoire. Other major 20th-century contributors were Albert Gerken, Gary C. White, Johan Franco, John Pozdro, and Jean W. Miller.Template:Sfnm The new American style developed into the antithesis of the Mechelen style: instead of exciting, tremolo-filled performances that demonstrate the showmanship of the carillonneur, it features slow passages, sparse harmonies and impressionist themes to draw the listener's attention to the natural sound of the bells.Template:Sfn
Carillon music was first published in North America in 1934. G. Schirmer, Inc. published the compositions of Curtis Institute of Music students Samuel Barber, Gian Carlo Menotti, and Nino Rota as part of the institute's short-lived publishing series.Template:Sfn The Guild of Carillonneurs in North America opened the first dedicated publishing house for carillon music in North America in 1961.Template:Sfn In 1968, the Anton Brees Carillon Library was established at Bok Tower Gardens in Lake Wales, Florida, US; it contains large collections of carillon music and related materials.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In the late 2010s, University of Michigan professor Tiffany Ng analyzed the diversity of the carillon repertoire. In a bibliography focusing on African-American music and composers, Ng claims that "while African-American music permeates the carillon repertoire," mostly in the form of spirituals, "almost none of the carillon arrangements and compositions are authored by African Americans."Template:Sfn In a second bibliography with Emmet Lewis focusing on women, transgender, and non-binary composers, they assert that while many works have been written by these groups, they are often not published through traditional means, and "gender inequality remains systemic and common practice in carillon concerts."Template:Sfn
PerformancesEdit
Performances on the carillon are commonly categorized as either recitals or concerts.Template:Sfn Carillon recitals are traditional performances that take place on fixed schedules throughout the week. They may supplement regularly scheduled events, or take place at the convenience of the carillonneur. Traditional since the instrument's inception, this method is the foundation of carillon performance.Template:Sfn Concerts refer to special carillon performances, typically featuring a program and a place for the audience to sit and listen. Some carillonneurs may livestream the event so the audience can watch them at the keyboard.Template:Sfn The first carillon concert was held on 1 August 1892 as part of Jef Denyn's Monday evening concert series.Template:Sfn
The lack of consistent interest in traditional performances among the general public has caused carillonneurs to engage in musical collaborations and experiments, collectively referred to as "Carillon Plus". Carillonneur duos explore the possibility of duet playing and producing new music for the configuration. Others seek to play the carillon in orchestras, bands, and other ensembles. Carillon Plus performances are not new, but have been explored more intensely since the mid-20th century.Template:Sfn
Organization and educationEdit
The World Carillon Federation is the central organization of carillon players and enthusiasts. It is a federation of preexisting regional, national, and supranational carillon organizations.Template:Sfn Template:As of it is composed of 15 member organizations:Template:Sfn Template:Div col
- Carillon Association Luxembourg
- Carillon Society of Australia
- Carillon Society of Britain and Ireland
- Confraternity of Bell Ringers and Carillonists of Catalonia
- Flemish Carillon Association
- German Carillon Association
- Guild of Carillonneurs and Campanologists of Switzerland
- The Guild of Carillonneurs in North America
- Guild of Carillonneurs of France
- Lithuanian Carillonist Guild
- Nordic Society for Campanology and Carillons
- Polish Carillon Association
- Royal Dutch Carillon Association
- Russian Carillon Foundation
- Walloon Carillon Association
Every three years, the federation hosts an international congress in a home country of one of the member organizations. The congresses host lectures, workshops, and committee meetings about the topics related to the carillon, for example: news, tutorials and demos, and research developments.Template:Sfn Most member organizations give periodic updates to their members on the state of carillon culture in their respective regions.Template:Sfn
Training to perform on a carillon can be obtained at several institutions, though the Royal Carillon School "Jef Denyn" has been the most popular.Template:Sfn The LUCA School of Arts in Leuven, Belgium, offers a master's degree in the carillon, and the Utrecht School of the Arts in Amersfoort, Netherlands, has a dedicated school.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Template:Ill is located in Denmark,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and there are schools in the United Kingdom<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and France.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The Guild of Carillonneurs in North America organizes carillon examinations during its annual congresses. Those who pass are certified as carillonneur-members of the guild. It also partners with the North American Carillon School, founded in 2012 as an affiliate of the Royal Carillon School "Jef Denyn".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Several American universities offer a carillon program within their curriculum.Template:Sfn For example, the University of California, Berkeley;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the University of California, Santa Barbara;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the University of Denver;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the University of Florida;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the University of Michigan<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> offer complete courses of study. Clemson University,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Indiana University,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Iowa State University,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the University of Kansas,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Marquette University<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> offer limited credit for carillon performance. Employed carillonneurs will often offer private lessons at their carillons.Template:Sfn Universities that possess a carillon but do not offer course credit often have a student organization or education program, such as the Yale Guild of Carillonneurs, which manages performances on the Yale Memorial Carillon,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the University of Chicago Guild of Carillonists.
Music competitions for carillon are held regularly, with the international Queen Fabiola Competition being the most important.Template:Sfn
DistributionEdit
Template:Main list Several institutions register and count carillons worldwide. Some registries specialize in counting specific types of carillons. For example, the War Memorial and Peace Carillons registry counts instruments which serve as war memorials or were built in the name of promoting world peace.<ref name=WMPC>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> TowerBells counts carillons played via a baton keyboard as "traditional carillons" and those with computerized or electronic mechanisms as "non-traditional carillons", among other bell instruments. It also publishes maps, technical specifications, and summary statistics.<ref name="TowerBells About">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> As the World Carillon Federation does not consider non-traditional carillons to be carillons, it counts only those which are played via a baton keyboard and without computerized or electronic mechanisms.<ref name="WCF carillon list">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn
According to TowerBells and the World Carillon Federation, there are about 700 existing traditional carillons. At least three can be found on every continent except Antarctica; however, of the countries in which traditional carillons can be found, only six have more than 20.Template:Sfn<ref name="WCF carillon list"/> The "great carillon" countriesTemplate:Sfn—the Netherlands, Belgium, and the United States—account for two-thirds of the world total. Over 90 percent are in either Western Europe (mainly the Low Countries) or North America. In North America, about 80 percent of carillons are owned by religious or educational institutions,<ref name="TowerBells NA Owner Type">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> while in Europe, nearly all carillons are municipally owned.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Almost all extant traditional carillons were constructed in the last 100 years; only some 50 historical carillons from the 18th century or earlier still exist.Template:Sfn According to TowerBells, there are another 483 non-traditional carillons, which are located mainly in the United States and Western Europe.Template:Sfn
Traveling carillonsEdit
Traveling or mobile carillons are those which are not housed in a tower. Instead, the bells and playing console are installed on a frame that allows it to be transported. These carillons have to be much lighter than their non-mobile counterparts.Template:Sfn Nora Johnston conceived the idea of a traveling carillon between 1933 and 1938. She connected a traditional baton keyboard to a system of chime bars and fixed the structure to a portable frame. Johnston traveled twice to the United States to perform in radio documentaries, orchestral concerts, and commercials.Template:Sfn Subsequent constructions by others used actual carillon bells.Template:Sfn
According to counts by the World Carillon Federation<ref name="WCF mobile carillon list">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and TowerBells,<ref name="TowerBells Traveling Carillons">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> there are about 20 existing traveling carillons with only three being non-traditional. Many were or are owned by bell foundries as a promotional tool. Almost all traveling carillons are headquartered in Western Europe and the United States. Two American traveling carillons are part of the musical group Cast in Bronze, which features the "Spirit of the Bells" playing the carillon in concert with other instruments or a recording. Cast in Bronze is credited with introducing the carillon to the United States' public in its mission to promote and preserve the instrument.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
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- Bianzhong, an Eastern instrument having clapperless bells that are struck with hammers
- {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:SndItalian bell ringing
- Electronic carillon
- Full circle ringing
- Russian Orthodox bell ringing
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
BooksEdit
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- Rombouts, Luc. Article 'Carillon', The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Second Edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000, part 5, pp. 128–134.
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External linksEdit
- English-speaking carillon organizations
- North American Carillon School
- Short educational video about the carillon from the World Carillon Federation
- Short video tutorial on composing for the carillon
- Tutorial website on arranging for the carillon
- {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Carillon museum in the Netherlands)
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