Short octave

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File:Johann Bap. Samber, Continuatio ad manductionem organicam, Salzburg 1707, S. 165.jpg
This organ console, made in Salzburg in 1707, shows the short octave system in its keyboard permitting the range to extend down to C; see text for details.

The short octave was a method of assigning notes to keys in early keyboard instruments (harpsichord, clavichord, organ), for the purpose of giving the instrument an extended range in the bass register. A closely related system, the broken octave, added more notes by using split keys: the front part and the back part of the (visible) key controlled separate levers and hence separate notes.

Short octaveEdit

First typeEdit

One variant of the short octave system was employed in the instrument shown above. Here, the lowest note on the keyboard was nominally E, but the pitch to which it was tuned was actually C. Nominal FTemplate:Music was tuned to D, and nominal GTemplate:Music was tuned to E. Thus, starting at the lowest note on the keyboard and playing these keys:

E FTemplate:Music GTemplate:Music F G A B C

the player would hear the musical scale of C major in the bass:

C D E F G A B C

The actual note assignments can be seen in the following diagram, which shows the lowest eight keys of an early keyboard:

The rationale behind this system was that the low notes FTemplate:Music and GTemplate:Music are seldom needed in early music. Deep bass notes typically form the root of the chord, and FTemplate:Music and GTemplate:Music chords were seldom used at this time. In contrast, low C and D, both roots of very common chords, are sorely missed if a harpsichord with lowest key E is tuned to match the keyboard layout. When scholars specify the pitch range of instruments with this kind of short octave, they write "C/E", meaning that the lowest note is a C, played on a key that normally would sound E.

Second typeEdit

A second type of short octave used the keys

B CTemplate:Music DTemplate:Music C D E FTemplate:Music G

to play the G major scale

G A B C D E FTemplate:Music G.

Here, the exotic bass notes CTemplate:Music and DTemplate:Music are sacrificed to obtain the more essential G and A. The notation for the pitch range of such an instrument is "G/B". The following diagram illustrates this kind of short octave:

In stringed instruments like the harpsichord, the short octave system created a defect: the strings which were tuned to mismatch their keyboard notes were in general too short to sound the reassigned note with good tone quality. To reach the lower pitch, the strings had to be thickened, or tuned too slack. During the 17th and 18th centuries, harpsichord builders gradually increased the size and bass range of their instruments to the point where every bass note could be properly played with its own key.

Short octaves were very common in the early organ. Here, the practice would not have yielded poor tone quality (since the associated pipes would have to be built with the correct length in any event). Far more than on stringed instruments the financial savings would have been quite considerable, as the long pipes entailed quite an expense, even in materials alone. But as harmonic music developed more complexity in the late 17th and 18th centuries and the desire arose for completely chromatic bass octaves, short octaves ultimately came to be abandoned in organs as well.

HistoryEdit

The 18th-century author Quirinus van Blankenburg suggested that the C/E short octave originated as an extension of keyboards that went down only to F; the addition of just one key (nominal E) and the reassignment of the FTemplate:Music and GTemplate:Music added three new notes to the bass range. Van Blankenburg says that when the short octave was invented, it was called the "new extension" for this reason.<ref>Quoted from Template:Harvp</ref> According to Frank Hubbard, harpsichords and organs of the 16th and 17th centuries "almost always" had short octaves.Template:Sfnp

Edward Kottick notes that the short octave persisted for a long time, suggests that a kind of mutual inertia between composers and instrument builders may have been responsible:

Our forebears were much more practical than we are. Since nobody wrote music that required those notes, why go to the expense of putting them in? And what composer would bother to write them if few keyboard instruments had them?Template:Sfnp

A transitional stage toward the final adoption of chromatic keyboards was seen in certain English virginals of the later 17th century. On these the lowest key could pluck two different strings, depending on the slot in which its jack was placed. One of these strings was tuned to low G (the normal pitch of this key in the G/B short octave) and the other to whatever missing chromatic pitch was desired. The player could then move the jack to the slot that provided the desired note, according to the piece being played.Template:Sfnp

Broken octaveEdit

File:FEINTES BRISEES.jpg
This harpsichord built by Clavecins Rouaud of Paris employs the broken octave scheme.

A variant of the short octave added more notes by using split keys: the front part and the back part of the (visible) key controlled separate levers and hence separate notes. Assume the following keys:

E F FTemplate:Music G GTemplate:Music A

with both FTemplate:Music and GTemplate:Music split front to back. Here, E played C, the front half of the FTemplate:Music key played D, and the (less accessible) rear half played FTemplate:Music. The front half of the GTemplate:Music key played E, and the rear half played GTemplate:Music. As with the short octave, the key labeled E played the lowest note C. Thus, playing the nominal sequence

E FTemplate:Music(front) GTemplate:Music(front) F FTemplate:Music(back) G GTemplate:Music(back) A

the player would hear:

C D E F FTemplate:Music G GTemplate:Music A

The actual note assignments can be seen in the following diagram:

It can be seen that only two notes of the chromatic scale, CTemplate:Music and DTemplate:Music, are missing. An analogous arrangement existed for keyboards with G instead of C at the bottom.

According to Trevor Pinnock,Template:Sfnp the short octave is characteristic of instruments of the 16th century. He adds, "in the second half of the 17th century, when more accidentals were required in the bass, 'broken octave' was often used."

File:VienneseBassOctave.jpg
The Viennese bass octave, as seen in a small single-manual harpsichord kept in the music collection of the Czech National Museum in Prague. The museum describes it as "anonymous, South Bohemia or Austria, ca. 1700"

Viennese bass octaveEdit

The short/broken octave principle not only survived, but was even developed further in one particular location, Vienna. The "Viennese bass octave" (German: "{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}") lasted well into the second half of the 18th century. Template:Harvtxt describes this keyboard arrangement as follows:

The notes leading down to F1 were accommodated on the keys of a "short-scaled octave" from c to C (only FTemplate:Music1 and GTemplate:Music1, as well as CTemplate:Music and ETemplate:Music continued to be omitted.<ref name=G-VII />

The assignment of notes to keys, which strikingly included a triple-split key, was as shown in the following diagram, adapted from Template:Harv:

Richard Maunder (who uses the term "multiple-broken short octave") observes that the Viennese bass octave, like its predecessors, imposed distortions on the string scaling of the harpsichord: it "leads to extreme foreshortening of the scale in the bass." Hence, it required unusually thick strings for the bottom notes, on the order of Template:Convert.Template:Sfnp

The Viennese bass octave gradually went out of style. However, Maunder notes instruments with Viennese bass octave built even in 1795, and observe that advertisements for such instruments appear even up to the end of the century.Template:Sfnp

Music written specifically for short-octave instrumentsEdit

Template:Image frame

   \new Voice {  \voiceTwo \relative c' { \clef "treble" \time 2/2 \key c \major | r2 \stemDown c8 [ \stemDown a8 ] \stemDown e'4 s1 \bar "|." }}
 >>
 \new Staff <<
   \new Voice {  \voiceOne \relative a { \clef "bass" \time 2/2 \key c \major | r4 r8 \stemUp a8 r4 r8 \stemUp a8 | <e, b' e gis>1 \bar "|." }}
   \new Voice {  \voiceTwo \relative a, { \clef "bass" \time 2/2 \key c \major | \stemDown <a e'>2 ~ ~ \stemDown <a e'>2 s1 \bar "|." }}
 >>

>> } </score>}} While the short octave seems primarily to have been an economy measure, it does have the advantage that the player's left hand can in certain cases span a greater number of notes. The composer Peter Philips wrote a pavane in which the left hand plays many parallel tenths. This is a considerable stretch for many players, and become even harder when (as in Philips's pavane), there sometimes other notes included in the chord. Of this piece harpsichord scholar Edward Kottick writes, "The sensuality of effortlessly achieving tenths is so strong, so delightful, that one cannot really claim to know the piece unless it has been played on a short-octave keyboard."Template:Efn

A later composer who wrote music conveniently playable only on a broken-octave instrument was Joseph Haydn, whose early work for keyboard was intended for harpsichord, not piano.<ref name=G-VII /> As Template:Harvtxt points out, Haydn's "Capriccio in G on the folk song '{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'", H. XVII:1 (1765) is evidently written for a harpsichord employing the Viennese bass octave. The work terminates in a chord in which the player's left hand must cover a low G, the G an octave above it, and the B two notes higher still. On orthodox keyboards this would be an impossible stretch for most players, but as on the Viennese bass octave it would have been easy to play, with the fingers depressing keys that visually appeared as D–G–B (see diagram above).

When Haydn's Capriccio was published by Artaria in the 1780s, the Viennese bass octave had mostly disappeared (indeed, the harpsichord itself was becoming obsolete). The publisher accordingly included alternative notes in the places where the original version could be played only on a short octave instrument, presumably to accommodate the needs of purchasers who owned a harpsichord or piano with the ordinary chromatic bass octave.<ref name=G-VII>Template:Harvp</ref>

Notes and referencesEdit

Notes Template:Notelist References Template:Reflist Sources

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