Encyclopedia > Classical guitar

  Article Content

Classical guitar

Musical instrument from the guitar family. Also called Spanish guitar.

The classical guitar is distinguished by a number of features.

  • It is an acoustic instrument. The sound is amplified by a sound box.
  • It has six strings.
  • The strings are made from cat gut, or much more commonly these days nylon, as opposed to the metal strings found in some other forms of guitar. These strings have a much lower tension than steel strings. The lower three strings ('bass strings') are wound with metal, commonly silver or bronze.
  • Because of the low tension of the strings the neck can be made entirely of wood, not requiring a steel truss road.
  • The neck tends to be broader than with steel string guitars, making more complex work easier, but requiring a left hand position which ultimately makes the guitar less stable to hold.
  • The strings are usually plucked with the fingers.

The heyday of the classical guitar repertoire lies in the 19th century. Some guitar composers are:

Because of the relative scarcity of pieces, guitarists often play transcriptions of music originally written for other instruments.

Classical guitar players:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article

Warning: rtrim(): Invalid '..'-range, '..'-range needs to be incrementing in /var/www/kidsnetau/encyclopedia_promo4.php on line 55

Warning: rtrim(): Invalid '..'-range, '..'-range needs to be incrementing in /var/www/kidsnetau/encyclopedia_promo4.php on line 55
Sanskrit language

... "stha" (standing, staying at) and means "they are in me". "-aham" (I) in the second line is nominative. na caaham = "...and not I....", meaning "but I am ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 40.7 ms