Stoessel lute

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stoessel lute
String instrument
Other namesStössel lute, Stössel-laute
Classification String instrument
Hornbostel–Sachs classification
(Composite chordophone)

The Stoessel lute (German: Stössel-Laute) is a string instrument invented by Georg Stössel in 1914 in Cologne (Köln), Germany.[1][2] Its steel strings are fingered not by putting one's hand round the neck, but over the end of it. To this end, most Stössel lutes have very short necks. It is, in effect, a hybrid between a necked string instrument and a zither.[3]

The instrument was very popular in Germany and elsewhere in the early 20th century; it was frequently used in German and Austrian schools in the inter-war period. The Second World War put an end to production and the instrument never regained its former popularity. However as of 2024, this instrument is being resurrected in an Electrified Version w/ Pickups, & also a version w/ Nylon strings for musicians w/ hurt hands. The tuning of this instrument is 2 sets of 5ths "interleaved together". E.G. for the 9 String Stossel Lute (& 18 string Stossel Mandolin which is a Double Strung version w/ 9 pairs of strings, the lowest 4 or 6 pairs sometimes in Octaves) the strings are tuned in 5ths like a Five-string violin & then a 2nd group of 5ths is inserted starting w/ the Minor Third of the lowest note.


C3, Eb3, G3, Bb3, D4, F4, A4, C5, E5


Some Instruments (the Bass & Contrabass Stossel Lutes) have 12 or 13 Open Strings to the Right of the Fretted Strings which provide accompaniment to the Fretted Strings

(C#3), G#2, Eb3, Bb2, F3, C3, G2, D3, A2, E3, B2, F#3, C#3

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Instrumentos Musicales en los Museos de URUEÑA". funjdiaz.net. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  2. ^ "Stössel-Lauten". www.studia-instrumentorum.de. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  3. ^ "The Stringed Instrument Database: S". stringedinstrumentdatabase.aornis.com. Retrieved 2023-11-01.

External links[edit]