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http://www.dennismasuzzo.com/images/HeadshotSmall.JPG My main reason for showing the other Bass was to get a better look at one from that maker that I found on the net. |
Nice Thread!
Wow...
I posted the original question about cornerless basses a while back, and I've just logged in for the first time in a while. This thread has grown into a wealth of information. Fascinating stuff. Just goes to show what a great resource the internet is for communication and research. When a bunch of bass geeks... I mean enthusiasts... pool their information, we get this. Awesome! Cheers all, Charlie |
Yes...
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Now I have two cornerless Basses but both are going into some long term restorations soon so it will be a year or more before I have either of them back. Jeff is doing the Storioni and Arnold is doing the one I acquired recently. Playing them first hand, I can really see how they vibrate differently than cornered Basses. |
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which?...
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My website is full of Basses in restoration so leaving out 1 or 2 won't hurt. For now, it's just another old Bass that can't be played yet. I briefly tested it and it does sound good, real good. Playing it will only make it worse so it's off the market and out of sight for a year or so, possibly two. |
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Basses are offered to me from time to time in various situations. If I like it and think it's a good candidate, then I might buy it. The list of Basses I turn down is way way bigger that the list of Basses I am interested to buy. Also, I can't afford to buy every Bass. The deal has to be 'just right' to appeal to me. Most of the Basses I buy need a lot of work right off the bat. Others can use some work if I want to get it in top playing condition. Last year I almost bought another small Cornerless Italian Bass in Italy but didn't push hard to get it. A local player bought it over there so it never made it across the pond. |
"Jordi Ruscada
http://zacharysmartin.com/images/for.../Ruscada_2.jpg found at http://zacharysmartin.com |
Yes.. but..
Yes, I know about that Bass BUT who are the Makers from Barcelona that made Basses like that? Show me one. The Makers in Spain ALL copied the Italians and J.B. Guillaumi Snr. (father and grandfather of Juan I and II) who is one of the earliest makers in Barcelona trained in Cremona.
I am still waiting to see a 'confirmed' Spanish Bass that looks anything like mine. Also, one with a similar grade of wood and workmanship as well. The French copied the Italians as well. That doesn't mean every time you see a Violin you can point to a Violin style made in France in the 1850. That is a late period. Where did they get it from. Ah haa... Speaking of... This design in the Back is actually French; http://zacharysmartin.com/images/for...scada_4_tn.jpg |
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hm...well...ok...not spanish...not italian...
but cornerless, hungarian, and cheap http://cgi.ebay.de/5-Saitiger-Kontra...QQcmdZViewItem |
... and ugly! what's with the whacky ffs? Beurkh!
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With all the great fakes that have come out of Hungary in the last few years I am not surprised at all to see this. But those FFs.. YUCK! You are supposed to go to the Bar for a drink (or two) AFTER you finish work, not before.:eek: |
some pics and infos about a cornerless landolfi is here:http://www.xbass.org/en/taxonomy/term/54
(and also the baldantoni ken mentioned before) |
Stradivari
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(Edit) I've been thinking about this, and although I agree with your logic, the addition of braces isn't that different from having corner blocks, is it? I made a Benedetto style archtop guitar a few years ago and although I didn't put them in that guitar Benedetto recommended them along with the linings. It might help add some stability? I do like the idea of the linen strips. I used them in my basses and cellos for awhile, but haven't done so lately. |
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Linen linings in place on my cornerless bass.
Actually Martin, I did try some cross strips at first but took them out because I didn't like the feel. I think they made the sides too stiff. I had the ribs without mold and I could bonk them to assess their stiffness. Just like Arnold, who advised me, I would advise you to forgo the wood and go with linen if anything. |
linings
Are your linings wider than normal?
That's going to be a nice bass. What do you use for varnish and sealer or ground? |
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Olde-Italian authentic varnish of course. |
Have we seen this one before? Supposedly Italian.
http://www.paris-contrebasses.com/DATA/Image/DV9.jpg |
f holes
Ken,
What is the length of the fs on your cornerless bass? |
Fs?
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Yes, to my eye it looks very Italian or could be Spanish as well. Where is this bass? |
It is, or was in Bruno Brett's shop in Paris. He calls it 18th C "Storioni school".
I have asked them for more information, but none forthcoming yet .. |
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I was told that the bass in the book is NOT Storioni and there is another bass known as a Storioni in another Museum not far from the one that has the Cornerless. The other bass is not Cornerless. I also saw a smallish Italian bass, very old over here that belongs to the Curtis Institute that they call a Storioni as well. Violin cornered bass.. With my bass is restoration, looking inside it now and even before the bass was opened, it looks to be too old to be by Storioni but who knows? Keep us informed if you hear anymore about this bass. |
I know this is a bit of an older thread, but how is the restoration going on your Storioni Ken? I am looking forward to hearing your thoughts on it when it is complete!
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well..
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What looked like a minor treble side Top pressing has been re-evaluated into being a total Top re-shaping. The Top is off and the neck is out with the Scroll/pegbox detached. The Neck is toast and incorrect so it's firewood. The Scroll is to be fully repaired and then grafted into the Block-cut carcass when it gets to that point. Time is our friend here as some of the stress and depression has come back on its own just getting some rest without the string tension on it. The rest of the Top shaping will be a major job. The Back and Ribs need total restoration as well. Ask me again this time next year if I haven't already posted on it.. lol You are welcome to ask Arnold BUT this may also fall under 'Doctor-Patient Confidentiality'! |
i,ll just add this youtube link for those whohave not heard Edicson Ruiz videos on youtube with his 1750 cornerless Landolfi. Btw he uses 3 diffrent bridges, one for 3 string Bottessini stuff, another for low action vieneese tuning and another one with higher action for modern playing. I had a chance to hear this bass for a whole week when Edicson came to solo with our orchestra. Its a dark sounding instrument, that projects really well at far.
http://www.youtube.com/user/doublebassVenezuela |
Landolfi?
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He is a great player. The sound you describe could be the same if it were my bass as I've heard this from others in the past. Is this bass a Landolfi? Who knows as he even mentions 'possibly by'. The shape of his bass looks a lot like mine but not the FFs, just the body outline. By they way, as my Bass is apart and in restoration it is looking about 50 years older than Storioni's period by two professional opinions so far. One thinks the Scroll has a Cremona flavor. The other thinks it's simplistically beautiful at the head. A third opinion as well as Arnold's and even mine now is that the rounded bottom of the pegbox is very possibly a later but very old modification. It was maybe done for a needed repair to a broken button. There are about 4 grafts visible in the back there. Arnold will leave a similar 2mm or so line across the button area showing the current graft as part of the bass's history. The rounded button area is there to stay. What's done is done! |
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I hope to see it sooner than later but it's a huge job. The other one I have in restoration might be done sooner. That is not as big a Job but no small one either. |
Update..
Today after another brief discussion with Arnold who is restoring the 'ex-Riccardi bass' I have decided to remove the Storioni attribution from the listing and change it officially to "Italian Guitar Model Bass, Italy, 18th Century".
When I first bought the Bass a well known historian that knew the Bass said it was not Storioni or even Cremona and most likely 19th century. When two prominent Bass Luthiers looked inside the bass their estimates were approximately mid-18th century, give or take a few decades. Now that the Bass is opened up and getting worked on the 1750 or so estimate looks more likely than anything near the 19th century. Who actually made it? I don't really know, I wasn't there! Perhaps in the future something will come along and tell us more. I did see a slightly similar Scroll/pegbox on another Italian Bass but that had I think a replaced Back and was not cornerless. The FFs were different as well but, the Scroll was close and maybe not a match for the Bass it was on. When I first heard of this Bass for sale about a year or two before getting it I was told it was a Rogeri. When I bought it the name was changed back to Storioni which it had been called before it was a Rogeri. Perhaps the Bass going to market was the reason for all the famous name calling. This by no means in itself lessens the greatness of this Double Bass but it does relieve me in the 'burden of proof' if it were to be sold. Regardless, it will not change the asking price either!;) |
Very interesing. Although I'm sure it will be difficult to find out who actually made the bass, I hope that as the restoration continues you and Arnold can find out more towards this. This is certainly an intriguing bass. Are you having Arnold make an extension for it as well?
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Maker? Ext?
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On the maker, I don't know what clues could be found short of a label or inscription by the maker. Even then, proving the name to be real to the bass would be nearly as difficult. With 'one-off' makes or one-of-a-kinds there is very little to match up as far as a maker goes. This bass is quite unique in itself. I will be happy with just the bass being repaired, restored, healthy again and sounding like it did before. A name wont do all that much except to use for marketing the bass when it gets sold. Even in the old shops in Italy it is believed that basses were less important than violins so it could be from a particular shop but not made be the master himself. In that case we are dealing with a 'shop bass' that may have one or more 'unknown' hands in the mix. At that point, no one knows who made what unless they were there to witness it. |
In Varnish Touch-up
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Ok, here's a few pics of the Bass during the Varnish touch-up stage that Arnold just sent me. I have several pics of the repair process but like watching a Heart Transplant, some internal operative pics are not for the faint!:eek:
The flame in this maple is the best I have ever seen. The Scroll repair from the old extension cut in this pic is invisible to my eye. |
one more..
I don't remember seeing this Bass posted but I just found it on line (Vito Liuzzi's site), Pedro Valls;
http://u.jimdo.com/www29/o/sb3486486...edro-valls.jpg I am not 100% certain but I think this is a Spanish Bass. In searching on the 'net I read this eye opening paragraph; "In Spain, two new fretted string instruments related to the lute emerged in late medieval times and spread around the Western world. These were the vihuela (Spanish guitar) and the viol. Our modern, classical guitar is a direct descendant of the vihuela. Because it was plucked it was often called vihuela de mano (hand guitar). Related to it was a Spanish instrument called the vihuela de arco (bowed guitar), better known as the viol. The viol was developed in Spain in the late 1400s. It had six strings and was fretted and tuned like the lute and vihuela, but it was bowed, not plucked. It came in different sizes and was played with the instrument resting on the lap and legs. It is often called by its Italian name viola da gamba (leg viol). Having entered Italy from Spain, it quickly spread from there throughout Western Europe." From; "The Invention of the Violin and the Spanish Guitar" It seems from this article that the Guitar Shaped Viol came from Spain originally and not Italy. Not counting politics but rather the intermingling of makers training in Italy from Spain it's easy to see how the two styles would merge into almost one. The Italians borrowing from Spain and the Spanish making Italian Violins. J.B. Guillami and Juan (Johannes) Guillami are reported to have trained in Italy. Juan II's instruments looking the same as the fathers but the father reportedly a better maker. Both are famed for their Double Basses, rare, sought after and valuable. J.B. Guillami is referenced in one of my books but the main book on Spanish makers by Ramon Pinto sells from $250-450 and I don't have one. I do know where one is so next time I am there, I will try to spend a few minutes looking up the family of Guillami. I emailed Pinto a few times about my Bass and he never replied. Is my Bass possibly by Guillami? If so, it's by J.B. or Juan I (possibly the son of J.B.) as Juan II is too late in time to be associated with this bass from the looks of its age. The Pinto book does not mention J.B. but the earlier Henley book does (not Jalovec!). Also, it's mentioned that J.B. trained in Cremona and dated his instruments as if made there. It could be possible that J.B. IS actually Juan/Johannes and just anti-dated some of his instruments upon returning from Italy, possibly Turin or Naples. It is not uncommon to see makers anti-dating their work or place of making for profit or whatever. It is also possible that for some reason, his name was left out of the book as no single book is perfect. If Pinto believed J.B.'s labels as being an Italian maker, then he may have left him out of the Spanish listings. The Spanish school being of less importance than other parts of Europe may also be to blame for the lack of research we see as compared to other schools of making. In reading the elder dated J.B. as compared to Juan I, the description of work of J.B. fits more along the lines of my Bass as his Violins (I think) are described as having fine wood and wide purfling as well as a similar varnish color to my bass. This could fit a thousand other makers but between these two, I go with the earlier by description. Compare this on line copied from Henley as compared to the Link from the Pinto book; "GUILLAMI, JUAN (1) Worked at Barcelona, 1720-1765. Pretty outline based on Stradivarian principles - sometimes reminiscent of a Gagliano. Arching of medium height. General style quite of Italian traits which he had imbued during several years’ sojourn in that country. Said to have been A pupil of Guadagnini. Had no plastic mind to control his somewhat erratic portrayal of a scroll, this being altogether of weak conception, thickly built but of narrow proportions. Ridges of volute marked with Indian ink. Ribs rather deep. Measurements: Body length, 35-1/2 cm.; upper bouts, 16.7; middle, 10.8; lower, 20.7. Belly wood always of close and strong fibre. Reddish shade of oil varnish, but not particularly supple. ’Cellos of fair Stradivarian design, well-calculated arching, and golden red varnish. Also several much sought for double-basses. ----------------------------- Joannes Guillami me fecit en Bar: anno 1760 ----------------------------- -------------------------------- Joannes Guillami me fecit en Barcelona 1742 -------------------------------- Branded near sound-post. £450, 1959. GUILLAMI, JUAN (2) Son of the preceding. Worked at Barcelona, 1767. Died 1820. Similar style to that of father, but a defined line of demarcation rests between the workmanship, wood, and varnish. Wood often carelessly chosen, particularly that for the tops. Varnish rather brittle and chippy. Also ’cellos and double-basses. £300, 1959. --------------------------------------- Joannes Guillami filius fecit Barcinone anno 1768" |
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Note: JB Guillami is listed in Henley but the edited book on line does not list him. http://www.ricercare.com/research/library/dictionary/g_contents.html s_ or a or g or whatever letter you like. I am surprised that site does not credit their source. After reading a few of the makers, I looked them up in Henley and found it's a copy! |
Only crappy pics to compare with, but FWIW I think the outline, ff placement and neck block of the bass shown above are very similar to the cornerless bass on page 116 of Elgar's book.
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The basses with less curve have more long continuous grains of wood in the top and back plates having wider center bouts which contributes to the sound. |
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