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Bach is Back
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University of Edinburgh
For more information on the Acoustics and Fluid Dynamics Group at the University of Edinburgh
University of Edinburgh
Read the abstracts from the recent Musical Acoustics Network Summer Meeting at the University of Edinburgh
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Bach is Back

The Lituus
It is often said that ‘the past is a foreign country’, but increasingly science enables us to bring the past to life. When the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis, from Basle in Switzerland were looking to recreate a long-lost instrument to be played in a performance of Bach, they contacted  the Acoustics and Fluid Dynamics group at the University of Edinburgh.  Software developed by researcher Dr Alistair Braden while studying for his Ph. D (supervised by Professor Murray Campbell) would enable them to design the ‘Lituus’, which no one had heard, played, or even seen a picture of.

French Horn © Carlos Martinez - iStockphoto

Testing out designs
‘The software,’ explains Dr Braden, ‘was a tool for designing and optimising brass instruments. It’s intended to be used not just for historical instruments but for modern instruments as well, manufacturers will be able to use it to help refine their existing designs.’ The major benefit of the software is that it allows users to test the shapes of instruments without the time and expense of building them. Designers can quickly try out new designs, with the software creating the correct pitch and tone required. The facility to change the design quickly was important for this project. ‘When the Swiss conservatory got in touch,’ says Braden, ‘they wanted to do as authentic a performance of this Bach piece as possible. They didn’t know exactly what the instrument was, but they had a reasonable idea of what they wanted the instrument to look and sound like.’

Exact replicas
The software allowed them to refine the design, ‘without having to go through a lengthy trial and error process of building lots of prototypes and refining them.’ Fascinatingly the final design could actually have been made in the time of Bach. The SCB built two replica pine instruments, each two and half metres long. ‘If you think of modern instruments like a trombone or a French Horn they are actually pretty much the same length. But because they are either coiled up, have bends in them, or bend back on themselves, they look a lot shorter. This instrument is straight and when you hold it out in front of yourself it looks enormous.’ The software isn’t just about recreating the past, the ease with which it can design instruments means contemporary musicians of all genres can easily create customised instruments.
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