I often see mandolins classified as celtic, bluegrass, classical or good or not for irish etc.
What, if any, are the characteristics of those different kind of mandolins?
I often see mandolins classified as celtic, bluegrass, classical or good or not for irish etc.
What, if any, are the characteristics of those different kind of mandolins?
Kentucky KM-805..........2 Hora M1086 Portuguese II(1 in car)
Hora M1088 Mandola.....
Richmond RMA-110..... .Noname Bearclaw
Pochette Franz Janisch...5 Pocket............Alfredo Privitera pocket
Puglisi Pocket 1908........Puglisi 1912.......Puglisi 1917
3 Mandolinetto ..............C.Garozzo
1 Mandriola...................Cannelo G. Mandriola...Böhm Waldzither 1921
Johs Møller 1945............Luigi Embergher Studio 1933
Marma Seashell back......Luigi Embergher 5bis 1909
I would say it's more of a personal preference. Bare in mind that Gibson mandolins arose when classical music was popular and Bluegrass was not yet defined. In Europe people seem to prefer German, Roman, or Neopolitan bowlbacks. In North America the preference seems to be for arch tops ranging from Gibson to Phoenix Neoclassical to Lyon & Healy models A-C. Examples of the various preferences include Caterina Lichtenburg on a German style bowlback; Sebastiaan de Grebber on an Embergher bowlback; and Chris Thile on a Gibson etc. Those mandolins all have different characteristics which speak to the performers individual preference. The same applies to string and pick choice by classical players.
“There are two means of refuge from the miseries of life: music and cats.” ― Albert Schweitzer
1925 Lyon & Healy Model A, #1674
2015 Collings A (MT2-V)
You can play any style of music on any type of mandolin. That said, there are certain tones that are generally thought of as more appropriate for certain styles. F-hole mandolins generally have more "punch" and projection. Bluegrass players usually like that. Oval hole mandolins have a fuller, rounder tone which is often desired for classical and celtic music. Bowl backs have a lighter, brighter tone which classical and Italian musicians often prefer.
Scale length can also make a difference. Flat tops and bowl backs have shorter scale length, which can make some things easier, like playing first position fiddle tunes.
Banjo mandolins are loud and have a very short scale and little sustain, which makes them perfect for Irish traditional music.
I often associate wet tuning with classical mandolins.
-the string pairs are not exactly the same pitch, but have a precise difference.
It can sound beautiful.
From "dry" to "wet(ter)"
Obviously the mndln's palette is more limited.
Last edited by catmandu2; Oct-29-2020 at 9:38pm.
I dig blues, and my oval mando sounds bluesier than my f-hole mando does.
But both sound good for any style I might play.
Also, some genres like specific techniques -- bluegrass likes the chop; celtic uses a lot of open strings and as much sustain as can be acquired so it sounds more like other typical ITM instruments like box or flute or fiddle, choro likes a lighter, ringier sound than some other genres. And each musician tries to get as close as s/he can to the preferred technique for the music being played so they gravitate to instruments that provide that sound. That's not to say you can't play choro on a bowlback or ITM on a carved top f-hole barkmaster, just that some musicians prefer specific types of instruments for the sounds they want to hear.
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1920 Lyon & Healy bowlback
1923 Gibson A-1 snakehead
1952 Strad-o-lin
1983 Giannini ABSM1 bandolim
2009 Giannini GBSM3 bandolim
2011 Eastman MD305
Thanks for this, the last three times someone said it sounded too 'celtic' for them I had no idea what was being said. :-)
Davey Stuart tenor guitar (based on his 18" mandola design).
Eastman MD-604SB with Grover 309 tuners.
Eastwood 4 string electric mandostang, 2x Airline e-mandola (4-string) one strung as an e-OM.
DSP's: Helix HX Stomp, various Zooms.
Amps: THR-10, Sony XB-20.
The only type of mandolin clearly genre specific is the F5 style for bluegrass. That is the only more or less cast in concrete. Classical folks tend to like bowlbacks, but not exclusively - with the super elites playing Kermans. As far as "not good for" I would say that is a myth. Mandolin can do it all.
Directionality is a significant factor. What the audience (or other players) out front are hearing may not be the same as what the person playing hears. When playing in a jam with other mucicians, being able (or unable) to hear one's own instrument can make or break the situation. Some mandolins allow the player to hear much better than others.
True enough that any mandolin will do, but to me old music like “Celtic” tunes sounds way better on a flattop, oval-hole mandolin. The thuddy, airy tone just lends itself to the older music IMO.
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I entirely agree. But I don't attribute that to the mandolin. I think the characteristic creamy tone of the F5, and many Loar Era Gibsons, that bluegrass sound, is so ingrained in my head that it sticks out in any other context. Just from familiarity, it always sounds like a bluegrasser playing traditional Irish.
I am not sure I would feel the same way if I was not saturated with that Gibsony sound.
In a workshop I attended, one of the premier classical mandolinners tried my bluegrasser mandolin, and his reaction was to ask where all the high brilliance had gone. I said it was turned into high lonesome. He just frowned.
Put a F5 or A5 in. my hand and before long bluegrass will mostly be played. Put an F4 or oval in my hand, folk, Irish and gypsy will result. Put my Martin in my hands and English folk comes out. My oval octave leads to gypsy and tommy music. What fun to let an instrument lead you.
Tony Huber
1930 Martin Style C #14783
2011 Mowry GOM
2013 Hester F4 #31
2014 Ellis F5 #322
2017 Nyberg Mandola #172
I've been wanting an oval hole, though have never played one. How are those for classic country, which is primarily what I play, along with classical?
I do everything in wet tuning. But the OM lends itself to it much easier than the mandolin.
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