Difference between revisions 901148339 and 921959241 on enwiki

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}
{{short description|Musical instrument}}
{{See also|Guitarrón mexicano}}

[[Image:Guitarronero001.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Playing guitarrón chileno]]

The '''Guitarrón Chileno''' (literally: "large Chilean guitar") is a guitar-shaped [[plucked string instrument]] from [[Chile]], with 25 or 24 (rarely) strings. Its primary contemporary use is as the instrumental accompaniment for the traditional Chilean genre of singing poetry known as ''Canto a lo Poeta'&(contracted; show full)orld music", and in the revival of traditional folk music forms has led to increased interest in the instrument in more urban areas and contemporary musical settings.  The Guitarrón Chileno is mainly used to accompany ''el Canto a lo Poeta'' (the Poet Singing), an old Chilean folk genre that combines [[décima]] (a ten-line poetic form) and ''[[payada]]'' (improvisation).<ref>[https://es.wikisource.org/wiki/El_Canto_del_Poeta El Canto del Poeta]</ref>
     The music embraces two main groups of themes: ''Canto a lo Divino'', lit. "''Singing to the Divine''" (solemn, religious, more prepared themes)<ref>[https://tradicionoraldelinares.webnode.cl/decimas/canto-a-lo-divino/ Canto a lo Divino]</ref> and ''Canto a lo Humano'', lit. "''Singing to the Human''" (humorous, amorous, and social criticism themes).<ref>[https://tradicionoraldelinares.webnode.cl/decimas/canto-a-lo-humano/ Canto a lo Humano]</ref>   This instrument is also used to perform in other musical forms like [[cueca]]s, tonadas, [[Vals Criollo|valses]] and [[polka]]s.<ref>[http://stringedinstrumentdatabase.110mb.com/g.htm The Stringed Instrument Database]</ref>

== Design and construction ==
As with most relatives of the guitar, the guitarrón chileno is constructed of wood and the same major sections may be distinguished in its construction:

* Head/Headstock:  Heavy and very long, it is sized to give support to the 20-21 primary strings with their respective tuners.  The headstock is sometimes decorated with carvings.
* Tuners:  Older instruments used [[Tuning peg|friction peg]] tuners similar to those found on violins, but modern instruments usually employ geared tuning machines similar to those used on modern classical guitars.  These are mounted in a slotted setup similar to that on classical guitars, but there are three slots for tuners, as opposed to the usual two.
* Neck/Fingerboard:  This is wider than the standard guitar (ca. 6.5-7.5&nbsp;cm), and frequently is fitted with only 8 frets, although some modern models are fully fretted with 18 or 19 frets like a modern classical guitar.  Originally the frets were movable cords of gut, similar to the frets employed on Renaissance lutes, but modern instruments use metal frets like those found on guitars.<ref>Pinkerton, Emily Jean; ''The Chilean Guitarrón'': ''The Social, Political and Gendered Life of a Folk Instrument''; Dissertation, Uni(contracted; show full)

[[Image:Guitarron encordadura01.jpg|thumb|A close-up of the string arrangement.]]
* Strings:  The string arrangement may be seen where strings pass over the sound hole of the guitarrón in the illustration.  Current general practice is to use strings of metal (generally steel) both plain and wound; on historical instruments metal, gut, and nylon were often mixed, even within a single [[course (music)|course]].<ref>Ibid. ''Pinkerton'',
   p. 21, ''et seq.''.</ref>   These strings are grouped in courses of various numbers of strings.  Five courses pass over the fingerboard, and each of these courses has usually either six, five, four, or three strings in it.  The contemporary standard is to group the strings in courses of 5, 6, 4, 3, and 3 (from low to high), but there is also some variation among models.  Thus for some instruments the number of strings in a particular course may differ from this standard, though the total number of strings will remain 24 or 25.<ref(contracted; show full)y, tunings are confined to a range which favors the male voice, as most ''guitarroneras'' were, until quite recently, male.  Modern female ''guitarroneras'' have mostly devised new playing patterns on the "male" instrument, but a few makers have been experimenting with novel stringing that allow the instrument to be tuned up to C or D, to better accommodate a female vocal range.<ref>Op cit. ''Pinkerton'', p. 231, ''et seq
.''.</ref><ref>Done primarily by switching from metal to nylon strings.  To tune a metal-strung instrument to C or D would put excessive tension on the bridge. As of yet there
are no metal-strung instruments in a woman’s key.  In 2000, Anselmo Jaramillo designed a guitarrón for women that has smaller dimensions and smaller courses of strings (3 per course, plus 4 diablitos for a total of 19 strings) to facilitate playing; as of 2007 only two such instruments had been made. ''Pinkerton'', p. 231.</ref>

== Playing ==
The traditional playing method for the guitarrón chileno is to pluck the strings with the finger tips and nails of the right hand.  Typically only the thumb and index finger are employed, especially in the ''payada'' styles.  The left hand frets strings on the fingerboard in a manner similar to that of the guitar and other guitar-like instruments.

== Notable players ==
* [[Hugo Arévalo]]
* [[Marcello Navarro Francke]]<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lslk1ljOtis Marcelo Navarro Francke - Documental Pirque]</ref>
* [[Nicolás Membriani]]<ref>[http://www.cadena3.com/contenido/2017/01/09/Nicolas-Membriani-se-lucio-con-sus-increibles-payadas-175828.asp Nicolás Membriani se lució con sus increíbles payadas]</ref>
* [[Alfonso Rubio Morales]]<ref>Ibid., Pinkerton.</ref><ref>[http://www.mus.cl/entrevista.php?fId=109 Alfonso Rubio, guitarronero de Pirque]</ref>
* [[Santos Rubio Morales]]<ref>Ibid., Pinkerton</ref><ref>[http://www.mus.cl/entrevista.php?fId=109 Alfonso Rubio, guitarronero de Pirque]</ref>
* [[Manuel Sánchez (musician)|Manuel Sánchez]]<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IP9nvu-4_S4 Manuel Sánchez - Clase Magistral de Guitarrón Chileno]</ref> 
* [[Nano Stern]] 
* [[Osvaldo Chosto Ulloa]]<ref>[http://www.memoriachilena.cl/602/w3-article-128683.html Osvaldo "Don Chosto" Ulloa (1936-2010)]</ref>

== Notes ==

{{reflist}}

== References ==
* {{cite book
| author = Acevedo, Antonio H.
| title = Los Cantores Populares Chilenos
| year = 1933
| publisher = Nascimento, Santiago de Chile
| id =
}}
* {{cite book
| author = Chaparro, Moisés
| title = El Guitarrón Chileno
| year = 2005
| publisher = AGENPOCH
| id =
}}
* {{cite book
|author1=Bustamante, Juan |author2=Astorga, Francisco | title = Renacer del Guitarrón Chileno
| year = 1996
| publisher  = AGENPOCH
| id =
}}
* {{cite book
| author = Lenz, Rodolfo
| title = Sobre la poesía popular impresa de Santiago de Chile
| year = 1894
| publisher = Memorias Científicas i Literarias
| id =
}}
* {{cite book
| author = Lizana, Desiderio
| title = Cómo se canta la poesía popular
| year = 1912
| publisher = Revista de folklore chileno, tomo IV
| id =
}}
* {{cite thesis
|type=Ph.D.D
|last=Pinkerton
|first=Emily J.
|dateyear=2007
|title=The Chilean Guitarrón: The Social, Political and Gendered Life of a Folk Instrument
|publisher=University of Texas at Austin
}}

== External links ==
*[http://theguitar-blog.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/the-chilean-chitarron.pdf The Chilean Guitarrón: The Social, Political and Gendered Life of a Folk Instrument]
*[http://www.payadoreschilenos.cl/media/publicaciones/guitarron_chileno.pdf El guitarrón chileno]
*[https://www.academia.edu/1516709/El_Guitarr%C3%B3n_chileno_como_Patrimonio_cultural Ensayo sobre Patrimonio: El guitarrón chileno]
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HCMMfsB02so Guitarronero playing "la común" (intonation)]
*[http://www.funjdiaz.net/museo/ficha.php?id=117 Instrumentos Musicales en los Museos de Urueña]


{{Guitars}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Guitarron chileno}}
[[Category:Guitar family instruments]]
[[Category:Chilean musical instruments]]