Ginislao Paris

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Diedunknown, after 1917
Ginislao Paris
Ginislao Cesare Antonio Paris
Label inside "The Russian Embergher" Liuto Cantabile - Sistema Ginislao Paris
BornMarch 15, 1852
Diedunknown, after 1917
OccupationsTrombonist, Mandolinist

Ginislao Paris (1852 – after 1917) was an Italian composer and musician in the Russian Empire who played trombone with the Russian Imperial Opera Orchestra in St. Petersburg.[1] He also played mandolin, founding the first mandolin orchestra in Russia, The society of amateur Mandolinists and Guitarists in the 1880s.[1] That orchestra was important because it inspired Vassily Andreev, to form the first orchestra based on Russian instruments.[1]

Paris invented a specialized mandolin which was named for him (Sistema Ginislao Paris) and built by the workshops of Luigi Embergher.[1] The Paris Ginislao mandolins feature a double top (a second hollow space within the instrument, created by a false back between the soundboard and the instrument's back).[1] The double top is a feature that mandolin makers are now experimenting with in the 21st century, to get better sound.[2] Mandolinists such as Avi Avital and Joseph Brent use them, and they are custom instruments, today.[3][2]

In 1905, Roman luthier Luigi Embergher made several mandolin family instruments based on Ginislao Paris' own design, featuring double top and special bracing system. Only four instruments of “Sistema Ginislao Paris” forming the mandolin family quartet are known presently. One is an Embergher Artistico mandolin model No. 8, held in the Theatre Museum of St Petersburg.[4][5] Another is a Liuto cantabile (known as the Russian Embergher) of model 5 bis, another mandolin No.5 bis and a mandola model 5 bis, held in private collections.[1]

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