Sharpsichord

Musical instrument From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Sharpsichord is a musical instrument created by Henry Dagg in Faversham, Kent.[1] It is a pin-barrel harp or Stroh Harpsichord that plays music using a system of pegs, like a music box.[2][3] The pegs slot into a grid of 11,520 holes[1] to program songs onto a 46-string harp using a chromatic scale of almost 4 octaves from C2 to A5 (the 47th Lever activates dampers for the lowest strings when changing Chords).[4] The harp is then amplified by a pair of large horns very akin to a Stroh violin which also uses Horns to amplify its sound.[1][4] The instrument can also be played more traditionally using a keyboard.[4] The Sharpsichord is solar-powered and can play 90 seconds of music at a time.[5][4][6] It is made of stainless steel and weighs 2,500 kilograms (5,500 lb) altogether.[4][7] Dagg has stated that the Sharpsichord is intended as a tribute to Cecil Sharp, a collector of folk music.[4]

Classification Chordophone
InventorHenry Dagg
Developed21st century
Quick facts String instrument, Classification ...
Sharpsichord
Henry Dagg and the Sharpsichord at TEDxArendal, Norway, 2016
Photo: Birgit Fostervold
String instrument
Classification Chordophone
InventorHenry Dagg
Developed21st century
Musicians
Björk
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It took around four years for Dagg to create the Sharpsichord after he was enabled to do so following a commission from the English Folk Dance and Song Society in 2006.[1] The society asked Dagg to create a trio of instruments to use in a "sound garden" following a grant from the Big Lottery Fund.[3][5] Dagg only produced one instrument: the Sharpsichord.[4] Due to the Sharpsichord being perishable it was not able to be used in the garden and Dagg later had to refund the money.[7][5] The instrument took a total of £90,000 to build. The Sharpsichord was used by Björk on her Biophilia tour for the song Sacrifice.[7][8][4][6][9][10][11]

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