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Multiscale Fretboards and Fingerboards: The Long and Short of It

Multiscale Fretboards and Fingerboards: The Long and Short of It

by Harry Fleishman

Originally published in American Lutherie #119, 2014



The idea of using a longer scale for low-ptiched strings and a shorter one for high-pitched strings goes back centuries. The earliest harps employed this concept and, of course, pianos and harpsichords are all graduated-scale-length instruments.

The earliest fretted instrument I’ve found employing this concept is the orpharion from the 17th century, pictured in this advertisement for a book of “tabliture.” How popular the instrument was I cannot say; but books containing “fundrie forts of leffons” were apparently “fold at his shop... in Gracious ftreet.” (Why shop, not fhop?)

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