While considered subservient to the violin, the bow rose to much greater
importance in the confluence of Tourte, skilled violinists, and the French
Revolution.
Frenchman
Francois Tourte is widely credited with inventing the modern violin bow, in
almost universal use today by violinists of all levels of ability. But given he
worked about 200 years ago (he lived from 1747 till 1835) – while fine
stringed instruments existed before that, including those of the master
Stradivarius, who produced his violins, cellos, and bass instruments in the 17th
and 18th centuries – it begs the question: what came before the Tourte bows?
It turns out
there were different versions of bows, largely used for different styles of
music. According to a scholarly article on Prism/Scholarslab, a crowdsourcing
interpretation website for educators, a shorter version bow (considered French)
was used for dances and other social events; this style had short musical phrasing,
therefore the bow was made for that. Italians preferred a longer bow fit for
longer melodic lines, such as you might hear in a sonata; the Italian
composers’ sonata da chiesa genre, with largo preludes
and an allegro finale, would be a good application of the longer Italian bow.
Tourte
standardized the length of the bow, to 74 to 75 centimeters. But the changes he
brought about did not end there. He used more wood in the tip, a heavier frog
for balance, and he introduced the spreader block. This latter innovation
creates a flat ribbon with the bow hair. The screw and the end of the bow moderates
the hair tension.
Another Tourte
innovation was to use Brazilian pernambuco wood. This type of wood, when
exposed to heat, can be bent to the optimal shape for bowing a stringed
instrument. Previous bows where made by carving wood to the shape rather than a
bent-wood process. And the Tourte bow was bent in the opposite direction than
its predecessors, a concave dip that tightens and extends when pressed
downward.
To be fair, it is
believed that Tourte was coalescing various bow components seen in the works of
other luthiers and archetiers (bow makers) at the time. But from a musical
point of view, he opened up a whole new world for players. Today fine
stringed instrument bows crafted by Tourte himself can be found for sale at
higher-end violin shops.
An historical
anecdote (i.e., not confirmed with scholarly evidence) is that the famed late
18th century violinist, G.B. Viotti was friendly with Tourte.
Viotti’s playing reportedly placed demands on the bow that only a Tourte bow
could deliver.
Another
historical footnote, which might explain why the Tourte bow achieved universal
popularity: The French Revolution of 1789 dissolved the courts of the French
aristocracy. Having lost their patrons, the violinists of the day fled the
country and went on tour to earn a living. Composers that included Beethoven
saw those performers and began writing music for violinists who had a broader
range – all thanks to the Tourte bow.
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