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  HARP  

  The harp is a chordophone (stringed musical instrument) consisting of a 
 set of parallel strings stretched between a resonator and a neck that are
 joined together at one end.                                                  
   
  The plane of the strings is perpendicular to the resonator; by contrast,
 the strings of the other major categories of chordophones (lutes, lyres, and
 zithers), run parallel to the resonator. Harps of antiquity and primitive
 cultures are generally pillarless; on the other hand, the frame harp, which
 has been favored by European musicians, has a pillar that braces the open end
 of the angle formed by the resonator and  neck. This arrangement allows for a
 greater string tension and, consequently, a higher pitch relative to size.   
    
  The modern orchestral harp stands approximately 170 cm high (5.5 ft) and
 has the largest range in the orchestra: more than 5 1/2 octaves (the lowest
 note is C flat below the bass staff). Its structure consists of a tapering,
 hollow body covered with a thin soundboard (the resonator), a doubly curved
 neck that carries the tuning pins, and a straight, hollow pillar. At the base
 of the harp are seven pedals, one  for each degree of the diatonic scale.
 rotating pronged discs placed under the strings on the neck, enable the
 player to raise the pitch of all of the strings for each degree of the scale
 either a semitone (pedal at half hitch activating discs in the first row) or
 a whole tone (pedal fully depressed activating discs in the second row);  the
 instrument is thus totally chromatic (a sequence of notes proceeding by
 semitones). The harp is strung in gut or nylon in the upper and middle
 registers. The bass strings are of overspun wire.                            
    
  Pillarless arched harps (in which the neck is merely a curved extension of
 the resonator) and angular harps (in which the neck is a separate part
 attached at one end to the resonator) were prevalent in ancient Egypt and
 Mesopotamia. Although known to the Greeks, the harp was eclipsed in classical
 times by instruments of the LYRE family. The frame harp is believed to have
 come into Europe from a northern, possibly  Ugro-Finnic, source and appears
 to have been developed early, particularly by the Irish. The short medieval
 harp with outcurving pillar so widely represented in iconography from the 8th
 century on was supplanted from about the mid-15th century by the much
 narrower Gothic harp with a nearly straight pillar, indicating increased
 string tension. Attempts to provide chromatic tones were made from the 16th
 strings. In the late 17th century the hook harp emerged; when metal hooks
 that were set into the neck near the tuning pins were turned, they pressed
 against the strings and raised the pitch by a semitone. Development of
 various pedal mechanisms during the 18th century resulted ultimately in the
 patent granted to Sebastien Erard in 1810 for the modern double  action pedal
 system. Although the harp had fallen into disuse, except as a novelty
 instrument, long before the development of the orchestra of the classical
 period, the chromatic flexibility offered by the pedal harp along with an
 increasing thirst for orchestral color made the harp increasingly appealing
 to composers in the 19th century. As a result, the harp became a regular
 member of the orchestra of Berlioz,  Wagner, and Tchaikovsky. NICHOLAS RENOUF
                                                                              
  Bibliography: Rensch, Roslyn, The Harp (1969); Rimmer, Joan, The Irish
 Harp (1969).                                                                 
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