Dictionary Definition
castanets n : a percussion instrument consisting
of a pair of hollow pieces of wood or bone (usually held between
the thumb and fingers) that are made to click together (as by
Spanish dancers) in rhythm with the dance [syn: bones, clappers, finger
cymbals, maraca]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛts
Noun
- A percussion instrument (idiophone) consisting of a pair of concave shells joined on one edge by a string, held in the hand and used to produce clicking sounds.
Translations
- Czech: kastaněty
- German: Kastagnetten
- French: castagnettes
- Dutch: castagnetten
- Japanese: カスタネット
- Polish: kastaniety
- Portuguese: castanhola
- Romanian castaniete
- Russian: kастаньеты
- Spanish castañuelas
Extensive Definition
- For other uses of Castanet or Castanets, see Castanet (disambiguation).
Castanets are percussion
instrument (idiophone), much used in
Moorish,
Ottoman,
Ancient
Roman, Italian,
Spanish,
Portuguese
and Latin
American music. The instrument consists of a pair of concave
shells joined on one edge by string. These are held in the hand and
used to produce clicks for rhythmic accents or a ripping or
rattling sound consisting of a rapid series of clicks. They are
traditionally made of hardwood, although fibreglass
is becoming increasingly popular.
In practice a player usually uses two pairs of
castanets. One pair is held in each hand, with the string hooked
over the thumb and the castanets resting on the palm with the
fingers bent over to support the other side. Each pair will make a
sound of a slightly different pitch. The
higher pair, known as hembra (female), is usually held in the right
hand, with the larger macho (male) pair held in the left.
Castanets are often played by singers or dancers,
and are prominently used in flamenco music. The name
(Spanish: castañuelas) is derived from the diminutive form of
castaña, the Spanish
word for chestnut,
which they resemble. In Andalusia they
are usually referred to as palillos (little sticks) instead, and
this is the name by which they are known in flamenco.
The origins of the instrument are not known. The
practice of clicking hand-held sticks together to accompany dancing
is ancient, and was practiced by both the Greeks
and the Egyptians.
In more modern times, the bones
and spoons used in
Minstrel
show and jug band music
can also be considered forms of the castanet.
When used in an orchestral setting, castanets
are sometimes attached to a handle, or mounted to a base to form a
pair of machine castanets. This makes them easier to play, but also
alters the sound, particularly for the machine castanets. It is
possible to produce a roll on a pair
of castanets in any of the three ways in which they are held. When
held in the hand, they are bounced against the fingers and palm of
the hand; on sticks, bouncing between fingers and the player's
thigh is one accepted method. For a machine castanet, a less
satisfactory roll is obtained by rapid alternation of the two
castanets with the fingers.
During the baroque
period, castanets are featured prominently in dances. Composers
like Jean-Baptiste
Lully scored them for the music of dances which included
Spaniards (Ballet des Nations), Egyptians (Persée, Phaëton),
Ethiopians (Persée, Phaëton), and Korybantes
(Atys). In addition, they are often scored for dances involving
less pleasant characters such as demons (Alceste) and
nightmares (Atys).
Their association with African
dances is even stated in the ballet Flore (1669) by Lully,
“...les Africains inventeurs des danses de Castagnettes entrent
d’un air plus gai...”
Castanets were used to evoke a Spanish atmosphere
in Georges
Bizet's opera,
Carmen and
Emmanuel
Chabrier's orchestral work España. They are also found in the
"Dance of the Seven Veils" from Richard
Strauss' opera Salome and
in Richard
Wagner's Tannhäuser.
An unusual variation on the standard castanets can be found in
Darius
Milhaud's Les Choëphores, which calls for castanets made of
metal. Other uses include
Rimsky-Korsakov's
Capriccio
espagnol, Ravel's Rapsodie
espagnole and Karl
Jenkins's Tangollen.
A rare occasion where the normally accompanying
instrument is given concertant solo status is Leonardo
Balada's Concertino for Castanets and Orchestra Three Anecdotes
(1977). The "Conciertino für Kastagnetten und Orchester" by the
German composer Helmut M. Timpelan, in cooperation with the
castanet virtuoso, José de Udaeta, is another solo work for the
instrument.
In the late Ottoman empire, köçeks not
only danced but played percussion instruments, especially a type of
castagnette known as
the çarpare, which in later times were replaced by metal cymbals
called zils.
See also
castanets in Arabic: كاستانيت
castanets in Bulgarian: Кастанети
castanets in Catalan: Castanyoles
castanets in Czech: Kastaněty
castanets in German: Kastagnetten
castanets in Modern Greek (1453-):
Καστανιέτα
castanets in Spanish: Castañuelas
castanets in French: Castagnettes
castanets in Italian: Nacchere
castanets in Hebrew: קסטנייטות
castanets in Hungarian: Kasztanyetta
castanets in Dutch: Castagnetten
castanets in Japanese: カスタネット
castanets in Polish: Kastaniety
castanets in Portuguese: Castanhola
castanets in Romanian: Castaniete
castanets in Russian: Кастаньеты
castanets in Finnish: Kastanjetit
castanets in Swedish: Kastanjetter
castanets in Ukrainian: Кастаньєти
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
battery, bells, bones, celesta, chime, chimes, clappers, crash cymbal,
cymbals, finger cymbals,
gamelan, glockenspiel, gong, handbells, idiophone, lyra, maraca, marimba, metallophone, orchestral
bells, percussion,
percussion instrument, percussions, percussive, rattle, rattlebones, sizzler, snappers, tam-tam, tintinnabula, tonitruone, triangle, tubular bells,
vibes, vibraphone, xylophone