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Inline chromatic harp

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An inline chromatic harp is a harp where the strings for all 12 chromatic notes of the octave are placed in one row (the same way strings are placed on a standard concert harp), as opposed to their being placed in two or three (parallel or crossing) courses.

At least one example of a harp with two parallel inline chromatic courses has also been produced.

Single course inline chromatic harps have been produced for at least the past 110 years: in 1902 Karel Weigel of Hanover (Germany) patented a model of inline chromatic harp. He built at least one 54 string (4 octaves and a fourth) model which is now housed in the Deutsches Museum (Munich).

A disadvantage of inline chromatic harps is that glissandi can only be performed chromatically.

References

  1. Philippe Clément's double inline chromatic harp
  2. Karl Weigel's patent (with patent text and drawings)
322: Harps
322.1: Open
322.11: Arched Harp
322.12: Angular harp
322.2: Frame
322.21: w/o tuning
322.22: w/ tuning
Other


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