Renaissance and Baroque guitars
are the gracile ancestors of the modern classical and flamenco guitar. They are
substantially smaller, more delicate in construction, and generate less volume.
The strings are paired in courses as in a modern 12-string guitar, but they
only have four or five courses of strings rather than six single strings
normally used now. They were more often used as rhythm instruments in ensembles
than as solo instruments, and can often be seen in that role in early music
performances. (Gaspar Sanz's Instrucción de Música sobre la Guitarra Española
of 1674 contains his whole output for the solo guitar.) Renaissance and Baroque
guitars are easily distinguished because the Renaissance guitar is very plain
and the Baroque guitar is very ornate, with ivory or wood inlays all over the
neck and body, and a paper-cutout inverted "wedding cake" inside the
hole.
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