Museum of Multiethnic Musical Instruments "Fausto Cannone"

The Museum of Multiethnic Musical Instruments "Fausto Cannone" is dedicated to music and is located inside the Ex Church of Saint James of the Sword at 75, Via Commendatore Navarra (near the Castle of the Counts of Modica) in Alcamo.

Museum of Multiethnic Musical Instruments "Fausto Cannone"
Established2014
LocationEx Church of Saint James of the Sword, 75 Via Commendatore Navarra, Alcamo
Coordinates37°58′48″N 12°57′59″E
Websitehttp://www.comune.alcamo.tp.it/

History

With the deliberation n° 116 of 23 November 2012, the Town Council of Alcamo, approved the steering motion, with the Councillor professor Antonio Fundarò as the first signatory and proposer, named "Institution Museum of Music Fausto Cannone".

On 23 January 2014 the Municipal Administration approved the deliberation relating to the foundation of the "Museum of the Multiethnic Musical Instruments", later inaugurated in July of the same year.[1] Initially the museum was set in two rooms of the Museum of Contemporary Art of Alcamo inside the Ex Collegio dei Gesuiti, in Piazza Ciullo.

The museum was born thanks to the perseverance of Fausto Cannone (a teacher, poet and singer-songwriter): thanks to his generous donation, they could realize in Alcamo the first ethnical musical Museum existing in Sicily.

Fausto Cannone

The museum was opened thanks to Fausto Cannone's perseverance and desire of this artist to leave a sign of love to his town:[2] Cannone, who died last September, went round the world for 30 years: he got the most strange and original musical instruments, string and wind ones, which are all working and bought in their original countries.[2] At last, this exceptional patrimony, maybe unique in its genre, has its final seat.

Fausto Cannone had received several requests, even by the Palazzo Steri from Palermo, but he preferred to donate these precious instruments to his hometown. He wanted to dedicate this museum to his father Gaspare Cannone who was a journalist, literary critic, anarchist and antifascist: He lived in the United States for many years, but due to his stands in favour of Sacco and Vanzetti, he was arrested and then forced to get back to Italy.[3]

Description and instruments

The Museum hosts 202 instruments coming from Thailand to Tibet, from New Guinea al South America, from Polynesia to China, from Australia to Argentina, from South Africa to several European countries. Most of them are poor instruments, made with parts of plants and animals, but there are also valuable craft products.[3]

Among the instruments you can see at the museum there are: flutes, cymbals, drums, bagpipes, accordions, trumpets violins, guitars, mandolins, harmonicas.

Here is the list:

Santir, Vietnam
  • Nanga (Congo or Uganda): with a wooden oval box, wholly closed with skin and with a solid handle inserted, with a side series of tuning pegs which serve to stretch the strings made of guts or fibers.

On the nanga they sing and recite slow melodies praising the leaders’ feats

  • Qanun, Egypt: instrument with 78 strings, similar to a trapezoidal citara
  • Kornai, Turkestan
  • Saran,India
  • Pipa,China: instrument with 4 strings belonging to the family of lutes
  • Yùeh ch’in(China): one of the main types of lutes with a short Chinese handle, with a circular box.
  • T'ang-ku (China)
  • Zheng (China)
  • Gender or metallophone, Indonesia.
  • Berimbau or urmwngo (Brasil): a string musical instrument from Africa, which was spread in Brasil after the importation of African slaves during colonialism.[4] Today it is part of the tradition of music of Latin America; it is made up of a wooden bow which stretches a metal string. A dry and hollow pumpkin operates like a sound box. Two models
  • Zither, Austria; string instrument: its strings are stretched over a resonator like in the psaltery. Two models
  • Kantele, Finland; instrument with 5 strings, linked by a wooden handle dug to the body and opened in the lower part.
  • Gusle, (ex-Jugoslavia): popular instrument with a single string used in Balkans, deriving from the byzantine lyra.

See also

References

Sources

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