The gusli is one of the oldest musical instruments that have played an important role in the Russian music culture. The Greek historians Theofilact and Theophan were the first to mention the gusli: Under the war in the end of the 6th Century, the Greeks took Slavonic prisoners and found a musical instrument named the gusli. This corresponds to what the Arabic authors Al-Masudi and Ibn-Dasta told in the 10th Century.
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In the slavonic publications, you find descriptions of the Russian folkinstrument the gusli in the beginning of the 12th - 13th Century. The instrument is described as an easy 5 stringed box made of wood. These strings were tuned like this: A, C, E, G, A. It was played like this: the strings that were not to be used were muted with the left hand, and a playstick was placed in the right hand. The playstick was used to press the rest of the open strings. The gusli was only used as accompaniment to the song and especially to the travelling scalds who used their songs to tell about the antiquity and to praise the princes and their relations. Little by little, more strings were put on the gusli - 10 then 13 - and the way of playing was changed. You began to use the harp method. |
In the 18th Century, guslis standing on legs were built in Saint Peterburg. Later, the number of strings were increased with up to 3-4 octaves with cromatic tuning. The gusli has its zenith in the 18th - 19th Century. The instrument is to be found in many homes and it is used at rehearsals of church choirs. There are several very good performers. The most famous among them were the gusli players Manjkovskij and Trutovskij who was playing at the Royal Court. Furthermore, there are schools for gusli music. In the last part of the 19th Century, the gusli music is replaced by pianoes, and the last gusli virtuoso Vodovozoff died in 1910.
The founder of the Balaika Orchestra, V. Andrejeff, reconstructed the gusli in 1890 and equipped the instrument with a keyboard and a mechanic in order to make it easier to play on. However, he preserved the caracteristics by the gusli. The way of playing and the timbre are the same as in the old instruments and the mechanical gusli - also named the keyboardgusli is a genuine Russian folkinstrument.
Except from a few changes, the Russian gusli has spread to other people - the Kanteles in Finland, the Kuakles in Lithuania, the Gysseles at the Tatars, and the Kannels in Estonia.
(Source: O. Nikitina, Moscow 1960 told in "Balalajka Blade" number 3 publiced by Evgeni Pavlovski, Copenhagen 1964).