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  1. The folk music of England is a tradition-based music which has existed since the later medieval period. It is often contrasted with courtly, classical and later commercial music.

  2. Pages in category "English musical instruments" The following 38 pages are in this category, out of 38 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . Anglo concertina. Birch trumpet. Bladder fiddle. Border pipes. Cittern. Contrabassoon. Cornish bagpipes. Crowdy-crawn. Crwth. Dulcimer. English bagpipes. English concertina. Euphonium. Fiddle.

    • Instruments
    • Fiddle
    • Melodeon
    • Piano Accordion
    • Button Accordion

    Many instruments are traditionally associated with playing English Folk Music – some boast a longer association than others – for instance the pipe and tabor have been used since mediaeval times whilst the concertina was invented in the 1820s. Instruments vary in the range of notes they are capable of making. Some are fully chromatic and able to pl...

    Often tuned identically to a classical violin, it is the technique and style of playing folk music on it that makes it a fiddle. The fiddle has been associated with folk music for many centuries. Recently there has been an increase in popularity of the cello and viola in folk music too.

    The melodeon has a set of bellows with buttons (often in two rows) on the right hand side providing the melody by allowing air through banks of reeds. There are fewer buttons on the left hand side, which provide bass notes and chords. The notes on both sides are different depending on whether the bellows are being pushed or pulled by the player. Me...

    A set of bellows with a piano keyboard on the right hand side, and plenty of buttons offering bass notes and chords on left hand side. All the notes are the same on the push and pull of the bellows. Accordions are fully chromatic.

    A set of bellows with buttons on the right hand side arranged in 3 rows, playing in the keys of B, C and C#. This allows the instrument to be fully chromatic. The notes on this side are different on the push and pull of the bellows. There are buttons on the left hand side, which provide bass notes and chords (as the piano accordion) – and are the s...

  3. Folk music, type of traditional and generally rural music that originally was passed down through families and other small social groups. Typically, folk music, like folk literature, lives in oral tradition; it is learned through hearing rather than reading. It is functional in the sense that it is

  4. 9 de nov. de 2012 · Obviously, most instruments are used to play many different types of music, so it is easier to find folk-related resources for those (such as free-reeds, dulcimers and bagpipes) which are primarily folk instruments.

  5. Which instruments are involved in a folk group? Typical instrumentation for the folk music traditions of the British Isles commonly involves: voice, violin (known as the fiddle in the folk setting), acoustic guitar, flute, whistle, pipes, accordion, melodeon, mandolin, harmonica, and tenor banjo.

  6. A folk instrument is a traditional musical instrument that has remained largely restricted to traditional folk music, and is not usually used in the classical music or other elite and formal musical genres of the culture concerned, though related intruments may be.