Folk culture in Carinthia – Today we’re going to be bang on the kettles!

The kettledrum made it from the battlefield to churches and orchestras. Special examples of the Arabic instrument were discovered in a Friesach attic.

With timpani and trumpets into the new year! This is the motto for some New Year’s concerts, and the instrument also emphasizes happy events in the Bible; For example, the liberation of the people of Israel after their exodus from Egypt: Miriam beat the drum and danced in front of them, it says in a song. Psalm 150 calls out: Praise him with timpani and dance! Military use The stately kettledrums and trumpets came to Europe with the Crusades and the Moors from Asia and the Orient and were transformed from a military to a liturgical instrument. In the Millstatt Monastery, in the inventory of instruments from 1774, in addition to “2 old unusable horns” and “2 broken trombones”, five trumpets and 2 kettledrums can also be found. In Friesach there were “1 organ, 4 violins including bows, 1 violon, 1 viol, 4 trumpets and 2 timpani” – these two baroque instruments were discovered in the attic of the parish church in 2005. Timpani were discovered in Friesach. “It began like Grimmschen Fairy tale: My friend and director of ‘Musica Claudiforensis’ Ingomar Mattitsch, the librarian couple Uta and Rudolf Henning from Ludwigsburg and I have these two timpani, which are unique for Carinthia, in the attic of the parish and provost church of St. Bartholomä in Friesach during our annual music iconographic research discovered in the late 18th century; in an extremely deplorable condition ”, reports Gerfried Horand people in“ KulturLandMenschen ”of the Landsmannschaft (09/10 2021). According to the former diocesan curator Eduard Mahlknecht, the funnel above the opening in the bottom of the kettle, which amplifies the vibrations, is rare. Reinhard Toriser, the Carinthian solo timpani at the Komische Oper Berlin and expert on historical timpani, advised on the covering and manufacture of the supports. The instruments were not played again until the summer of 2017, but those who are not musical can still hit the drum, i.e. party lively. Happy New Year!
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