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  2. Mandolin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandolin

    Other American-made variants include the mandolinetto or Howe-Orme guitar-shaped mandolin (manufactured by the Elias Howe Company between 1897 and roughly 1920), which featured a cylindrical bulge along the top from fingerboard end to tailpiece and the Vega mando-lute (more commonly called a cylinder-back mandolin manufactured by the Vega ...

  3. Algerian mandole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algerian_mandole

    The Algerian mandole is a stringed instrument, with an almond shaped body, built in a box like a guitar, but almond shaped like the mandola with a flat back, raised fingerboard, and wide neck (as a guitar's). [2] It can have eight, ten, or twelve strings in doubled courses, and may have additional frets between frets to provide quarter tones.

  4. Bluegrass mandolin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluegrass_mandolin

    Most bluegrass mandolin players choose one of two styles. Both have flat or nearly flat backs and arched tops. The so-called a-style mandolin has a teardrop-shaped body; the f-style mandolin is more stylized, with a spiraled wooden cone on the upper side and a couple of points on the lower side.

  5. Octave mandolin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octave_mandolin

    Octave mandolin construction is similar to the mandolin: The body may be constructed with a bowl-shaped back according to designs of the 18th century Vinaccia school, or with a flat (arched) back according to the designs of Gibson Guitar Corporation, popularized in the United States in the early 20th century.

  6. Mandobass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandobass

    The Pagani model was also one of the few eight-string mando-basses made in the US, with four double-strung courses like the European tremolo bass. Vega produced both a flat-back and a humped-back mando-bass (known as a "cylinder back"), both with a generally mandolin-shape in outline, but with markedly pointed upper bouts.

  7. Mandocello - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandocello

    The scale of the mandocello is longer than that of the mandolin. Gibson examples have a scale length of 24.75" (62.87 cm) but flat-back designs have appeared with both significantly shorter and longer scale lengths (27"/68.58 cm on some Vega mandocellos). Bowl-back instruments may have a shorter scale length, on the order of 22.5" (about 57 cm).

  8. History of the mandolin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_mandolin

    When the word "mandolin" is said in the 21st century, it usually refers to an instrument with 8 strings tuned in fifths, such as the Neapolitan mandolin or the American bluegrass mandolin. It is also commonly thought that mandolino is a diminutive of mandola, and that therefore the mandolino was a smaller development of the mandola.

  9. List of transposing instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_transposing...

    This is a list of transposing instruments and their transposition. Transposing instruments are instruments for which the convention is to write music notation transposed relative to concert pitch . Instrument family