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If you can get past the tourists, there’s plenty of space to find monastery ruins, a crumbling Roman aqueduct, and the remains of a Medieval ironworks, among other things. These have ended up becoming quite important to me, again due to the experiences of the landscapes, and la Costiera Amalfitana was no exception. It’s a beautiful instrument, in my humble opinion, and as I have no piano at my disposal, it should help me out quite a bit when I’m writing stuff that I have to figure out more complex harmonies for.īut back to the trip. It features a bowlback design, which sounds brighter and more resonant, and it plays more delicately. The Neapolitan instrument is a much older design, and probably the image that would come to mind when you think of a mandolin (if an image comes to mind at all – it’s okay, I’ve had folks call my American instrument a banjo before). But my American mandolin is of the archtop variety, which tends to be warmer and muted, and distinctly American. The time invested in learning to play the violin, however, prepared me well to pick up a mandolin just for fun as the instruments share a tuning pattern. Back stateside, I played violin and piano for a decade give or take before deciding that I wanted to commit to composition instead. (It was actually shipped to me from Catania, another prominent instrument-producing city. I’m proud to say that as of this week I am the owner of a brand-new mandolino in stilo Napoletano. While I didn’t have time to visit the luthiers in person, Napoli happens to be a hotbed of instrument-making, particularly for mandolins.
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I spearheaded a weekend trip which flurried through Napoli, Sorrento, Positano, Agerola, Amalfi, and Salerno, and which probably featured as much time walking/hiking from place to place as was spent on the buses and trains involved. I would have been prudent to mention in my last post some of the musical experiences I encountered on the Basilicata trip, which included an excursion to la Casa Cava and its famed hall nei sassi (underground) and a walk through a narrow street past the conservatorio named for famed film composer Nino Rota, where the sounds of a practicing clarinetist filled the air from above.īut I digress, because this post is going to be a little more about the region of Campania.