Tenor tromba marina (2018)—8” x 9” x 52”
1/4" plywood, oak, mahogany, maple, pine, piano pin, zither pins, screws, polyurethane, latex paint, piano wire
The tromba marina (Fr. trompette marine, Ger. marientrompete, nonnengeige) is a Renaissance-era Western European monochord. The name nonnengeige translates to “nun’s violin”, and comes from their use in German convents by nuns who wanted to perform pieces written for brass instruments, but were not allowed to use their lips to play. This instrument features an unbalanced wishbone-shaped bridge, which rattles against the soundboard and is the source of the tromba’s brassy timbre. Trombas are played by depressing the partials of the sounding string, and are traditionally bowed above the fingers.
This tromba uses one sounding string, and a set of nine sympathetic strings mounted underneath the soundboard. The soundboard, back and sides are 1/4" plywood, the neck is oak, and the neck bracing is layered mahogany and pine. The ribs are pine, the pinblock for the sympathetic strings is maple, and the bridge for the sounding string is maple.