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Schubinger and the Lute

Markus Grassl

It was not uncommon around 1500 for a wind player to also master string instruments, particularly the lute (reflecting a general development of the time, namely the gradual dissolution of the boundary between “loud” and “soft” instruments). Several musicians, including Schubinger’s brothers Michel and Ulrich the Younger or Giovanni Cellini, were known to play the lute, harp, and/or “viola” in addition to wind instruments.[14]

Schubinger’s lifetime coincided with a phase in which lute technique underwent a fundamental change: the transition from playing with a plectrum to plucking the strings with the fingertips. This innovation promoted the establishment of the lute as a solo instrument on which an individual could perform polyphonic pieces.[15]. Until then, the lute was typically played in ensembles. From around 1450, it was found particularly in combination with another “soft” string instrument, preferably a second lute. Clearly, the new practice did not abruptly replace the older one. Rather, we can assume a long transition period during which both variants coexisted. There is evidence that Schubinger practiced both the older and the newer forms of lute playing. He belonged to an older generation of lutenists under Maximilian, along with Albrecht Morhanns, who was also born around 1460. Morhanns is known to have performed in ensembles. By contrast, the lute intabulations of Adolf Blindhamer, born around 1480 and employed by Maximilian since 1503, testify to the new, soloistic playing of polyphonic pieces.[16] Additionally, during the 1480s and 1490s, and occasionally after 1500, lute duos in Maximilian’s service are documented.[17] The depiction of the Triumphzug titled “Musica süeß Meledey” shows the typical combination of small and large lutes (» I. Ch. “Musica süeß Meledey”: Instrumental Ensembles). Schubinger’s possible involvement in a lute duo might be indicated by the fact that in 1508, he—described as “luytslager vanden keysere” (lutenist of the emperor)—received a payment from the city of Mechelen, alongside “Lenaert luytslager”, who frequently travelled in Maximilian’s entourage and was later at the court of Philip the Handsome and Margaret of Austria.[18]

[14] See Polk 1989a, 496, 500, and 502; McGee 2000, 215; Prizer 1981, 163; further examples in Polk 1989c, 526–527, 542–543; Polk 1990, 196–197; McGee 2005, 149–150; McGee 2008, 210–212.

[15] Although polyphonic lute playing was possible to some extent with plectrum technique. See Lewon 2007. Cf. » Instrumentenmuseum Laute.

[18] B-Baeb Algemeen Rijksarchief / Archives générales du Royaume, V132–41287 (Stads Rekeningen Mechelen 1507/1508), fol. 211r. For Lenaert (or “Lionhardt”) see the references in Polk 1992b, 86–87; Polk 2001a, 93–94; Polk 2005a, 64 and 66.