A kitharode (Latinized citharode)[a][2] (Ancient Greek: κιθαρῳδός [kitʰarɔː'dós] and κιτηαρῳδός;[3] Latin: citharoedus) or citharist,[1] was a classical Greek professional performer (singer) of the cithara, as one who used the cithara to accompany their singing. Famous citharodes included Terpander, Sappho, and Arion.
Occupation | |
---|---|
Synonyms | kitharist (citharist)[a] |
Occupation type | professional performer |
Activity sectors | self-accompanied musical performance |
Description | |
Competencies | singing, strummed string instrument (lyre family),[b] music theory, music notation[c] |
Related jobs | Aulete / aulist (aulos player, "piper") |
"Citharoedus" or "Citharede" was also an epithet of Apollo (Apollo Citharede), and the term is used to refer to statues which portray Apollo with his lyre.
See also
edit- Relevant musical instruments
- Related type of statuary
Footnotes
edit- ^ a b c There are an elaborate variety of spellings, each altered to pronounce correctly in different languages, and to incorporate partial translations; since there is no modern form of kithara, that is typically left un-translated. (Strictly speaking, kitharoedos / citharoedus translates to "zitherist", but that seems to never be used.) Variants include:
- Ancient Greek: κιθαρῳδός [kitʰarɔː'dós]
- ^
A kitharode would automatically be expected to be able to also play a barbiton, lyre, and phorminx, provided it was a version with the same number of strings as the standard kithara.
- ^
It is unclear how far back Greek musical notation goes. It may have only been a competency of kitharodes during the late classical period; from some point, both kitharodes and auletes would have required to simultaneously read two separate systems of notation: One for instrumental music and the other for sung music.
References
edit- ^ a b "citharist". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
- ^ "citharode". Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World.
- ^ Lewis, Charlton T.; et al. (eds.). "citharoedus". An Elementary Latin Dictionary.