This HTML5 document contains 229 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
dbpedia-dahttp://da.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbthttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Template:
dbpedia-svhttp://sv.dbpedia.org/resource/
wikipedia-enhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
n42https://companyoffifeanddrum.org/
n30http://hy.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbrhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/
n26http://mtcn.free.fr/
dbpedia-frhttp://fr.dbpedia.org/resource/
n41http://digital.nls.uk/
n15http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/
dctermshttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
rdfshttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
n21http://www.luton-lambeg.org/music/
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
n19http://d-nb.info/gnd/
n22http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:
dbphttp://dbpedia.org/property/
dbpedia-gahttp://ga.dbpedia.org/resource/
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
dbohttp://dbpedia.org/ontology/
dbpedia-pthttp://pt.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbchttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:
dbpedia-dehttp://de.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-brhttp://br.dbpedia.org/resource/
yagohttp://dbpedia.org/class/yago/
n37http://www.fifemuseum.com/
wikidatahttp://www.wikidata.org/entity/
goldhttp://purl.org/linguistics/gold/
yago-reshttp://yago-knowledge.org/resource/
n31https://global.dbpedia.org/id/
n16http://www.pfdc.us/
dbpedia-ithttp://it.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-cahttp://ca.dbpedia.org/resource/
provhttp://www.w3.org/ns/prov#
foafhttp://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/
dbpedia-nnhttp://nn.dbpedia.org/resource/
n35https://web.archive.org/web/20051029151208/http:/www.history.org/history/fife%26drum/
freebasehttp://rdf.freebase.com/ns/
dbpedia-eshttp://es.dbpedia.org/resource/
n23http://www.wfg.woodwind.org/tinwhistle/
n43http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/ammu/
dbpedia-iohttp://io.dbpedia.org/resource/
owlhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#

Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Fife_(instrument)
rdf:type
yago:WikicatSwissMusicalInstruments yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:WikicatPortugueseMusicalInstruments yago:Flute103372029 yago:WindInstrument104586932 yago:WikicatSide-blownFlutes yago:MusicalInstrument103800933 yago:WikicatWoodwindInstruments yago:Device103183080 yago:WikicatFrenchMusicalInstruments yago:Woodwind104598582 yago:Object100002684 yago:Instrumentality103575240 yago:Instrument103574816 yago:WikicatGermanMusicalInstruments yago:WikicatAustrianMusicalInstruments dbo:Person yago:WikicatFlutes yago:Artifact100021939 owl:Thing yago:Whole100003553 yago:WikicatMarchingBandInstruments yago:WikicatEarlyMusicalInstruments
rdfs:label
Pífano Fältpipor Fiffaro Fifre Pifre Schwegel Fíf Fife (instrument) Pífano
rdfs:comment
Die (auch „der“) Schwegel (von althochdeutsch suegala, „Schienbeinknochen“) ist seit dem Mittelalter eine einfache Form einer Längsflöte oder Querflöte. Ursprünglich wurden mit Schwegel verschiedene Arten von Einhandflöten (französisch galoubet) bezeichnet, die einhändig zugleich mit einer Trommel (Tabor) gespielt wurden. Heute ist der Name von diesen zylindrischen Kernspaltflöten auf eine einfache hölzerne Querflöte mit sechs Grifflöchern übergegangen. Sie wird in der Volksmusik verwendet. Il fiffaro (talvolta anche "piffero", dal tedesco pfeife) è genericamente un flauto traverso, e in particolare un ottavino privo di tasti, dal suono molto acuto e penetrante, usato prevalentemente dalle bande militari accompagnato da tamburi. Era lo strumento principale di tutte le armate del XVIII e XIX secolo, specialmente delle Giubbe Rosse britanniche. Insieme al tamburo, serviva ad alzare il morale dei soldati e a tenere ordine nella formazione. Nei giorni d'oggi, è usato soltanto nelle parate, tra cui la più famosa, Trooping the Colour. A fife /ˈfaɪf/ is a small, high-pitched, transverse aerophone, that is similar to the piccolo. The fife originated in medieval Europe and is often used in fife and drum corps, military units, and marching bands. Someone who plays the fife is called a fifer. The word fife comes from the German Pfeife, meaning pipe, which comes from the Latin word pipare. Fifes are made primarily of wood, such as blackwood, grenadilla, rosewood, mopane, pink ivory, cocobolo, boxwood, maple, or persimmon. Some fifes are entirely made of metal or plastic. Le fifre est un petite flûte traversière, proche du piccolo mais dépourvue de clé, largement utilisé dans la musique traditionnelle européenne, dans la musique folklorique ainsi que dans certains ensembles militaires occidentaux. Il s'agit d'un instrument à la sonorité aiguë et habituellement joué de manière rapide et rythmée. Le fifre reste de ce fait rattaché à la musique de rue et aux traditions festives populaires de nombreuses régions de France, d'Allemagne, de Suisse et de Belgique, notamment aux aubades, aux défilés de fifres et tambours et à certains carnavals. El pifre, o pífol a Mallorca i Menorca, (de l'alemany pfeiffen, flauta) és un instrument musical de vent fusta. Es tracta d'una petita flauta travessera que toca en registres molt aguts. Durant el Renaixement comencen a desenvolupar-se, a Alemanya i Suïssa, les flautes travesseres. Se'n fan de diverses mides per a obtenir diversos registres. Les flautes de mides més grans van ser ben acollides en l'àmbit de la música culta de manera que van evolucionar cap a l'actual flauta travessera. Per la seva banda, les més petites van tenir molt èxit, pel seu registre agut i estrident, en l'àmbit de la música militar. Fliúit bheag thrasnach ardairde le 6 mhéarpholl agus, i ngléasanna nua-aoiseacha is cuid mhaith seanghléasanna, 6 eochair mhiotalach. In úsáid mar ghléas míleata i gcomhair glaonna is comharthaí, cosúil leis an mbuabhall, agus i mbannaí fífeanna is drumaí i gcomhair máirseála. Pífaro, pífano, pife, pifre ou gaiteiro é uma pequena flauta transversal, aguda, similar a um flautim, mas com um timbre mais intenso e estridente, devido ao seu diâmetro menor. Os pífanos são originários da Europa medieval e são frequentemente utilizados em bandas militares. El pífano es un instrumento musical de viento consistente en una pequeña flauta muy aguda que se toca atravesada. Se cree que fueron los suizos quienes introdujeron el pífano en sus regimientos después de la batalla de Marignano (1515). Lo adoptaron posteriormente los franceses y se extendió luego por otras naciones.​
rdfs:seeAlso
dbr:Gunpowder_warfare
dbp:name
Fife
foaf:depiction
n15:Range_flute.png n15:Silver_fife.jpg n15:Manet,_Edouard_-_Young_Flautist,_or_The_Fifer,_1866_(2).jpg n15:Fife-wooden,_civil_war_era.jpeg n15:MHS_Fife.jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Military_music dbc:Six_tone_hole_wind_instruments dbc:Early_musical_instruments dbc:Blues dbc:Marching_band_instruments dbc:Swiss_musical_instruments dbc:Side-blown_flutes dbc:Portuguese_musical_instruments
dbo:wikiPageID
476923
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1123162997
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbc:Portuguese_musical_instruments dbr:Transposing_instrument dbr:Trooping_of_the_Colour dbr:Buenos_Aires dbr:National_Library_of_Scotland dbr:Piccolo dbr:Mississippi dbr:Relative_key dbc:Military_music dbr:Cocobolo dbr:United_States_Marine_Corps dbr:Fife_and_drum_blues dbr:Junkanoo dbr:Latin dbr:1st_King's_Immemorial_Infantry_Regiment_of_AHQ dbr:Grenadilla dbr:Enfield,_Connecticut dbr:Colonial_history_of_the_United_States dbr:Historical_reenactment dbr:Musical_tuning dbr:Bellows_Falls,_Vermont dbr:Tin_whistle dbr:Military_band dbr:Aerophone dbr:Music_of_Africa dbc:Six_tone_hole_wind_instruments dbr:Irish_flute dbr:Solfège dbr:Regiment_of_Patricians dbr:Brazil dbr:Piano dbr:Mopane n22:Manet,_Edouard_-_Young_Flautist,_or_The_Fifer,_1866_(2).jpg dbr:History_of_slavery_in_the_United_States n22:Silver_fife.jpg dbr:Drum_major_(military) dbr:Ivoryton,_Connecticut dbr:Old_Guard_Fife_and_Drum_Corps n22:MHS_Fife.jpg dbr:Ferrule dbr:Pink_ivory dbr:Artillery dbr:Wind_instrument dbr:Caribbean_music dbr:Germany dbr:Rosewood_(timber) dbr:American_Civil_War dbr:American_Revolutionary_War dbr:Jamaica dbr:Mexican–American_War dbc:Early_musical_instruments dbr:Daegeum dbr:Basel dbr:Western_concert_flute dbr:Chilean_Navy dbr:National_People's_Army dbr:Occitania dbr:Old-time_music dbr:Appalachian_folk_music dbr:3rd_U.S._Infantry_Regiment_(The_Old_Guard) dbr:Renaissance dbr:Maple dbr:Othar_Turner dbr:Bundeswehr_Band_Bonn dbr:Persimmon dbr:Bundeswehr_Military_Music_Service dbr:Bundeswehr_Staff_Band_Berlin dbr:Fife_and_drum_corps dbr:Ancient_Fife_and_Drum_Corps dbr:Chilean_Army dbr:Brazilian_fife dbc:Blues dbr:Woodwind_instrument dbr:Bundeswehr dbr:Octave dbr:Edge-blown_aerophone dbr:Folk-rock dbr:Rhode_Island dbr:Warehouse_Point,_Connecticut dbc:Marching_band_instruments dbr:Switzerland dbr:Bugle dbr:Diatonic dbr:Bansuri dbc:Swiss_musical_instruments dbr:Bamboo dbr:Lambeg_drum dbr:Dalbergia_melanoxylon dbr:Total_chromatic dbr:Noncommissioned_officer dbr:The_Metropolitan_Museum_of_Art dbr:Centerbrook,_Connecticut dbr:Languedoc dbr:Bahamas dbr:Europe dbc:Side-blown_flutes dbr:Celtic_music dbr:War_of_1812 dbr:Chromatic dbr:German_language dbr:Folk_music dbr:Marching_band dbr:Dance dbr:Connecticut dbr:Boxwood_(genus) dbr:Violin dbr:Native_Americans_in_the_United_States
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n16: n21:music_portal.htm n23: n26:mtcn-traditional-music-midi-farandole.php n35:about.cfm n37: n41:94689564 n42: n43:hd_ammu.htm
owl:sameAs
dbpedia-pt:Pífano dbpedia-nn:Marsjfløyte dbpedia-de:Schwegel n19:4607225-1 yago-res:Fife_(instrument) dbpedia-ca:Pifre wikidata:Q2255516 dbpedia-sv:Fältpipor dbpedia-br:Pif freebase:m.02f5t8 n30:Թութակ_(երաժշտական_գործիք) n31:28U1h dbpedia-da:Marchfløjte dbpedia-io:Fifro dbpedia-it:Fiffaro dbpedia-es:Pífano dbpedia-fr:Fifre dbpedia-ga:Fíf
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Music dbt:Authority_control dbt:Reflist dbt:Refimprove dbt:Cite_book dbt:Wikisource1911Enc dbt:Infobox_Instrument dbt:Unreferenced_section dbt:See_also dbt:Convert dbt:Annotated_link dbt:IPAc-en dbt:Frac dbt:Short_description dbt:Citation_needed dbt:Which dbt:English_folk_music dbt:Flutes dbt:Plain_image_with_caption
dbo:thumbnail
n15:Fife-wooden,_civil_war_era.jpeg?width=300
dbp:background
woodwind
dbp:caption
Crosby-style fife made by George and Frederick Cloos
dbp:classification
*Wind *Woodwind *Aerophone *Edge-blown aerophone
dbp:related
* Bansuri *Daegeum *Piccolo *Western concert flute
dbo:abstract
Il fiffaro (talvolta anche "piffero", dal tedesco pfeife) è genericamente un flauto traverso, e in particolare un ottavino privo di tasti, dal suono molto acuto e penetrante, usato prevalentemente dalle bande militari accompagnato da tamburi. Era lo strumento principale di tutte le armate del XVIII e XIX secolo, specialmente delle Giubbe Rosse britanniche. Insieme al tamburo, serviva ad alzare il morale dei soldati e a tenere ordine nella formazione. Nei giorni d'oggi, è usato soltanto nelle parate, tra cui la più famosa, Trooping the Colour. Ha origine nella Svizzera del XIV secolo ed è stato diffuso in tutta Europa dai mercenari svizzeri. Nell'Europa medievale era usato nella tradizione della musica popolare per accompagnare le danze di tutte le classi sociali. El pífano es un instrumento musical de viento consistente en una pequeña flauta muy aguda que se toca atravesada. Se cree que fueron los suizos quienes introdujeron el pífano en sus regimientos después de la batalla de Marignano (1515). Lo adoptaron posteriormente los franceses y se extendió luego por otras naciones.​ Ha sido tradicionalmente un instrumento tocado en infantería acompañado por la caja. Posteriormente, su uso derivó hacia las bandas de música o charangas de los regimientos de infantería, con excepción de las compañías de reales guardias alabarderos de la Guardia Real española que siguen utilizándolo como antiguamente.​ A fife /ˈfaɪf/ is a small, high-pitched, transverse aerophone, that is similar to the piccolo. The fife originated in medieval Europe and is often used in fife and drum corps, military units, and marching bands. Someone who plays the fife is called a fifer. The word fife comes from the German Pfeife, meaning pipe, which comes from the Latin word pipare. The fife is a diatonically tuned instrument commonly consisting of a tube with 6 finger holes and an embouchure hole that produces sound when blown across. Modern versions of the fife are chromatic, having 10 or 11 finger holes that allow any note to be played. On a 10-hole fife, the index, middle and ring fingers of both hands remain in the same positions as on the 6-hole fife, while both thumbs and both pinkies are used to play accidentals. An 11-hole fife has holes positioned similarly but adds a second hole under the right middle finger. Fifes are made primarily of wood, such as blackwood, grenadilla, rosewood, mopane, pink ivory, cocobolo, boxwood, maple, or persimmon. Some fifes are entirely made of metal or plastic. Military and marching fifes have metal reinforcing bands, called ferrules, around the ends to protect them from damage. A fife used in less strenuous conditions may have a lathe-turned, knob-like decoration at the ends for protection. Modern fifes may have two- or three-piece constructions, and may incorporate a sliding tuning joint made of metal or cork. Fifes are most commonly used in Fife and Drum Corps, but can also be found in folk music, particularly Celtic music. Some Caribbean music makes use of fifes, which are usually made from bamboo. El pifre, o pífol a Mallorca i Menorca, (de l'alemany pfeiffen, flauta) és un instrument musical de vent fusta. Es tracta d'una petita flauta travessera que toca en registres molt aguts. Durant el Renaixement comencen a desenvolupar-se, a Alemanya i Suïssa, les flautes travesseres. Se'n fan de diverses mides per a obtenir diversos registres. Les flautes de mides més grans van ser ben acollides en l'àmbit de la música culta de manera que van evolucionar cap a l'actual flauta travessera. Per la seva banda, les més petites van tenir molt èxit, pel seu registre agut i estrident, en l'àmbit de la música militar. A mitjans del segle xvi els soldats suïssos tenien plenament incorporat aquest instrument en les seves bandes, de manera que aviat el pifre va ser conegut arreu d'Europa amb el nom de "flauta suïssa" o, en alemany, schweitzer pfeiffen, d'on deriva el seu nom. Die (auch „der“) Schwegel (von althochdeutsch suegala, „Schienbeinknochen“) ist seit dem Mittelalter eine einfache Form einer Längsflöte oder Querflöte. Ursprünglich wurden mit Schwegel verschiedene Arten von Einhandflöten (französisch galoubet) bezeichnet, die einhändig zugleich mit einer Trommel (Tabor) gespielt wurden. Heute ist der Name von diesen zylindrischen Kernspaltflöten auf eine einfache hölzerne Querflöte mit sechs Grifflöchern übergegangen. Sie wird in der Volksmusik verwendet. In der Musik des Mittelalters und der Renaissance fand die Schwegel vor allem im Feld zusammen mit der Trommel als „Kriegsinstrument“ Verwendung. Es gibt sie in verschiedenen Stimmungen. Die tiefsten Pfeifen haben den Grundton d1, die höchsten noch spielbaren Instrumente klingen in es2. Am gebräuchlichsten sind derzeit Pfeifen in a1 (440 Hz). Der Tonumfang beträgt zweieinhalb Oktaven. Synonyme sind Schwegelpfeife und Trommelflöte, sowie Seitlpfeife, Querpfeife und Zwerchpfeife (zwerch, „quer“) wenn eine Querflöte gemeint ist. In der Schweiz sind auch die Bezeichnungen Schweitzerpfeiff (neue Schweizerpfeife) und Natwärisch-Pfiifa (im Wallis) gebräuchlich. Pífaro, pífano, pife, pifre ou gaiteiro é uma pequena flauta transversal, aguda, similar a um flautim, mas com um timbre mais intenso e estridente, devido ao seu diâmetro menor. Os pífanos são originários da Europa medieval e são frequentemente utilizados em bandas militares. Fliúit bheag thrasnach ardairde le 6 mhéarpholl agus, i ngléasanna nua-aoiseacha is cuid mhaith seanghléasanna, 6 eochair mhiotalach. In úsáid mar ghléas míleata i gcomhair glaonna is comharthaí, cosúil leis an mbuabhall, agus i mbannaí fífeanna is drumaí i gcomhair máirseála. Le fifre est un petite flûte traversière, proche du piccolo mais dépourvue de clé, largement utilisé dans la musique traditionnelle européenne, dans la musique folklorique ainsi que dans certains ensembles militaires occidentaux. Il s'agit d'un instrument à la sonorité aiguë et habituellement joué de manière rapide et rythmée. Le fifre reste de ce fait rattaché à la musique de rue et aux traditions festives populaires de nombreuses régions de France, d'Allemagne, de Suisse et de Belgique, notamment aux aubades, aux défilés de fifres et tambours et à certains carnavals.
dbp:hornbostelSachs
421.121
dbp:hornbostelSachsDesc
open side-blown flutes with fingerholes
gold:hypernym
dbr:Flute
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Fife_(instrument)?oldid=1123162997&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
27801
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Fife_(instrument)