Baroque instruments
Baroque instruments encompass the diverse array of musical instruments that were developed, refined, and prominently used during the Baroque era of Western classical music, spanning approximately from 1600 to 1750. This period marked a revolutionary transformation in instrument design, driven by the era's emphasis on dramatic expression, contrast in dynamics and timbre, and the rise of new musical forms such as opera, concerto, and sonata. Innovations included the shift from Renaissance-era viols to the violin family for strings, the evolution of woodwinds like the oboe and traverso for greater tonal flexibility, and the prominence of keyboard instruments such as the harpsichord for realizing the basso continuo, a foundational harmonic structure that underpinned much of Baroque composition. These instruments, often constructed with gut strings, conical bores, and mechanisms suited to polyphonic textures, enabled composers like Monteverdi, Vivaldi, and Bach to achieve the ornate, rhetorical style defining the age.[1][2] The Baroque period's instrumental developments were gradual and regionally varied, beginning with early experiments in the late 16th century and culminating by the mid-18th century, as documented in treatises by scholars like Michael Praetorius and Marin Mersenne. String instruments underwent the most significant changes first, with the violin family—featuring four gut strings, a fretless fingerboard, and a shoulder-held posture—emerging as the orchestral backbone, supplanting the fretted viols by the late 17th century. Woodwinds advanced through jointed constructions for improved intonation and range; for instance, the oboe derived from the shawm with a narrower bore and three joints, while the bassoon gained a separate bell and up to four keys by the era's end. Brass instruments like the natural trumpet, valued for its brilliant tone despite lacking valves, and the horn, introduced around 1700 with crooks for tuning, added ceremonial splendor, though their chromatic limitations posed technical challenges for performers.[2][3] Keyboard instruments played a pivotal role in Baroque music, supporting both solo repertoire and ensemble continuo realization, which involved improvising harmonies over a bass line notated with figures. The harpsichord, with its plucked strings producing a bright, non-dynamic tone, became ubiquitous in two national styles: the lighter Italian models for intimate settings and the fuller Flemish or French versions for larger ensembles, often featuring multiple manuals for registration changes. The organ, emphasizing contrasting divisions in German Werkprinzip designs or grand solo effects in French styles, dominated sacred music, while the clavichord offered subtle dynamic expression for private practice through direct string tangents. Percussion was limited primarily to timpani, tuned with adjustable kettles for rhythmic punctuation in orchestral works. These instruments' collective evolution reflected broader cultural shifts toward individualism and emotional depth, influencing the transition to Classical-era designs.[3][4][2]Historical Context
Origins and Evolution
The transition from Renaissance to Baroque music marked a profound shift in compositional styles, moving from intricate polyphony—where multiple independent melodic lines intertwined—to homophony, which emphasized a dominant melody supported by chordal accompaniment, thereby elevating the role of instruments in providing harmonic foundation and expressive contrast.[5] This evolution influenced instrument usage, as ensembles began to prioritize clarity and projection over the balanced vocal-instrumental interplay of the Renaissance. Early examples of this change appeared in the Venetian polychoral style, where spatially separated choirs and instrumental groups alternated, often featuring cornetts and sackbuts to double or substitute vocal parts for added sonority in grand ceremonial works.[6][7] The Baroque period's instrumental development unfolded across distinct phases from 1600 to 1750, driven by the rise of opera and monody in the early years. Between 1600 and 1650, the emergence of opera—exemplified by Claudio Monteverdi's works—prioritized monodic textures, where a solo voice or instrument carried the melodic line over a basso continuo, fostering the violin's ascent as a standardized solo instrument with consistent four-string tuning and form that replaced the more varied Renaissance fiddles.[8] From 1650 to 1700, French and Italian schools flourished, with Italy emphasizing virtuosic string writing and France developing refined woodwind and continuo practices suited to courtly dances and suites.[9] The late phase, 1700 to 1750, saw German expansion through composers like Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Handel, who integrated diverse national styles into complex polyphonic and orchestral textures, expanding ensemble sizes and instrumental interplay in church and opera settings.[10][11] Key innovations during this era enhanced instrumental expressiveness and technical capabilities. The Baroque violin bow, introduced in the early 17th century, featured a convex curve that allowed for greater hair tension and dynamic control, enabling sustained legato and articulated strokes suited to the period's rhetorical style.[12] Similarly, the transverse flute evolved from a Renaissance cylindrical bore to a conical one by the mid-17th century, improving intonation across octaves and facilitating its integration into chamber and orchestral music.[13][14] Patronage from courts and churches played a pivotal role in standardizing instruments. Under Louis XIV, the French court in the late 17th century employed over 30 hautbois players and reconfigured the instrument's bore, finger holes, and reed, establishing a uniform design that influenced European woodwinds and integrated them into Lully's orchestral ballets.[15][16] In Italy, makers like Antonio Stradivari refined violin forms around 1700 during his "Golden Period," introducing elongated patterns and a durable, amber-hued varnish that enhanced resonance and aesthetic appeal, setting benchmarks for Cremonese craftsmanship.[17][18]Key Developments in Design
During the Baroque period, instrument makers introduced significant innovations in materials and construction techniques that enhanced tonal quality, playability, and acoustic efficiency, setting these instruments apart from their Renaissance counterparts through refined craftsmanship and adaptation to emerging musical demands.[19] These changes, often driven by regional workshops, focused on stability, projection, and versatility while maintaining the period's emphasis on natural resonance and expressive nuance. Material selections evolved to prioritize woods and treatments that improved durability and sound production. Boxwood became the preferred material for recorders and oboes due to its dense grain and favorable acoustic properties, yielding a clearer, more stable tone compared to earlier fruitwoods.[20] Transverse flutes often incorporated ivory or silver for head joints and key mounts, providing both aesthetic elegance and enhanced resonance for the instrument's conical bore.[21] Gut strings, central to string instruments, were frequently treated with light varnishes or oils to increase resistance to humidity fluctuations and ensure pitch stability during extended performances.[22] Acoustic modifications addressed limitations in pitch range and intonation, particularly for woodwinds and brass. French maker Jacques Hotteterre pioneered the addition of keys to the oboe around 1700, introducing a two- or three-key system that covered lower holes (such as D-sharp and C), enabling chromatic passages and extending the instrument's usability beyond diatonic scales. The Baroque trumpet relied on natural harmonics without valves, producing a limited series of overtones; players adjusted intonation primarily through embouchure variations to bend partials or employed mutes to generate factitious tones, altering the instrument's resonance for better pitch accuracy in non-harmonic notes.[23] Ergonomic advancements improved musician comfort and control. Harpsichords evolved from single-manual Renaissance virginals to two-manual instruments with mechanical stops, allowing players to couple registers or shift keyboards for dynamic contrasts and timbral variety, such as coupling an 8-foot stop with a 4-foot for brighter articulation.[19] Regional variations highlighted specialized adaptations. In Italy, Cremonese luthiers like Antonio Stradivari developed violins with extended bass bars—longer than those in earlier northern European designs—to support greater string tension and enhance bass response and overall projection in ensemble settings.[24] French makers, such as Pierre Naust, innovated transverse flutes with interchangeable corps de rechange (center joints of varying lengths), facilitating pitch adjustments across different tuning standards like A=392 Hz for court music.[21]Instrument Families
String Instruments
The violin family formed the core of Baroque string ensembles, comprising the soprano violin, alto viola, the rare tenor violin, and bass violoncello. These instruments shared a construction featuring a hollow wooden body with f-holes, a bridge, and gut strings, with the violin tuned in perfect fifths as G3-D4-A4-E5, the viola as C3-G3-D4-A4, the tenor violin (when used) as G2-D3-A3-E4, and the violoncello as C2-G2-D3-A3. Renowned Cremonese makers such as Andrea Amati (c. 1505–1577), Antonio Stradivari (1644–1737), and the Guarneri family (active mid-17th to mid-18th century) refined these designs between approximately 1650 and 1720, emphasizing varnished maple and spruce for resonant tone and playability.[25][26][27][28] The Baroque bow differed markedly from later models, featuring a convex stick of snakewood or similar material, a shorter length (about 48–52 cm), and a fixed frog that maintained constant hair tension, enabling an overhand grip for enhanced articulation and rhythmic precision in polyphonic textures. This design contrasted with the Classical-era bow's concave stick and adjustable frog, which allowed greater dynamic control but less bow bounce suited to Baroque inequalities. Gut strings, common across these instruments, contributed to their brighter, more flexible timbre compared to modern steel equivalents.[29][30] Plucked strings complemented bowed ones in Baroque music, with the lute serving as a primary continuo instrument through its multi-course setup and theoretical tunings such as D-A-D for the bass courses in D minor configurations (e.g., full tuning A2-d3-f3-a3-d'4-f'4 for a 13-course Baroque lute). The theorbo, an extended bass lute with a separate long neck for diapason strings tuned diatonically (e.g., descending from G2 to G1 in A tuning), provided deep harmonic support in ensembles. Archlute variations extended this further, often retaining Renaissance-style tuning for the upper courses while adding bass extensions for basso continuo roles.[31][32][28][33] Baroque playing techniques emphasized expressive polyphony, including scordatura tunings—such as detuning the A string to G in Bach's Chaconne from Partita No. 2 in D minor (BWV 1004)—to facilitate intricate harmonies and resonance. Double-stopping, where two or more strings were bowed simultaneously, imitated vocal polyphony and chordal textures, as seen in works by composers like Biagio Marini and J.S. Bach, enhancing the instrument's role in solo and ensemble imitation.[34][35]Woodwind Instruments
Woodwind instruments in the Baroque era encompassed a variety of reed and fipple flutes that contributed melodic agility and timbral color to ensembles, often featuring conical or cylindrical bores for expressive phrasing. These instruments, typically constructed from woods like boxwood or maple, allowed for intricate ornamentation and dynamic contrasts central to the period's affective style. Unlike their Renaissance predecessors, Baroque woodwinds incorporated early key mechanisms to extend chromatic possibilities, though intonation remained a challenge due to variable fingerings and ensemble tuning practices. The recorder family, known as blockflöte, included soprano (descant in C), alto (treble in F), tenor (in C), and bass (in F) variants, forming consorts that played in four-part harmony. These end-blown fipple flutes were tuned at A=392 Hz for many German consorts, producing a gentle, flute-like tone suited to chamber music. Fingering systems differed between English (Baroque) style, with a forked fingering for F and F-sharp, and the earlier German system, which used a single thumb hole for both notes; the Baroque system facilitated more even intonation across the range. The flauto piccolo, or sopranino recorder in F or G, was employed for high melodic parts, as in Antonio Vivaldi's Recorder Concerto in C major, RV 443, where its piercing timbre highlighted virtuosic passages.[36][37][38][39] The oboe family evolved from the shawm, with the hautbois serving as the principal soprano instrument in C, featuring two keys for basic chromatic notes like C-sharp and E-flat. This double-reed aerophone offered a reedy, penetrating tone for solo and orchestral roles. The oboe d'amore, pitched in A with a bulbous bell, provided a mellower alto voice, used evocatively in works by composers like Johann Sebastian Bach. The taille de hautbois functioned as the tenor in F, bridging soprano and bass lines in larger ensembles. The English horn, or cor anglais in F, emerged post-Baroque but drew from these tenor designs, retaining the family's conical bore and double reed.[40][41][42] The transverse flute, or flauto traverso, was a wooden, one-keyed instrument in D, with the single key operating a D-sharp/E-flat vent on the foot joint. Its conical bore and parabolic embouchure produced a breathy, variable tone, but the design limited ease in keys outside D major, relying on forked fingerings for accidentals like G-sharp or B-flat, which often compromised intonation. Jacques Hotteterre's 1707 treatise, Principes de la flûte traversière, detailed techniques for these fingerings and articulation, establishing the flute's role in French Baroque chamber music.[43][21][44] The bassoon, or fagotto, featured an early four-keyed mechanism for notes like low D and G-sharp, with a double reed and folded conical bore extending about 7.5 feet when assembled. Its range spanned from Bb1 to approximately c''', enabling both foundational bass support and melodic obbligato lines, as exemplified in Georg Philipp Telemann's Bassoon Sonata in F minor, TWV 41:f1, where agile upper register passages showcased its versatility. This instrument's reedy warmth contrasted with the continuo, adding depth to Baroque concertos and sonatas.[45][46]Brass Instruments
Brass instruments in the Baroque era were lip-reed aerophones prized for their brilliant timbre and symbolic association with majesty, heroism, and divine power, often featured in ceremonial, operatic, and sacred music to evoke grandeur and triumph. Unlike woodwinds, which blended intimately in ensembles, brass provided bold, projecting tones suited to outdoor and large-scale indoor performances, demanding exceptional virtuosity from players due to their reliance on the natural harmonic series without valves or keys for chromatic alteration. Key examples include the natural trumpet, horn, sackbut, and cornett, each adapted for specific registers and roles in compositions by masters like Bach, Handel, and Gabrieli.[47] The natural trumpet, typically coiled and pitched in D, measured about 5 to 6 feet in length when uncoiled, allowing players to produce notes from the instrument's harmonic series, ranging from pedal tones like low D up to high C and beyond through lip control and breath pressure. This design limited playability to diatonic partials, with techniques like bending overtones enabling approximate semitones, but full chromaticism required expert manipulation of embouchure and articulation. The clarino technique, emphasizing the high register (often from C to F in the treble clef), was particularly demanding and showcased in Johann Sebastian Bach's cantatas, such as BWV 24 and BWV 172, where it symbolized celestial brilliance and required specialized virtuosos like Gottfried Reiche.[48][47][49] The natural horn, derived from the hunting horn, was a coiled tube pitched in keys like F alto or G, using interchangeable crooks—short tubes inserted to transpose the instrument for different tonalities and extend its utility in orchestral settings. Initially restricted to the harmonic series like the trumpet, it gained chromatic potential in the late Baroque through emerging hand-stopping, where the player inserted their hand into the bell to shorten the effective length and alter pitch, though this technique was rudimentary and timbre-altering until refined in the Classical era. Its warm, pastoral tone contrasted the trumpet's brilliance, often depicting hunting scenes or rustic elements in works by composers like Telemann and Handel.[50][51] The sackbut, a precursor to the modern trombone, featured a telescoping slide mechanism with U-shaped parallel tubes, enabling precise semitone shifts across its range and distinguishing it from fixed-pitch brass. Available in alto (F), tenor (Bb), and bass (F) sizes, it offered a mellow yet agile tone suitable for polyphonic blending, with the slide allowing fluid glissandi and rapid passages. In Venetian ceremonies and sacred music, sackbuts formed choirs that doubled vocal lines for solemnity, as in Giovanni Gabrieli's polychoral motets like Canzoni da sonare, where their antiphonal deployment enhanced spatial acoustics in St. Mark's Basilica.[52][53][54][3] The cornett, a wooden instrument wrapped in leather for durability and acoustic sealing, produced sound via lip vibration against a cup-shaped mouthpiece, bridging brass and woodwind qualities with its finger holes for diatonic scales. Its typical treble form spanned two octaves from g (approximately g3 to g5), offering a reedy, vocal-like timbre that imitated the human voice in consort music. A variant, the mute cornett, was straight and one-piece with a built-in conical mouthpiece recess and narrow bore, yielding a softer, more veiled tone for intimate chamber or sacred contexts, as employed in English antiphonal works by composers like Byrd.[55][56][57]Keyboard Instruments
Keyboard instruments played a central role in Baroque music, providing harmonic foundation through continuo realization and solo performance. The harpsichord, a plucked-string instrument, dominated this domain with its mechanism of jacks rising to pluck strings using quills or leather plectra, producing a bright, articulate tone ideal for polyphony. Italian harpsichords typically featured a single manual with light construction, thin walls, and moldings, offering a range of about four octaves from GG to c³, emphasizing clarity for chamber music.[58][59] In contrast, French double-manual harpsichords, often derived from Flemish models, included registration options like a lute stop on the upper manual, which plucked strings near the bridge for a softer, harp-like timbre, extending the range to five octaves and allowing dynamic contrasts via manual coupling.[19] Prominent builders included the Flemish Ruckers family, active in Antwerp from the 1620s, whose robust instruments with two 8' ranks and a 4' stop influenced later French adaptations by makers like Pascal Taskin.[60][61] The organ, a wind-blown pipe instrument, offered expansive registration for sacred and concert settings, with multiple manuals controlling divisions such as the Great (Hauptwerk) for principal choruses, Swell (Oberwerk) for expressive reeds, and Choir (Rückpositiv or Brustwerk) for accompanimental flues. German Baroque organs prominently featured a pedalboard for independent bass lines, enabling complex pedal solos in works by composers like J.S. Bach. Arp Schnitger's large instruments, such as the 1693 Hamburg St. Jakobi organ with over 60 stops across four manuals and pedal, exemplified this design, incorporating powerful 32' principals and mixtures suited to Bach's organ repertoire.[62][63] The clavichord, a smaller tangent-struck instrument, provided intimate expression through its mechanism where brass tangents on the keys directly struck strings, allowing touch-sensitive dynamics from pppp to p—a feature absent in the harpsichord. Its limited volume confined it to private practice, often tuned in meantone temperament to favor pure thirds in common keys. Builders like Hieronymus Albrecht Hass produced unfretted models in the mid-18th century, such as the 1744 Hamburg clavichord, with ranges approaching five octaves for nuanced study of Baroque keyboard works.[64][65] Precursors to the fortepiano appeared in tangent-action instruments like Hass's clavichords, which foreshadowed hammer mechanisms through their expressive touch, though the true fortepiano with damped hammers emerged late Baroque around 1700.[66]Auxiliary Instruments
Auxiliary instruments in Baroque music encompassed a variety of less prominent tools that provided rhythmic support, drones, or exotic timbres, often drawn from folk traditions or innovative designs to enhance specific dramatic or ceremonial effects. These instruments were typically employed sparingly, adding color to ensembles without dominating the harmonic structure. The hurdy-gurdy, known as the vielle à roue in France, featured wheel-fretted strings that produced a continuous drone sound, mimicking bagpipe effects through a rosined wheel turned by a crank. It gained popularity in French court dances during the late 17th and early 18th centuries, where its rhythmic buzzing complemented pastoral or rustic scenes in operas and ballets.[67] A related innovation, the viola organista, conceptualized by Leonardo da Vinci around 1489, attempted to apply a similar wheel mechanism to bowed strings via a keyboard, though practical Baroque implementations remained experimental and influenced later drone-based designs.[68] The dulcimer, particularly in its hammered form akin to the Eastern European cimbalom or the Italian salterio, introduced percussive string strikes that evoked folkloric elements in French Baroque operas. Such instruments were used to depict exotic scenes, where the bright, metallic timbre heightened dramatic tension through rapid hammer beats on tuned strings.[69] Percussion instruments played a supportive role, emphasizing martial or festive moods. Timpani, typically used in pairs tuned to G and C, delivered thunderous rolls and fanfare strokes in George Frideric Handel's oratorios such as Saul (1739) and Israel in Egypt (1739), underscoring battle scenes and divine interventions with their resonant copper kettles.[70] For exotic scorings, Jean-Philippe Rameau employed tambourines and castanets in operas like Les Indes galantes (1735), evoking Spanish or Oriental dances through jangling rhythms and idiomatic snaps that contrasted the period's predominant string and woodwind textures.[71] The serpent, a wooden bass cornett with a brass crook, featured a conical bore that allowed for a flexible, reedy tone suitable for low-register lines. Constructed from carved wood wrapped in leather, it served as a church bass instrument in Baroque ensembles, providing foundational support in sacred music with a range spanning from C to g'. Its serpentine shape facilitated the extended tubing needed for this pitch span, making it a precursor to later bass brass developments.[72]Performance and Instrumentation
Basso Continuo Practice
The basso continuo served as the harmonic backbone of Baroque music, providing a continuous bass line that supported melodies and ensured tonal coherence across ensembles. This practice involved a figured bass notation, where numbers placed below the bass notes indicated the intervals to be played above the bass, guiding performers in constructing harmonies. For instance, the figure "6" denoted a first inversion triad, while "7" specified a dominant seventh chord in root position, allowing for efficient notational shorthand that emphasized improvisation over fully written-out parts.[73][74] The realization of this bass line was improvisational, with performers adding chords, embellishments, and inner voices in real time to create a supportive harmonic framework, a technique central to the era's monodic and polyphonic styles.[73] Typical instrumentation for basso continuo combined a chordal instrument to realize the harmonies with a sustaining instrument to articulate the bass line. The harpsichord or organ provided the right-hand chords and improvisatory fills, while the cello, bassoon, or viola da gamba played the bass notes, often an octave lower for reinforcement. In chamber settings, plucked instruments such as the lute or theorbo substituted for the keyboard, offering a softer, more intimate texture suitable for smaller groups.[73][74] These choices allowed flexibility, with the harpsichord's plucked strings enabling quick chordal responses and the organ providing sustained resonance in larger venues.[73] Realization followed principles of voice leading, typically in four parts, where the performer maintained smooth progressions between chords while incorporating expressive devices like suspensions and appoggiaturas to heighten emotional tension. Italian treatises emphasized contrapuntal awareness, avoiding parallel fifths or octaves, and prioritizing the bass line's melodic contour. Arcangelo Corelli's Sonate a violino e violone o cimbalo (Op. 5, 1700) exemplifies these rules, with its figured bass realizations demonstrating restrained yet elegant harmonizations that balance simplicity and ornamentation, serving as models for subsequent composers.[73][75] Variations in basso continuo practice adapted to genre-specific demands, reflecting acoustic and stylistic needs. In opera, realizations were often lavish, incorporating winds like oboes or bassoons alongside the core keyboard and bass for colorful, dramatic support in recitatives and arias. Sonata genres, particularly chamber works, employed minimal configurations, typically just harpsichord and cello, to maintain intimacy and focus on solo lines. Oratorios, especially in sacred contexts, favored organ-dominant continuo, leveraging its pedal capabilities for robust bass reinforcement in choral sections and arias.[76][77][78]Ensemble Configurations
Baroque chamber music often centered on intimate ensembles, with the trio sonata emerging as a prominent form characterized by two melody instruments, typically violins, accompanied by basso continuo realized on harpsichord or organ. This configuration allowed for dialogue between the melodic lines while the continuo provided harmonic support, as exemplified in Arcangelo Corelli's 12 Trio Sonatas, Op. 3 (1689), where the two violins engage in contrapuntal interplay over a bass line. Solo sonatas, such as those in Corelli's Op. 5 (1700), featured a single melody instrument like the violin paired with harpsichord continuo, emphasizing virtuosic expression within a smaller group of three to four performers.[79] In orchestral settings, strings formed the foundational core, typically organized into four parts: first violins, second violins, violas, and cellos or basses, creating a homogeneous sound that supported melodic development. Woodwinds, such as pairs of oboes and occasionally horns or bassoons, were incorporated sparingly to add timbral color rather than structural weight, while trumpets appeared primarily for ceremonial or festive emphasis, as in George Frideric Handel's oratorios where they heightened dramatic climaxes.[80][81] This setup balanced transparency and fullness, with the continuo integrating seamlessly to underpin the ensemble's texture.[82] Regional variations influenced ensemble makeup and purpose. Italian opera orchestras, as seen in works by composers like Antonio Vivaldi, relied on a string-dominated body augmented by continuo and occasional trumpets for brilliant accents, prioritizing rhythmic drive and vocal support in theatrical contexts.[3] In France, the petits violons under Jean-Baptiste Lully comprised a small string band of up to twenty players, often joined by flutes, oboes, and bassoons, to deliver precise, dance-inflected accompaniments at court.[83] German collegia musicum, such as those led by Johann Sebastian Bach in Leipzig, featured mixed amateur and professional forces including strings, winds, and keyboards, fostering versatile performances in coffee houses or churches.[84] Balance in larger ensembles followed principles of contrast, particularly in the concerto grosso form, where a small concertino group—often two violins and cello—alternated with the fuller ripieno string orchestra to create dynamic interplay and textural variety. Handel's 12 Concerti Grossi, Op. 6 (1739), illustrate this vividly, with the concertino providing soloistic agility against the ripieno's solid foundation, all unified by harpsichord continuo.[85][86]Catalog and Modern Use
List of Common Instruments
The following table provides a catalog of common Baroque instruments, including their instrument families, typical ranges (in scientific pitch notation), common keys where particularly associated, and primary roles in performance contexts such as melody, harmony, or basso continuo accompaniment.| Family | Instrument Name | Typical Range | Common Keys | Primary Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| String | Violin | G3–A7 | Various | Melody and solo lines |
| String | Viola da gamba (bass) | D2–D5 (extendable to A1 with added string) | Various | Harmony and continuo |
| Woodwind | Recorder (alto) | F4–F6 | Various | Melody and consort |
| Woodwind | Oboe | C4–G6 | Various | Melody |
| Brass | Natural trumpet | C4–C7 (harmonic series, approx. four octaves) | D major | Melody and fanfares |
| Keyboard | Harpsichord | F1–F6 | Various | Harmony and continuo |
| String | Theorbo | G2–a5 | Various | Basso continuo |
| Brass | Sackbut (tenor) | E2–C5 | Various | Harmony |
| Woodwind | Transverse flute | D4–D6 | Various | Melody and solo |
| Woodwind | Bassoon | B♭1–A4 | Various | Bass and continuo |