By tyler on Sep 4, 2008 in Garden Instruments, H2O Instruments, Nature, Traditional | 1 Comment
The suikinkutsu, literally meaning ‘water harp chamber,’ is an underground Japanese water instrument which is usually located in temple gardens and places of ceremony. The water chime consists of an upside down pot with a small hole through it’s bottom. The upside down pot is buried underground, with a porous rock layer above [...]
By tyler on Jul 28, 2008 in Art, Bands/Musicians, Nature, Traditional, Wood, Woodwind Instruments | 1 Comment
From Wouter Baeck, an amazing musician, sculptor, painter, and musical instrument creator.
“An ancient instrument came to live. Based on a thin long straight bamboo reed tied up with a thread on a small bamboo mouth piece. Protected by a gourd. Double pipe made out of bamboo or elder wood, and always with [...]
By tyler on Jul 23, 2008 in Idiophones, Percussion Instruments, Traditional, Wood | 0 Comments
A bin zasara (a.k.a. bin sasara, sasara) is a traditional Japanese percussion instrument. Due to the bin zasara’s self-vibrating nature, the instrument is classified as an idiophone. The instrument consists of many rectangular wooden slats, made from tonewood (wood that carries sound waves well e.g. maple, ceder, bamboo, walnut) strung together by some [...]
By tyler on Jul 9, 2008 in Stringed Instruments, Traditional, Wood | 1 Comment
The hurdy gurdy, also known as the “wheel fiddle,” is similar to the nyckelharpa in that it’s notes are summoned using a keyboard which controls tangents (wood wedges) that depress the strings at defined intervals. What is most interesting about this violin-type instrument is that the strings are vibrated by a resin wheel mechanism [...]
By tyler on Jun 15, 2008 in Traditional, Wood, Woodwind Instruments | 0 Comments
For those of you who enjoy diagrams, here is a great diagram off the systems in a traditional Native American flute.
From the diagram:
“From the mouth, the airflow is slowed down in the SAC (slow air chamber), passes the exit hole, then the little channel of the flue, to hit the cutting edge. Then the [...]
By tyler on May 29, 2008 in Bowed Instruments, Performances, Recordings, Traditional | 3 Comments
Here is a traditional Swedish tune, “Polska After Sven Donat,” played with nyckelharpa. Notice the shifting sounds of the keys being pressed.