| Balalaika |
One of the best known
members of the traditional lute family from Central Asia is the balalaika,
an instrument which has a distinctive, triangular shaped body. Characteristically,
they also have a long thin neck and a single circular or patterned sound
hole in their bodies. Some models have two strings, but most have three
made from string or gut which are tuned to intervals of a fourth, and plucked
with a pick (or plectrum). There are at least six sizes of balalaika, each
standardized by a Russian musician, Andreyev, in the late 1800s. Most scholars
agree that the balalaika is an offspring of the Eastern tanbur (dating back
at least to the 1600s) and the round-bodied Russian domra , a three-stringed
mandolin. No longer exclusively a folk instrument, balalaika have become
increasingly popular among contemporary eastern European musicians during
the past century. Their often virtuousic, rapidly strummed sound has also
been evoked in Russian art music as composed by Sokolovsky, Dargomizhsky,
Balakirev and Stravinsky.The traditional significance of the balalaika continues to live among Siberian communities who associate this instrument with forest spiritual beings who love music and assist hunters. |
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Information provided by: http://www.si.umich.edu |