Gadulka: Bulgarian musical instrument
The gadulka is a traditional Bulgarian bowed string musical instrument. The name of the instrument comes from the root meaning which is “t...
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The gadulka is a traditional
Bulgarian bowed string musical instrument. The name of the instrument comes
from the root meaning which is “to make noise, buzz or to hum”. The gadulka is
a constituent part of the Bulgarian traditional instrumental groups that is
commonly played in the context of dance music.
source: en.wikipedia.org
The musical instrument commonly
possesses three main strings and sometimes four and up to ten sympathetic
resonating strings beneath, but there is a small difference of the instrument
in the Dobrudia region with no sympathetic strings of any kind. Only the main
melodic strings are moved by the player of the instrument and with his fingers
and the strings are never pressed much down to touch the neck. The musical
instrument is held vertically while playing it with a bow also held
perpendicular in an under-hand hold.
This musical instrument is similar
and related to the gudok found in Russia. Another possible origin of the
gadulka is suspected to be the lira, the bowed Byzantine instrument of the 9th
century AD and the ancestor of most European bowed musical instruments. Similar
instrument has been played continually in the Mediterranean and the Balkan
until today.
The body of the instrument as well as
the neck is carved out of one piece of wood, the body of the instrument forming
a bowl or gourd similar to the lute. The top which is made of straight-grained
softwood is also carved with a shallower arch. The total construction of the
instrument is quite heavy when compared to a violin. The bridge that is placed
between the two roughly D-shaped sound holes has one foot place on the top of
the instrument while the other foot rest on the top of the sound post that
contacts the inside of the back. The vibration of the string is as such
directly moved to both the top and the back of the musical instrument.
Different from other stringed musical instruments, there is nothing like nut at
the top of the strings as the strings are simply stretched between a tuning peg
at the top and the tail piece that is located at the bottom, passing over the
bridge or probably through the holes in the sympathetic. The tail piece of the
musical instrument is typically produced out of bone and it is secured to the
carved projection by short steel wire. The endpin as well assists to hold the
bottom of the instrument to a strap that the player is wearing. The strings of
the gadulka are of steel and can either be plain in the smaller gauges or wound
with steel in the larger ones, sometimes bronze. The strings are guided to the
tailpiece by their ball ends.
There are many tuning that are
available for the gadulka but the standard tuning of the instrument is A-E-A
for the three playing strings while the bridges are tuned chromatically to
cover all notes apart from A and E depending on the number of bridges.