Tamburica: Hungary musical instrument
Tamburica refers to any member of a family of long- necked lutes that are popular in the Eastern and Central Europe especially Hungary, Se...
http://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2013/12/tamburica-hungary-musical-instrument.html
Tamburica refers to any member of a
family of long- necked lutes that are popular in the Eastern and Central Europe
especially Hungary, Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia, and also in Burgenland. Each of
these regions has a name they call this musical instrument such as Bosnian: Tamburica, Croatian: Tamburica, Serbian: Тамбурица, meaning "little
Tamboura"; Hungarian: Tambura; Greek: Ταμπουράς, sometimes written tamburrizza.
All took their name and some other characteristics from Persian tanbur even
though they also resemble mandolin because the strings are plucked and often
paired. The frets can be moved to allow the playing of many modes on the
instrument.
source of picture: yotke.hr
There has
been a little dependable data showing hoe the tamburica entered the Central
Europe. It existed already during the Byzantine Empire and the Greeks and Slavs
used to call it “pandouras or tambouras” which were the ancestor of the modern
bouzoki. The musical instrument was called thambourin in the Byzantine Empire.
It is believed that it was probably brought by the Turks and Bosnia from this
place the instrument spread further with migrations of Sokci and Bunjeyci above
the Sava River and to all parts of Croatia, Serbia and further. The modern
tamburica shape was carved and developed in Hungary in the end of the 19th
century. The type of tamboura that was more frequently used in Croatia and
Serbia had a long neck and two or three strings until the Great Migration of
the Serbs at the end of the 17th century. Similar musical instrument
are found such as the Czech Bratsche, Turkish saz and also the šargija, çifteli
and bouzouki. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia and Hungary,
the tamburica is the most important musical instrument of traditional folk
music that is usually played by small orchestras of three men or at most, ten
men even though large orchestras that are able to play even classical pieces
arranged for tamboura also are in existence.
The number
of strings on a tamburica differs and it may have single or double-coursed
strings or a mixture of the two. Double-coursed strings can be tuned in unison.
There is a suggestion that the first tamburica orchestra was formed in Hungary
in the 19th century and the names of the instruments came from the
Hungarian names of the musical instruments of the symphony orchestra and from
the Hungarian gipsy bands such as the kontra and prim. These orchestras later
spread to the Bosnia, Austria, Slovenia, Czech Republic and the Slovakia.
The
tamburica consists of three main parts which are; the body, the neck and the
head. The body is known as the sound box and it has pear-shape until the middle
of the 19th century CE when it was built by scooping out the log and
today they are mostly built in a way of the guitar and even the tiniest which
is the ‘bisernica’ has a construction box. The fingerboard possesses frets and
the head normally had a sharpened form that can be found still on some
bisernicas although the snail design later got into charge and dominated.