Bağlama: Armenia musical instrument
The bağlama also called the bağlamak in the Turkish language meaning “to tie” is a string musical instrument that is said to be shared by ...
https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2013/11/baglama.html
The bağlama also called the bağlamak in the Turkish language meaning “to tie”
is a string musical instrument that is said to be shared by so many cultures in
the eastern Mediterranean region, the near East region and in the central Asia
region.
source of picture: www.harmonycentral.com
It can also be called saz which is a Persian language that means set or
kit. The word saz is known to have been a reference word for a family of
plucked string instruments, also long-necked lutes that are used in Ottoman
classical music, Kurdish music, and Azeri music Turkish music and in some
significant parts of Syria and Iraq. A musical instrument that has similar
characteristics with bağlama is been discovered in the scientific study of the
ancient cultures of Sumerian and Hittite mounds in the Asian part of turkey,
forming the western peninsular of Asia dating prior to Common Era and also in
ancient Greek acts.
The new grove dictionary of music and musicians explained the two terms
“bağlama and saz” as being used somewhat interchangeably in the turkey region.
Just like the Middle Eastern “oud” and the Western “lute”, the musical
instrument has a deep back which is roundish in shape but with a neck that is
much longer. This musical instrument can be played with a small flat piece of
pointed material or a selpe also called finger picking style.
The bağlama known as the most commonly used string musical instrument in
turkey has seven strings that is divided into two or three courses. It has so
many ways of tuning it and has been given so many names by so many regions.
Example of the names that has been given to this musical instrument includes;
sazi, bozuk, cura, tambura, etc. the cura is known as the smallest individual
member of the bağlama family, the tambura is also small but it is larger than
the cura and tuned an octave lower.
The bağlama as a musical instrument has three major parts; the tekne also
known as the bowl is made from the woods of a mulberry or juniper, gogus which
is also known as the spruce or the walnut is the sounding board and a sap which
is also called the juniper. Frets can be tied on the part called sap together
with a fishing line which permits them to be slightly changed. This musical
instrument can be played with a material that is similar to the guitar pick
called teneze or with bare fingers; this style is known as serpe. The electric
bağlama can be connected to an amplifier and can have single or double pickups.
The bağlama is a result of the combination of historical musical
instrument that exists in the central Asia; it also exists in the pre-Turkish
Anatolia. It is assumed to have gone down from the Turkish komuz. The bağlama
is quite different from the komuz in that the body is covered with thick
leather and has two or three string that is made from the gut of a sheep, or
that of a wolf or event the horsehair. The komuz is played with finger which is
unlike the bağlama which is played with plectrum. The word bağlama was discovered to be first
used in the 18th century text.
On the bağlama, there are three courses with double strings or triple
strings which can be tuned in a so many ways, for the baglama duzeni, the best
way of tuning the courses is to go from the top to down. The musical scale of
this musical instrument varies from that of the western musical instrument that
has similar qualities such as guitar and other lutes.