Tabla: Bangladesh musical instrument
The tabla or tabl is also called other names in many languages Hindi : तबला , Urdu : طبلہ , Arabic : طبل، طبلة , Persian : طبل . The ...
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The tabla or tabl is also called other names in many languages Hindi: तबला, Urdu: طبلہ, Arabic: طبل،
طبلة, Persian: طبل. The tabla is a membranophone percussion instrument that is
similar to bongos. It is used in Hindustani classical music and in well-known
and devotional music of the Indian sub-continent. The musical instrument is
made up of a pair of hand drum of contrasting sizes and tone qualities. The
term tabla is derived from the Arabic word table which means ‘drum’. This
musical instrument is used in some other Asian musical cultures outside the
India like the Indonesian dangdut genre. The playing method of this instrument
requires extensive use of the finger and palms in many configurations to create
wide types of different sounds that are reflected in the mnemonic syllables.
The heel of the hand is used to mount pressure on the instrument or in sliding
motion on the larger drum so that the pitch cab be changed during the sound’s
disintegration.
source of picture: www.pakrashi-harmonium.com
The tabla is estimated to
have been invented by the sufi poet and
musical talented Amir Khusro in the 13th century coming up from the
need to have drum that can be played from the top in the sitting posture to
enable the more complex rhythm styles that were required for the new Indian
Sufi vocal style of chanting and Zikr. Its discovery would also have completed
the complex early sitar melodies that Amirs Khusrov was composing. This musical
instrument uses a method played form the top unlike the Pakhawai which mainly
use the full palm and are sideways in motion being more limited in terms of
sound complexity.
Rebecca stewart also has
suggested that the tabla is a product of experiment from the already existing
drums like pakhawai, dholak and naqqara. The tabla has similar qualities with
these musical instruments.
The similar drum that is
played with the dominant hand is often called dayan. It is made from a conical
piece of mostly teak and rose wood hollowed out to almost half of the total
depth. The drum is tuned to a particular note which could either be tonic,
dominant or subdominant of the soloist’s key and as such complements the
melody. The tuning range is limited even though different dayans are produced
in many other sizes, each with differing range. Cylindrical wood blocks that
are also known as ‘ghatta’ is put between the strap and the shell allowing
tension to be adjusted by their vertical positioning. The fine tuning can be
achieved while hitting vertically on the braided portion of the head with the
use of small hammer. The larger drum that is played with the other hand is
called bayan or sometimes called dagga. The bayan has much more deeper bass
tone than its distant cousin known as the kettle drum. The bayan may be
produced of a number of materials of which brass is the most common, copper is
more expensive but collectively known to be the best while aluminum and steel
are usually found in the inexpensive models of the instrument. The wood is also used sometimes especially in
the old bayans from the Punjab. Clay can as well be used but it is not
guaranteed for durability.