Çeng: Georgia musical instrument
The Çeng is known as a Turkish harp. It was seen as a popular ottoman musical instrument until the ending part of the 17 th century. Çeng...
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The Çeng is known as a Turkish harp. It was seen as a popular ottoman
musical instrument until the ending part of the 17th century. Çeng
is a word derived from the Persian word “chang” which connotes “harp.” It also
means “five fingers” a similar instrument believed to be an ancestor of this
instrument was said to be an instrument that was found in the ancient Assyrian
tablets. Also a similar instrument appears in Egyptian drawings.
source of picture: en.wikipedia.org
Instrument producers and
players started the revival of the Çeng in the 20th century giving
it some newer designs and giving it an advanced tuning mechanism such as those
found on the kanun. Tone bending became possible by pressing on the string
behind the bridge. Also the soundbox that was on the old Çeng was fixed on the
upper division of the instrument, but most modern instruments do have their
soundboxes on the lower part of the instrument.
A kemence player from
Turkey, Fikret Karakaya, in 1995 produced a Çeng using the explanations in the
masnavi ‘cengname’ by a Turkish poet Ahmed-I Dai, he also did that following
the description in Iranian and ottoman miniatures from the 15th and
16th century and currently, he plays and records music with the
instrument.
An instrument producer and
master’s degree graduate student at Istanbul Technical University, Mehmet
Soylemez recently made the second Çeng in Turkey for the primary harpist of
Turkey called Sirin Pancaroglu. Professor Robert Labaree, New England
Conservatory of Music ethnomusicology, plays and records music with this
musical instrument in the United States.
The Çeng is believed to be
a member of the of the ‘open harp’ family which was later divided into the ‘bow
harps’ and the ‘square harp’ where the Çeng is belonging to.
The father of the ottoman
Çeng which was a metaphor in the ottoman poetry for one in love doubled over I
agony from a lover’s cruelty. The instrument gained some certain features in
Istanbul. The Persian manuscript, Kenzut-Tuhaf that was written in the 14th
century gave detailed information on the Çeng.