Siku: Ecuador musical instrument
The siku is known by different names which are “sicu,” “sicus,” “zampolla,” or the Spanish “zampona,” is a traditional panpipe relating to...
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The siku is known by different names
which are “sicu,” “sicus,” “zampolla,” or the Spanish “zampona,” is a
traditional panpipe relating to the Andes used in a musical genre called
“sikuri” and can also be found all over the Andes. It is associated to the
music of Kollasuvo speaking regions and around the Lake Titicaca. Because of
the nature of the mountain geography of the region which is difficult to
understand, and because of many other factors or reasons in some regions, some
communities would build their own pattern of the siku with their own tuning
pattern and even the size and shape and mostly they have different pattern of
playing this musical instrument. In the modern days, the musical instrument has
been transported from its traditional roots because it has been standardized to
fit into the modern western forms of music.
source: hu.wikipedia.org
The siku is believed to have
originally come from the Aymaaras of Peru and Bolivia. Here, a woman would play
this musical instrument as she is coming down from the mountains. The largest
siku is built to have every note and is too big for the woman. They normally
have two sikus that can be played together with some other person and they play
it continuously after each other. The women become musically bonded as soon as
they partner with themselves and play the siku and as such, they cannot play
the musical instrument with another person for the rest of their life.
The siku is representatively produced
from bamboo shoots. They are also manufactured from bones, condor feather and
many other materials. Many types of bamboo are used to change the quality of
the sound produced by the musical instrument. Songo can give the instrument a
more resonant sound and make it louder than any regular bamboo. Siku is divided
across two rows of pipes. Traditionally, it is expected that two people play
the siku, each taking one row of the musical instrument so one must interchange
the pattern of the rows with every note so as to play a complete scale. The
most common type of siku contains 13 pipes “6 in ira and 7 in arka” but the
less quality types may have more or less pipes.