KOMUZ: kyrgyzstan musical instrument
https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2014/10/komuz-kyrgyzstan-musical-instrument.html
The komuz or qomuz or Azeri Gopuz or
kopuz in Turkish local language is an ancient fretless stringed instrument that
is used in the central Asian music and it is related to some other Turkic
string musical instruments and the lute. It is known as the best national
instrument and one of the better-known Kyrgyz national symbols. Komuz is
produced from the single piece of wood such as the apricot or juniper and has
three strings that are traditionally produced from gut and often from the fish
in the modern times. The middle string is the best and the highest in pitch in
the most common tunings. Virtuosos frequently play the komuz in different
positions such as over the shoulder, between the knees and upside down.
The komuz can be used as a lead
instrument or as an accompaniment to other instrument and is used in many
musical styles including aytysh and the recitation of epics. Generally, it is
played while sitting down and holding the instrument horizontally and may be
strummed or plucked. The musical instrument has many tuning and names that are
given to the tunings are in line with the various styles of music.
The word komuz is of the same root
with the names of other instruments in the Music of Central Asia which
includes, Kazakh Kobyz ‘bowed instrument’ and the tuvan and the sakha or
yakutxomus ‘a jaw harp.’ The oldest instrument that is similar to the komuz was
traced back the 4th century, although the related Azerbaijani gopuz
is believed to date back to 6000Bc because of the archaeological findings of
clay plates showing gopuz players. In the 1960american archeologists working in
the Shushdagh Mountain near the ancient city of Jygamish in southern azerbaijan
opened a number of clay plates that dated back to the 6000BC showed musicians
at a council who are holding an instrument that was similar to the komuz to
their chest. The ancient komuz has two or three strings. The three stringed
“golchagopuz” was more popular in the ancient Anatolia and azerbaijan while the
two stringed “gilgopuz” was better used in the Altai plains, in some parts of
Turkmenistan and in chinese territory that was occupied by the Uyghur people.
The golchagopuz is produced from a leather covering that covered around the
two-third of the surface and the third is covered with a thin wood together
with the sound coard. The length of the instrument is 810mm with the body 410mm
thewideness being 240mm and the height of the instrument being 20mm.
The musical instrument fell from
favor during the soviet era. It was ridiculed as rudimentary and attempts were
made to remake it and make it look like the Russian balalaika by adding fret to
it. The komuz was taught in colleges
after the independence even when some soviet changes could not be eradicated.
Many types of komuzhas been reported
to have spread to several eastern European countries such as the Ukraine,
Poland and Hungary during the 4th and 5th century AD
during the mass migration of the Huns into the region.