Tanbur: kyrgyzstan musical instrument
https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2014/10/tanbur-kyrgyzstan-musical-instrument.html
The term tanbur is a long-necked
string instrument that emanated from Central Asia and Southern Asia. Today the
term tanbur is linked to a variety of distinct and related long-necked string
instruments that are being used in art and folk traditions in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Turkey, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.
Elsewhere, a study has revealed that
tanbur is been derived from pandur which is Sumerian term which means
long-necked lutes. It has also been revealed that tanbur has been in existence
in Mesopotamia since the era of Akkadian, the third millennium BCE.
A small figure have been discovered
in Susa that has been in existence since 1500BCE and in hands of one of them is
seen a tanbur-like instrument. The rocks near Mosul that which been in existence
since 1000BCE shows some image of tanbur players. All through the Sassanid
period and in the late Parthian era, playing tanbur was very common because the
word tanbur is used in middle Persian and Parthian language
Al-Farabi in the 10th CE
century described two tanburs found in Persia as a Baghdad tanbur distributed
south and west of Baghdad and the second as a Khorasantanbur. This
distinguishing feature may be the source of modern differentiation between the
Arabic musical instrument that are derived from the Baghdad tanbur and the
musical instrument that are found in northern Iraq, Syria and Turkey from the
Khorasantanbur.
As the Persian name continued to
spread widely, it eventually took in long-necked string musical instrument used
in Central Asian music such as dombura and the classical Turkish tanbur and
also Kurdish tembur. This was so until the early 20th century when
the names chambar and jumbush were being applied to musical instruments in
northern Iraq. In India it was known as tanpura, a fretless drone lute. Tanbur
travelled through Al-Hirah to the Arabian Peninsula and in the early islam
period it travelled to the European countries. In Greek it was named Tanbouras
and was named Tampurain Russia, it became domra on reaching Siberia and was renamed
to dombra when it got to Mongolia and also is called pandura/bandura as it got
to Byzantine Empire and through the Byzantine empire it travelled to the rest
of the European countries and was called pandura, mandura, bandura, etc. After,
the Iranian tanbur became connected with the music of Ahl-e Haqq.
In the recent days, the afghan tambur
which measures 80cm in height and 16cm in breadth, pear-shaped resonator,
produced of either a single piece of multiple carvels of mulberry wood, the
neck manufactured from walnut and possesses fourteen frets, arranged in a
semi-tempered chromatic scale and possessing two steel strings tuned in fifth,
fourth or second intervals and whose higher string may be double coursed is
played mainly in the North of Afghanistan, Mazar Sharif and Kabul. Afghan
tanbur formally has wider hollow neck and gourd-like body, but nowadays they
seem to look more like Heratidutar, but the body outline is rounder and the
neck is decorated and is separate and has three courses of metal strings. The
music can come with singing and dancing or playing classical ghazal.