bamboo musical instruments

{{Short description|Musical instruments, commonly flutes, made of bamboo}}

{{More citations needed|date=August 2023}}

File:Bamboo wind instruments.jpg

File:Kagul.jpg from the Philippines known as a kagul by the Maguindanaon people{{cite web

|last = Mercurio

|first = Philip Dominguez

|author-link =

|year = 2006

|url = http://www.pnoyandthecity.blogspot.com

|title = Traditional Music of the Southern Philippines

|work = PnoyAndTheCity: A center for Kulintang – A home for Pasikings

|publisher =

| access-date = June 12, 2006

}}]]

Bamboo{{'}}s natural hollow form makes it an obvious choice for many musical instruments. In South and South East Asia, traditional uses of bamboo the instrument include various types of woodwind instruments, such as flutes, and devices like xylophones and organs, which require resonating sections. In some traditional instruments bamboo is the primary material, while others combine bamboo with other materials such as wood and leather.

Overview

Bamboo has been used to create a variety of instruments including flutes, mouth organs, saxophones, trumpets, drums and xylophones.

=Flutes=

There are numerous types of bamboo flutes made all over the world, such as the dizi, xiao, shakuhachi, palendag and jinghu. In the Indian subcontinent, it is a very popular and highly respected musical instrument, available even to the poorest and the choice of many highly venerated maestros of classical music. It is known and revered above all as the divine flute forever associated with Lord Krishna, who is always portrayed holding a bansuri in sculptures and paintings. Four of the instruments used in Polynesia for traditional hula are made of bamboo: nose flute, rattle, stamping pipes and the jaw harp. Bamboo may be used in the construction of the Australian didgeridoo instead of the more traditional eucalyptus wood.

=Other bamboo instruments=

In Indonesia and the Philippines, bamboo has been used for making various kinds of musical instruments, including the kolintang, angklung and bumbong.

Bamboo is also used to make slit drums. Traditional Philippine bamboo ensemble

use a variety of bamboo musical instruments, including the marimba, angklung, panpipes and bumbong, as well as bamboo versions of western instruments, such as clarinets, saxophones, and tubas.{{cite web |url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/origins-and-development-of-bamboo-music/11926.html |title=Origins and development of bamboo music |work=bbc.co.uk |year=2011 |access-date=March 27, 2011}} The Las Piñas Bamboo Organ in the Philippines has pipes made of bamboo culms. The modern amplified string instrument, the Chapman stick, is also constructed using bamboo. The khene (also spelled khaen, kaen and khen; Lao: ແຄນ, {{langx|th|แคน}}) is a mouth organ of Lao origin whose pipes, which are usually made of bamboo, are connected with a small, hollowed-out hardwood reservoir into which air is blown, creating a sound similar to that of the cello. In the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar, the valiha, a long tube zither made of a single bamboo stalk, is considered the national instrument.

Bamboo has also recently been used for the manufacture of guitars and ukuleles. Bamboo Ukuleles are constructed of solid cross laminated bamboo strips not plywood. The bamboo solid wood strips are similar to bamboo manufactured flooring.

Gallery

File:Shakuhachi-2.png|Top and bottom-side views of a shakuhachi, end-blown bamboo flutes from Japan

File:টকা বাদ্য.JPG|Toka, bamoo clapper, Assam, Nepal

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Buisciter van bamboe TMnr 1027-5.jpg|Bamboo tanggetang tube zither, Sumatra

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Buisciter van bamboe TMnr 15-410.jpg|Bamboo tube-zither drum

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Buisciter met één snaar TMnr 1330-130.jpg|Bamboo tube-zither drum

File:Agung a Tamlang.jpg|Bamboo gong or slit drum, Agung a tamlang, Philippines

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Spleettrom van bamboe TMnr 15-415.jpg|Indonesian slit drum

File:Alat Musik Sasando 2.jpg|Sasando tube zither

File:Chinese half-tube bamboo zithers.jpg|Bamboo half-tube zithers

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Dubbel enkelriet ('dubbel-klarinet') van bamboe TMnr 4296-5a.jpg|Double-reed clarinet, North Africa

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Dubbel enkelriet (klarinet) van bamboe TMnr 3492-4.jpg|Magruna double reed clarinet, Libya

File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Trompet van bamboe TMnr 2236-1.jpg|Bamboo trumpet, Sulawesi, Indonesia

File:Siku (09).jpg|Siku, Pan pipes, Bolivia or Peru, Andes Mountains

File:PNG Pipes QM r.jpg|Pan pipes, New Ireland Province, Queensland, Australia

File:Maultrom 2a.jpg|bamboo Jew's Harp

File:Mukkuri.jpg|Ainu Jew's Harpo

File:Nusa-Dua Bali Indonesia Xylophone-player-01.jpg|Bali Indonesia Xylophone-player, photo by CEphoto, Uwe Aranas

File:Bala player.jpg|Bala, African xylophone

File:Boo I.jpg|Bamboo marimba, one of the instruments created by Harry Partch

File:Severalbambooflutes.jpg|bamboo flutes

File:Bansuri bamboo flute 23inch.jpg|Bansuri, Indian Subcontinent

File:Thổi sáo.jpg|Sáo, Vietnamese flute

File:Angklung-arumba.jpg|Angklung, Indonesia

File:Angklung-kolintang.jpg|Kolintang xylophone and angklung, Indonesia

File:Bamboo organ of Las Piñas I (cropped).jpg|Bamboo organ, Saint Joseph Parish Church, Las Piñas, Metro Manila, Philippine

File:Saxos de bambú por Angel Sampedro del Río, luthier argentino.jpg|Bamboo saxophone, Argentina

File:Khenesarong.jpg|Khene, mouth organ, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos

File:Chinese flutes circa 1900.JPG|Sheng mouth organ, China

File:Miao musicians.jpg|Lusheng mouth organ

File:Ploong.jpg|Ploong, a musical instrument of the Mru people, Bangladesh

File:Jinghu.jpg|Jinghu, Chinese bowed string instrument

File:Agustinus Sasundu Maestro Musik Tiup Bambu Indonesia.jpg|Musician Agustinus Sasundu of Sangihe, with a bamboo wind instrument

References

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