idakka
{{short description|Musical instrument}}
{{Use Indian English|date=December 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2019}}
File:Edakka - Idakka - Edaykka.JPG
The idakka ({{langx|ml|ഇടയ്ക്ക}}), also spelt edaykka/edakka, is an hourglass-shaped drum from Kerala in south India, very similar to the pan-Indian damaru.{{cn|date=May 2018}} While the damaru is played by rattling knotted cords against the resonators, the idakka is played with a stick. Like the damaru, the idakka's pitch may be bent by squeezing the lacing in the middle. The idakka is slung over the left shoulder and the right side of the instrument is gently beaten with a thin curve-ended stick.{{cite book |last=Deva |first=Bigamudre Chaitanya |title=Indian Music |date=1995 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9788122407303 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z-XKAfoa8WMC&q=Idakka&pg=PA116}} It is played in temples and in performances such as Kathakali and Mohiniattam classical dance.{{cite web |title=Edakka |url=http://indianculture.gov.in/musical-instruments/avanaddha-vadya/edakka |access-date=2022-08-17 |website=Indian culture}}
Etymology
The Malayalam name idaykka or idakka derives from the Sanskrit word श्रीढक्का (Śrīḍhakkā). In Sanskrit, a ḍhakkā is described as a double drum that makes a ḍhak sound. ढक् इति गम्भीरशब्देन कायतीति (ḍhak iti gambhīraśabdēna kāyatīti).Kalpadruma, Sanskrit dictionary The sacred prefix Śrī is used to denote the auspiciousness of the instrument.
Construction
Similar to the talking drum, the idakka consists of two circular drumheads each of which is mounted within a circular ring. The hourglass-shaped body is placed between the two heads and lacing is used to pull the two rings towards each other, stretching each drumhead over an open end of the body. Snare-like strings made of natural fiber are stretched across the open ends of the drum body, under each drumhead. It is not uncommon for the diameter of the drumheads to be larger than the diameter of the body, with the result that the drumheads are often seen mounted significantly off-center.
Acoustics
The idakka is a small, high-pitched drum with definite pitch. The snares running under the drumheads have been found to interact with the vibrating membrane in a way that causes the pitch of the instrument to be determinate.{{cite journal|date=April 2018|title=Acoustics of Idakkā: An Indian snare drum with definite pitch|journal=The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America|volume=143|issue=5|pages=3184–3194|doi=10.1121/1.5038111|pmid=29857748|last1=Jose|first1=Kevin|last2=Chatterjee|first2=Anindya|last3=Gupta|first3=Anurag|bibcode=2018ASAJ..143.3184J}} Different pitches can be obtained by squeezing the lacing around the instrument, which changes the amount of tension in the skins.
See also
- Damaru
- Pandi Melam
- Panchari melam
- Thayambaka
- Panchavadyam
- Tripunithura Krishnadas
- Talking Drum, another drum in West Africa with an hour-glass shape.
References
{{Reflist}}
{{commons category|Idakka}}
{{Indian musical instruments}}
{{Culture of Kerala}}