pey au

{{Short description|Cambodian musical instrument}}File:Pey au.jpg

The pey au (sometimes spelled pei au or pei ar) (Khmer: ប៉ីអ) is a Cambodian musical instrument, similar to a flute but using a set of double reeds to produce sound.{{cite web |url= https://sovichetlife.wordpress.com/2013/08/28/pei-or-and-pei-pok/amp/|title= ប៉ីអ និង ប៉ីពក [Poetry and Songs] |last= Sovichet |website= sovichetlifelwordpress.com|date= 28 August 2013 |quote=ប៉ីអ (the name of the instrument in Khmer).
[https://sovichetlife.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/pei-or.jpg?w=600 Image of pei au]}}
{{cite book |last1= Khean|first1=Yun |last2= Dorivan|first2= Keo|last3= Lina |first3= Y|last4= Lenna|first4= Mao|title= Traditional Musical Instruments of Cambodia|url= http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0013/001352/135257mb.pdf|location= Kingdom of Cambodia|publisher= United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization|page= 130 }}

The instrument uses an external reed, cut from a prebos{{typo help inline|reason=similar to probes|date=November 2019}} tree and flattened with small strips of ratan. The bundle is insterted into a hold at the top of the flute part of the instrument, creating a mouthpiece. The instrument's body is made of "narrow bore bamboo", narrower than that used for the khloy vertical flute and pey pok. The instrument gives the pitch to be used in aareak and phleng kar wedding orchestras. Pitches are not standardized in Cambodia, although the spaces between pitches is. The instrument is ancient and predates the Angkor (9th—15th centuries A.D.), and has played with the aareak and aapeapipa orchestras for as long.

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Category:Cambodian musical instruments

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