Algaita

The algaita (also spelled alghaita, algayta or algheita) is a double reed wind instrument from West Africa, especially among the Hausa and Kanuri peoples. Its construction is similar to the oboe-like rhaita and the zurna. The algaita is distinguished from these other instruments by its larger, trumpet-like bell. Instead of keys, it has open holes for fingering, similar to the zurna. [1]

Algaita player, Kapsiki, Cameroon
Algaita
Classification Double reed
Related instruments

Traditional recordings

  • Music from the Villages of Northeastern Nigeria (Folkways, 1971)
  • "Music of the Cameroon - The Fulani of the North" (Lyrichord 7334)

Use in jazz recordings

  • Yusef Lateef, In Nigeria, (YAL Records, 1983)
  • Yusef Lateef, The African-American Epic Suite (1994)
gollark: nano is great.
gollark: WHY*JIT* does some madness in order to just run the regular C compiler (bundled with your code for portability, of course) and then execute the result.
gollark: Someone was annoying and refused to accept that.
gollark: It's the JIT compiler for WHY, my "esolang".
gollark: https://esolangs.org/wiki/WHY

References

  1. "African Music - MSN Encarta". Archived from the original on 2009-10-31.
  • H.G. Farmer, "The Arab Influence on the Western Soudan." The Musical Standard, 15 November, 1924.

See also


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.