Krar

The krar ( ክራር in Amharic), kirar, kerar, kraar is a five- or six-stringed bowl-shaped lyre from Eritrea[1] and Ethiopia. It is tuned to a pentatonic scale. A modern krar may be amplified, much in the same way as an electric guitar or violin.

Krar
A wooden krar.
String instrument
Classification lyre
Related instruments
masenqo

Features

A krar player from Ethiopia

A chordophone, the krar is usually decorated with wood, cloth and beads. Its five or six strings determine the available pitches. The instrument's tone depends on the musician's playing technique: bowing, strumming or plucking. If plucked, the instrument will produce a soft tone. Strumming, on the other hand, will yield a harmonious pulsation.

A krar is often played by musician-singers called azmari. It usually accompanies love songs and secular songs.

Resources

  • Asnakech Worku, Ethiopiques 16: The Lady with the Krar (compact disc). Buda Musique 822652, 2003.
  • Ethiopie, chants d'amour (Ethiopia, Love Songs). Fantahun Shewankochew, vocals and krar (compact disc). INEDIT/Maison des Cultures du Monde W260080, 1998.

Films

  • HELP! – Musikalische Geschichten aus Äthiopien. Directed by Daniel Schulz.[2]
gollark: You could use a nether portal, no?
gollark: Couldn't you just move somewhere else secretly?
gollark: There are a bunch of ways I can imagine to track people, and in modern packs it's quite easy to do basically whatever you want to someone's base if it's not claimed.
gollark: I imagine a radiing thing wouldn't have dynmap. But still.
gollark: On CodersNet, for example, I can pull anyone's location off the dynmap API, fly over to them quite fast, then arbitrarily teleport through their base.

See also

References

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