Malunga

The malunga is a single-stringed musical bow played by the Siddi of India, who are the descendants of East African immigrants. It produces two tones, an octave apart, and the knuckle of the hand supporting the instrument may be pressed against the string to vary the pitch. It is struck with a stick and, as with the berimbau of Brazil, the hand holding the stick also holds a rattle (in the case of the malunga the rattle, called mai misra). The malunga has a gourd resonator which amplifies the instrument's sound. The placement of this rattle along the string also varies the pitch produced by the Malunga.

Construction

The bow is of solid-core bamboo cane and the string is made of three twisted strands of gut. The gourd resonator is made from a coconut shell and is a mobile part of the instrument.[1]

Cultural importance

The malunga is one of the instruments that is used in the religious practices of the Siddi people in India.[2] This instrument is one of the few that are still in existence that can be played, though its scarcity is growing.

gollark: Except Lenovo. They deliberately installed adware.
gollark: I try to not judge entire large complex brands by one bad product.
gollark: Acer TravelMate P4 TMP449-G2-M with aftermarket 120GB SSD + 4GB RAM DIMM.
gollark: Only one slot, mind you.
gollark: I just bought a 4GB DIMM instead of an 8GB DIMM ages ago.

See also

References

  1. Projeto Sidi Malunga ISBN 1-880519-28-3
  2. YouTube
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.